Many have assumed wrongly that I would recommend political campaigns set up two separate Twitter accounts in order to keep tweets from the candidate and tweets from staff or press separate.
The better solution, as Jordan points out, is to just be honest about who is tweeting but to keep everything associated with one brand together.
Ford, Microsoft and oh yeah Twitter are all great examples of brands who actually identify who is posting each tweet. They do it by simply adding a "^" and then the initials of the person tweeting. They then inform users somewhere (usually in the bio field or the background) who those folks are. Yes you loose three characters, but your brand is suddenly human. Something that is very important for social media.
One thing that politicians/campaigns typically do a poor job of when it comes to social media is listening (number three on Jordan's list). All three of the brands mentioned above are using a twitter client call CoTweet to help manage multiple people posting and responding from the same twitter account. They even put the signature in for each users. If your brand or campaign is looking for a way to easily manage their twitter account(s) check out CoTweet and start responding (and following) other people. Twitter is about being social not about pushing press releases.





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