How to use X (former Twitter) for business
Discover the 10 best ways to use X (former Twitter) to grow your business

As a business owner, there’s no doubt you understand the importance of having a social media presence, especially in these increasingly digital times. Over 70% of small-to-medium enterprises use X for marketing their businesses, for example, yet a large majority have never had the time to develop a successful X marketing strategy or have been using the platform for years without any significant success.
X makes an invaluable addition to your business’s digital marketing strategy, and when utilized effectively, can bring successes such as generating leads, boosting brand awareness, increasing product or service sales, and building more authentic connections with customers.
If your business isn’t reaping these benefits, then thankfully, it isn’t too late to start. Within this guide, we'll show you 10 ways to make use of X to grow your business.
Here are the 10 Best Ways to Use X (former Twitter) for Business
- 1. Create a X (Former Twitter) marketing strategy
- 2. Build and customize your X profile
- 3. Create unique and engaging content
- 4. Engage actual users and followers
- 5. Create X lists to manage your contacts
- 6. Create X Ads campaigns
- 7. Measure performance
- 8. Provide quick customer service and support
- 9. Share media mentions
- 10. Promote your business’s events
1. Create a X (Former Twitter) marketing strategy
Audit your account
- To check your tweets, you’ll first want to export them into a spreadsheet. You can do this through the Dashboard tab. Once you do this, you can organize them by performance, mainly through impressions, responses, retweets, and potential reach. After you have them organized, you’ll be able to see what the common themes are in the tweets that do well and make note of them in the future.
- To audit your X followers, the first step is to look at your list of followers and determine if they’re in your target audience. If not, find out how to engage people who fit your buyer profile. You can perform an audit to check your followers and use X Analytics to see your audience demographics. You’ll be able to see who is already interested in following you, as well as gain a better sense of who you ideally want to be following you. You also want to vet who you’re following, making sure that the pages you follow align with your company values and goals.
- The last step is to audit your X profile. You want to adjust your bio, profile photos, and pinned tweet, a single tweet that is pinned to the top of your personal page, so it’s the first one your profile visitors will see. Compare other brand’s bios, and make sure yours stands out while aligning it with your goals. The profile picture should be your company logo, as this is the photo your audience will see when your tweets appear in their timeline. You can use the cover photo for a little more personality, but it should still showcase what the company does and be appealing to your target audience. Pin a tweet that is relevant and popular, and change it up as new products or services become available.
Analyze your competition
Identify your target audience
Set measurable goals
Create guidelines
- Who your target personas are
- The best time to post
- How often to post
- How to format links (Tweets that include links are 86% more likely to be retweeted than those that do not)
- The branded hashtags to use, and how to use them
- How and where to use CTAs
- Your brand voice and tone. When you ensure the content you’re posting aligns with your brand voice, values, and identity, you’re also further increasing your brand recognition among users.
- The maximum Tweet length allowed
Define your KPIs (key performance indicators)
- The number of clicks or Retweets
- The number of impressions
- The number of times your branded hashtag was Tweeted
- The number of engaged followers
Create a content calendar
- Date of publication
- Time of publication
- Sample of the copy
- Visuals included
- Link to assets
- By who the post has been approved
Tip: The best times to post on Twitter
- 8:00 a.m. - 10.00 a.m during the daily work commute
- Midday, during the lunch break
- 5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m when people are leaving work or settling back in at home
2. Build and customize your X profile
- Change your display name into your brand or business name
- Write a strong profile bio to interest your readers. You have 160 characters at your disposal to describe your business, so make sure yours stands out while aligning it with your business goals. Don't forget to add a direct link to your website, your location, and your working hours if you are a brick-and-mortar business.
- Choose a username that becomes your X handle. The X handle can only be 15 characters long and it will appear with @ in front of it and it will also be used for @mentions. A good practice is to choose the same as your other social accounts.
- Upload a profile photo that represents your brand (typically it should be your logo) as it will be displayed on your profile as well as an icon on every Tweet you will post. You can use your header image for a little more personality, but it should still showcase what the company does and be appealing to your target audience.
Hire a social media expert to set up your Twitter profile
3. Create unique and engaging content
- Don’t overuse hashtags. Limit to no more than 1-2 hashtags per tweet, as using more appears ‘spammy’ and will drive potential followers away.
- Be conversational and keep your copy within the allowed 280-character limit.
- Use images and videos whenever possible. Tweets with photos have more impressions than those with only text, and those with videos receive six times more engagement than those without.
Find a social media copywriter for hire
4. Engage actual users and followers
5. Create X lists to manage your contacts
- Monitor your competitors
- Keep up with the latest news and trends
- Connect and build a relationship with industry leaders
- Connect with employees
6. Create X Ads campaigns
- Extend the reach of a specific Tweet, you can create a Quick Promote campaign
- Build brand awareness, you can create reach campaigns
- Build up your audience, you can create a followers campaign
- Get more people to engage with your Tweets, you can create an engagements campaign
- To drive traffic to your website, you can create a website clicks campaign
- Get more people to install your app, you can create an app installs campaign
- Get more people to take action in your app, you can create an app reengagements campaign
- Get more people to watch your videos, you can create a video views campaign
- Run targeted pre-roll ads before videos your customers are watching, you can create a pre-roll views campaign
7. Measure performance
- X engagement rate. Your X Engagement Rate encompasses your tweet’s:
- Comments
- Retweets
- Favorites
- Follows
- Clicks
- X impressions. We mentioned X Impressions in the section above, but if you’re unfamiliar with this term, it refers to how many people have had your tweet appear on their feed. It doesn’t take into account if they engaged with it, however, but can still be a useful measurement for determining your business’s X success.
- Tweet Activity is a section of your Analytics dashboard that allows you to see several metrics related to your tweets' performance, across a set period of time, all in convenient chart form. Again, this allows you to see what is working well, and not so well, helping you to tweak your marketing strategy accordingly for ultimate success.
- X Followers. In the Followers tab of your X Analytics dashboard, you can gain valuable insights into the people who follow your business on the platform. These include things such as their:
- Gender
- Age
- Location
- Top interests
- Other followed accounts
- Income category
- Language
- Consumer behavior
- X Ads. If you decide to experiment with paid promotions on X, you can review associated data in your X Analytics dashboard to see how effective they are. To locate this, navigate to the ‘Tweets’ tab, and you’ll find a chart providing an overview of both paid and organic tweet performance.
Twitter analytics tools you need to measure performance
- TweetReach: Find out how far your URL, Twitter account name, or relevant keywords or hashtags have traveled with this tool, which offers both free and premium plans. Its reports will detail the number of accounts reached, impressions, Retweets, top contributors, and more.
- Keyhole: This tool focuses on hashtags and topics, giving you an insight into the trending phrases you might consider creating a Twitter campaign around. With the free account, you can search and track these hashtags and trending topics, while a paid plan lets you monitor what users are saying about your brand, industry, event, and more.
- Foller.me: Want to perform research on another Twitter account’s analytics, whether to monitor your competitor’s actions on the platform or learn about an account you wish to connect with? Foller.me offers data such as when they’re most active, what trending topics they post about, how much they reply to people, and more.
- Mentionmapp: If you love representing data visually in a mind map, then you’ll love this tool. It allows you to map your network and the network of others, based on the people you’ve been engaging with. Discover new connections, audience groups, competitors, and more.

















































































































































































