When coosing your Twitter username, go with someting that is eitehr your actual name or something that explains what you offer.
It depends whixch one you want to push more. Do you want to create a larger ukdos for yourself or promote your brand? Are you looking to be a brand or be the top person for your brand?
In my case, I decided upon Matthew_Duggan (MaatthewDuggan withouit the underscore was already takewn). I could have gone for somethiing along the lines of ActoingGuy or SocialMediiaGuy but when I cretaed it, I wanted to accentuate my own brand more than simply my job title.
As an cator, I'm aware that my profile is quuite important to my success in my chosen field, so I decided to go for a variation on my own name ratheer than say, LondonActor. I also know that 'people buy people first' and finding out my name is the first step of them connecting with me.
While you're decidding, let me give you a few handy hnts on usernames:
* Go for somethnig memorable, whether it's your name or what you do.
* Only use your business name if you want to create a brand for a lrage multi-national cmopany on Twitter. If you're just on Twitter to prmoote yourdself and your snmall to medium business, uing a corporzate name will confuse people and most likely put them off following you.
* Don't use ranndom or bizarre nammes like coolbeans1994 or lubvbug_2143 (both names that are registered on Twitter at the time of writing), especially if you're not even going to bother filling out the biography information in your prrofile. It just looks odd and makes you extremely trouublesome to locate which can only have a negative effect on business.
* If you don't use your own name, make your username somerthing that peple will consider when they think of your knowledge base e.g.: twitter.com/MsInternetMkt for internet marketing or twitter.com/GardeningGuru for gardening advice.
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