Brands having trouble building a large base of followers on Twitter can now turn to Australian technology firm uSocial.net and pay for connections (full story at Revolution). Surely if a brand wants to get more followers it should simply be interesting in what it has to say. Obviously the first thing any brand needs to do is identify what is the purpose of its twitter feed – it is a mistake to simply treat it as an extension of your PR communications channel.
Some brands have definitely got it right:
Dell Outlet (795,396 followers) – Quite simply an extension of its online outlet offering discounts on products. So far accounted for $3 million of additional sales
Zappos CEO (901,993 followers) – Surely the most followed CEO on twitter. Mixture of him running an amazing business, having a sense of humour and sharing interesting views. E.g.

Interestingly Zappos_service only has only got 1,712. However this only scratches the surface as they still very active. Here is the response I got soon after I recommended them as one of the best #socialbrands:

There are many more (see mashable for a list of top 40) but most seem to be focused on customer services and/or providing interesting information to their customers. Where twitter however has been used as part of a campaign, from what I have seen it has invariably not been successful. Here is the reality for some of those brands that have been lauded for their campaigns on twitter:
Marmite – LoveHate Martmite
The write up
This is a good idea for the Unilever brand in a sector where new marketing strategies can be difficult to get off the ground. Continuing its love/hate theme used across all channels, this Marmite/Twitter mashup has created two hashtags (#lovemarmite and #hatemarmite) that it then collates. The key thing here is that Ollie Parsley and Paul Randall have matched Marmite to micro-blogging in a way that’s appropriate for the brand, but that doesn’t blindly follow the convention of having a Twitter account. Like Skittles, this uses Twitter without having to tweet about an FMCG brand – something that may be of limited interest. This is an unofficial Marmite campaign that Parsley says he and Randell created in four hours and demonstrates what FMCG brands could do if they devoted even a little time to social media (via Revolution)
The reality
Love Marmite mentions – 18
Hate Marmite mentions – 12
Vodafone Live Guy –
The write up
Vodafone announced the launch of its free Lenovo laptop with a campaign that was Where’s Wally? meets social media. Consumers followed Liveguy through blogs and Twitter as he travelled through UK cities, blogging and Tweeting about his surroundings. The aim, for consumers, was to find him in real life to win a Lenovo laptop. This went beyond the standard Twitter models that most brands adhere to, and as a campaign, highlighted a new product in an innovative way. It was more daring than most Twitter brands and built a nice amount of buzz. Vodafone has now wrapped up Live Guy and has turned VodafoneUK into an interactive feed, suggesting that a conversational tone is set to become obvious throughout its Twitter presence.
The reality
244 followers
There have been some successes on the campaign side but personally do not think that this is going to be the main purpose of twitter for brands. Irrespective I do not want to criticize these brands for trying as it is probably only going to be through trial and error that brands are going to find their true voice in this environment. The important thing is that when they do choose to play in the space that they remain authentic, true to their values and be interesting.
Twitter Stats
Via Information is Beautiful