The choice between Twitter and LinkedIn for a startup's social media presence depends on the target audience and business goals. Twitter is ideal for real-time engagement and broader reach, while LinkedIn excels in connecting with professionals, B2B networking, and thought leadership. Many startups use both platforms to cater to different needs. The decision should align with the startup's objectives and the preferences of the target audience.
I also do this for my website for the ranking you can check: taxi to JFK
Twitter is like an ad on the bus. Linkedin is like an ad sticker inside the bus. It may be of the same topic, but needs different tricks to break the blindness.
We're only starting our journey, and decided to give both Twitter and Linkedin a try and see what works best for our no-code email builder. It's B2B, but mostly for SMB and Freelancers, so both platforms seem necessary
@vinnie_tran We're a cold outreach software that combines LinkedIn and email into sequences that can think for you essentialy.
We started with linkedin, connecting every day and sending follow up message. 1 month process where a lead replies sooner or later
As many people here already mentioned, it does depend on your audience and business model.
But when it comes to certain things in your start up journey like PH launch, it's crucial to stick to versatile approach and develop various social media to create broad communities and increase visibility.
At least that's what we are doing with Klu.so and does produce good results💪
I won't ever choose one and put the other aside. HUGE market segments can be found in both, and for a startup, it's vital to use the full potential of your social reach. Skip Twitter and the public will probably never hear of you. Skip LinkedIn and large businesses and investor will find it hard to take you seriously!
I my opinion, it really depends on your goals and your target audience. Let's say you want a place to really talk to your audience, where they share they real feeling and concerns about your product or the context in which your product is placed. That place most likely isn't Linkedin.