Apart from news and views on media covering tourism, travel, and hospitality, writers, editors, photogs, and bloggers share tips, leads, ideas, news, gripes. PR reps/journos ISO press releases/trips, see also "PR/Marketing." Opinions stated are not necessarily those of Tripatini.
A tribute to my friend, the late travel media icon Arthur Frommer
The legendary U.S. travel journalist and entrepreneur Arthur Frommer passed away November 18 at the age of 95. Born in Virginia and with an early boyhood in a small town in Missouri, Arthur was a lawyer who became a pioneering and great travel journalist, and who will be remembered as having helped open the joys of travel to the masses. While serving in the U.S. Army in Europe in the 1950s, he got the travel bug, came out with a travel guide for servicemen, and followed up in 1957 with…
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I attended a social media seminar for wine journalists where even the most successful wine bloggers said, "it's the quality of your tweets--not the frequency." Who you follow also matters--again, not the number, but the quality of who you follow. (They also said "don't give up your day job to be a blogger.")
1) To follow what other travel writers are saying, doing, and reading.
2) To promote my blog (all posts automatically get "tweeted" on Twitter and posted on Facebook via Twitterfeed).
3) To promote good work by other writers.
4) To pass along news stories that I think will appeal to my "Followers" on Twitter (although I now do this less often and post more of these stories to the "Travel News Update" section of my blog).
- @chris2x
Max says Tweeting is tool for many to make a living. I don't tweet (haven't got the time) and I don't follow people tweeting. So I'm curious how it helps on the income side? I've never figured this out. The people I deal with are busy, and I don't see how income is generated from tweetng. I know a number of people who do tweet (they're on the PR or destination management or sales side) but interestingly while they send tweets, they don't receive any or follow anyone who does. So it seems one-sided to me. People tweet, but who's reading them? Why? And how does it profit the tweeter (in this case a writer)?