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Winter Tomato Soup
If something like that already exists, let me know - you've just made me paranoid enough to want to sign up :)
Nevertheless the reason why I use Twitter is to build community and Drive people to my site. I have built enough relationships that my customers and influence rs will be able to be contacted if Twitter goes down.
You'd best have email, phone, web channels, even good old fashioned mailing addresses and be offering your customers the touchpoints THEY want and use. And more than one of them, depending on their circumstance.
You've got to have all the communication tendrils out there for people to latch on to, and make sure there's some redunancy built in for just the moments you're talking about. Thanks for the succinct food for thought.
Suffice it to say that this stretches beyond Twitter! You've got to have multiple conversation touchpoints for your customers, some of which should be redundant just for the kinds of scenarios you describe. Email, phone, social media channels, websites, even good old fashioned snail mail.
It's all about giving your customers the channels they need to talk to you, WHEN they need to do the talking.
There's always something else, and that's why it's important to maximize the penetration into many social networks. Be active on three to four. I am active on a bit more as I make the time, e.g. Twitter, LinkedIn, Flickr, Facebook, and Govloop.
While I don't include the same "friends" on each network, there is enough overlap that if one dies, the conversation can continue. Moreover, those people I like, trust, or respect, I usually am active on their blogs (or they on mine) and we have each other's email addresses. Email won't be dying yet.
I use Twitter on top of my normal means of communication. It's great for things that don't warrant sending out a mass mail but is good enough for people to know. If it's down, then I can wait until my next email to add a PS or what not.
Were it not for Plurk and FriendFeed, I wouldn't have been able to get in touch with some of my Twitter friends.
I WISH there was a way to export your followers from Twitter, simply as a way to back it up. LinkedIn has the ability and I love it.
I was interviewed by the CBC about trusting the cloud: http://urlzen.com/1eh.
Cheers,
Dave
And now that the Twitter time has been cleared up, one less thing to get in the way of writing your masterpiece :).
Sincerely,
Bryan