Sign up for my email newsletter

Get new updates, usually once a week – it features long-form essays on what’s going on here in Silicon Valley.

I’ve written 550+ essays which have been featured and quoted in The New York Times, Fortune, Wired, and WSJ. The topics range from mobile product design to fundraising to “growth hacking.”

Thanks for reading. -Andrew

Close

@andrewchen

Subscribe · Featured · Recent essays

How to use Twitter to predict popular blog posts you should write

Using retweets to assess content virality
Recently I’ve been running an experiment:

  1. Tweet an insight, idea, or quote
  2. See how many people retweet it
  3. If it catches, then write a blog post elaborating on the topic

My recent Growth Hacker post was the result of one such tweet, which you can see above in my Crowdbooster dashboard. I wrote it on a whim, but after the retweets, I developed it into a longer and more comprehensive blog post. (Note that sometimes a tweet is not suitable to developed into a blog post, but most of the time this technique works)

Why this works
This works because the headline is key. It spreads the content behind it.

This is especially true on Twitter, but it’s also true for news sites that will pick up and syndicate your content. If that headline is viral and the content behind it is high quality, there’s a multiplier effect – sometimes a difference of 100X or more. Naturally, you want to optimize the flow of how people interact with your content, starting with what they see first: The title.

After all, what’s a better test for whether the following will be viral:

New blog post: Growth Hacker is the new VP Marketing [link]

than the tweet:

Growth Hacker is the new VP marketing

It’s a natural test.

I’ll also argue that if you can express the core of your idea in a short, pithy tweet, then that’s a good test for whether the underlying blog post will be interesting as well. Great tweets are often provocative insights or mesmerizing quotes, and there’s a lot to say by examining the issues more deeply. Contrast this to writing a long, unfocused, laundry-list essay examining a topic from all angles, taking no interesting positions or risks along the way – now that’s a recipe for boredom.

Combining virality with a high-quality product, of course, is the key to a lot of things – not just blogging :)

Don’t waste your time writing what people don’t want to read
Testing your ideas like this allows you to invest more time and effort into the content – a clear win.

Personally, I love writing long-form content that dives deep into an area, and also enjoy reading it as well. Unfortunately, writing a blog post often takes a long time – an hour or more. Use this technique to make it safer to spend more time, think more deeply, and research more broadly on you write. In my experience, writing a high-quality, highly retweetable blog post once per month is better than writing a daily stream of short, low-quality posts that no one will read. Plus, it takes less time.

As a smart guy once said: “Do less, but better.”

Like this post?
Get new updates via newsletter..

  • http://crowdbooster.com/ David Tran

    Honored that Crowdbooster could be of help in pushing you towards writing a really thoughtful post! A corollary of course is that by testing the waters with tweets, you not only measure the latent demand and possible virality of a post on the topic, but you actually can drum up additional hype and anticipation before you even spend time working on the post.
    A similar and equally interesting application we’ve seen is to use tweets to pre-test topics or points to address for a more informal talk or presentation. It’s interesting to see reactions across the spectrum of content from short-form to informal long-form to more formal/polished prose. It’s like applying the Minimum Viable Product (MVP) principle to writing: any testing, validation and refinement you can do earlier in that process will only result in an even more polished, sought-after final product. 

  • WoosungAhn

    Interesting. Thanks for introducing Crowdbooster. Have you considered factoring in favorites too?

  • Srinagesh Eranki

    An MVP for a blog post ..

  • http://andrewchenblog.com Andrew Chen

    I find that I get a lot more RTs than favorites, and that sometimes favorites are used more like “I want to read this later” rather than RTs which are about spreading the article.

  • n_ranjan

    Do you think anyone can use this strategy or do they have to have a certain minimum number of followers? It seems like you would need a minimum number to get noticed and retweeted?

  • http://andrewchenblog.com Andrew Chen

    You’re right that you probably need some kind of critical mass to use this. My best tweets have the ratio of 1 RT per 100 followers.

  • http://blog.hegranes.com/ jonathan hegranes

    Great insights, applicable to your blog, larger editorial decisions, as well as products and services… perhaps even elections to find their talking points.

    PS: What was the red circle tweet? Or will that be a forthcoming blog??

  • http://andrewchenblog.com Andrew Chen

    The red circle tweet is a bit too newsy to write a post on. It’s “At $679,000 a day, Google Play makes an eighth of iOS App Store’s $5.41M daily revenue http://t.co/0kejQsnF ”

  • Bobby Garrett

    Nice so simple

  • Sebastian Tonkin

    Great concept!  This is a little bit like using AdWords to test taglines and benefit statements.  

  • http://www.stanleywong.org Stanley Wong

    Great idea. Call it “tweet tasting”.  ”Tweet Tasting” = testing out new ideas on Twitter before writing a longer blog post about it.

  • http://www.stanleywong.org Stanley Wong

    Also, how about proactively creating a list around a specific Twitter list and look for things that are rising in terms of retweets.  Once you identify trending retweets for a specific topic you write a blog post about it.

  • http://www.brandings.com/ Kim Oakland

    Fantastic!  Had never really thought about using retweets as a measure of our content strength.  Will help us be more strategic going forward.

Want more? Featured essays and book recommendations