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Social Network Marketing

1

Clever Facebook Marketing tools for your blog

Posted by admin at April 28, 2010 | Category Facebook Apps, Facebook Marketing, Social Network Marketing
 

For me, the way to develop your Facebook Marketing website seems to be integration.

I’ve just installed some really neat tools in my Social Network Guru Blog that integrate lots of Facebook functionality into my blog pages.

This were just free plugins – no coding required!

This means Facebook users can now rate my page, share content and even write on their own Facebook wall from my blog!

I suspect this is just the beginning for Facebook Marketing, where soon all sorts of clever apps and plugins will allow you to offer things to Facebook users.

Maybe even one day we’ll be buying things via our facebook account!

Now there’s a thought…

Clarke

 
 
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Video: How to Create and Promote a Facebook Event

Posted by admin at April 27, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Social Network Marketing, Training
 

If you want to learn how to create and promote a Facebook event, just watch these two videos.

Video 1 will show you how to set up the event

Video 2 will show you how to promote the event and maximise the number of attendees to the event.

 
 
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How to set up a Facebook Fan Page

Posted by admin at April 19, 2010 | Category Facebook Apps, Facebook Marketing, Social Network Marketing
 

Having recently watched Robert Grant’s excellent Free video on setting up a Facebook Fan Page
(which is in my FREE Facebook Marketing Course – now on my Facebook Fan Page)

I decided to apply it so you can see for yourself how easy it is….

Feel free to copy it!

All I did was:

1. Add a company page (under advertising)

2. Add the BML app under applications

3. Paste some HTML into the FBML app and called it my welcome page

It’s really easy!

And if you have a blog you can add that in too!

Before  you visit my Fan Page…

and of course only if you find it helpful…

please click on the link/become a fan button at the top of my fan page

Here’s the link you’ll need to copy it / check it out via the link below

My Fan Page on Facebook

Clarke



 
 
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Social Media – Where do I start?

Posted by admin at April 8, 2010 | Category Social Network Marketing
 

Social media  has revolutionized marketing and advertising.  As a result, even if you’re a novice at “getting the word out” on who or what you are and what goods/services you provide, business owners with a little know how  can use any number of social media sites to make a ripple on a very large, but level playing field.  So to try and compete, like other business startups or marketing managers looking to take control of the marketing reigns, make sure you are registered or have an active profile on many of these sites.

But, the need to automatically adopt all the latest social media trends and master every social media site could possibly hinder your ability to actually grow your business venture and leave you with a sense of social media overload.  You should be primarily focusing on what makes your business venture great instead of scratching your head over how to get your Twitter followers over to your Linkedin profile so your Google Analytics account can monitor how many unique visitors are requesting connections in order to direct them to your WordPress blog to tell users what you think about using FriendFeed to link to your Twitter followers.

If you are like many of the new or well established business owners, entrepreneurs, or marketing professionals and you want to take advantage of what social media has to offer your marketing bottom line, you should treat social media sites like any other tool that you utilize to operate your business.

  • Have a clear goal for what you want that tool to accomplish.
  • Identify the best method for using that tool to accomplish your goal.
  • Monitor the rate success of utilizing the tool.

Just jumping out into the social media world can quickly turn into leaving you overwhelmed and frustrated if you are not prepared.  To avoid social media overload you should map out a plan of action.  That way, you can identify which social media sites work the best for you.  There are tons of sites, resources, and tools related to social media, and a great deal of them can be redundant and thus eliminated from your game plan, only if you have a game plan to start with.  Social Media Today is a good place to start and talk to other social media professionals and get ideals and tools.  As a result of identifying which social media tools work the best, you will be able to easily monitor them via sites like Google Analytics to see if they are in fact, proving you a solid ROI (time is money). 

Tip: If there are sites out there you that you don’t use, a good habit is to remove all personal information from the site.

I know it’s tempting to make sure you are registered on every social network.  But if you’re not careful, the need to be everywhere can evolve into an inability to be anywhere.  You should develop a targeted marketing strategy with social media sites to ensure your focus can remain on growing your brand and in turn, growing your business.

Want to learn more about social network marketing?

 
 
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Brits are hooked on Facebook!

Posted by admin at March 26, 2010 | Category Facebook News, Social Network Marketing
 

More than three in four UK internet users belong to online networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, according to research by InSites Consulting.
Facebook is used by half, the online market research organisation found, with Twitter attracting 42 per cent of the British online community.

Figures for the UK reflect the global trend, with Facebook the world´s most popular networking site, visited by 51 per cent of the total online population.

Remarkably, 72 per cent of internet users worldwide use at least one social network, which means a staggering 940 million users worldwide.

The UK´s online community is not the most socially active, however, as in South America 95 per cent of web users log on to social networking sites on a regular basis.

It was revealed recently by Experian Hitwise that Facebook attracts more loyal visitors than Google, and also directed more traffic to news sites than the web´s leading search engine.

 
 
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Social Networking is Sky-Rocketing!

Posted by admin at March 25, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Facebook News, Social Network Marketing
 

Social networking sites are now more popular with consumers than the telephone, it has been claimed.

Daniel Chubb, chief executive officer at Dansway Communications and Online Social Media, said many people especially are using websites such as Twitter and Facebook more times a day than their mobiles and landlines ? comments which may interest marketing professionals seeking opportunities online.

He claimed that the younger generation in particular “cannot live without social media” to keep in touch and shape their leisure time.

“Facebook overshadows all, but niche social media sites are more popular with many users with specific interests,” Mr Chubb stated.

Research published by InSites Consulting this week revealed that 72 per cent of internet users are part of at least one social network, which translates to 940 million users worldwide.

According to the study, Facebook remains the most popular social media platform with 51 per cent of global internet users, followed by MySpace (20 per cent) and Twitter (17 per cent).

 
 
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5 Common Social Network Marketing Mistakes

Posted by admin at March 10, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Social Network Marketing
 

Is your social media marketing campaign working for you, or is it more in the nature of a kamikaze mission?

Social media marketing on sites such as Twitter and Facebook can do wonders for your online business IF you use them correctly.

However, if you are making major mistakes in your social media campaigns, you might be on the fast track to the ecommerce graveyard!

Here are some common mistakes that you don’t want to make in social media marketing:

Too Many Advertisements. This is a huge no-no! Internet users in general and social site members in particular find pop-up and flashing ads extremely annoying. Ditto for too many ads of any kind! If you have any sly thoughts about disguising your ads as regular content—forget it! Web folks are savvy to that sort of subterfuge and you will find yourself a social site pariah in nothing flat by using those tricky techniques.

Spamming. Never, ever spam! Don’t send blanket messages to every one of your followers or people on your Friends list, either, or this can be considered spammy behavior. Only send messages where they are relevant. Every one of your followers may not be interested in the same things, so try to keep your messages pertinent to the recipients.

No option to share. Make it as easy as possible for your content to be shared. On Twitter, for example, you can ask for your message to be shared by including “Please RT,” which translates to “Please retweet.” The best and fastest way to get your content passed along is to make it easy and painless for readers!

Being selfish. Don’t just share your own content! Pass along any message or post by other users that is interesting, entertaining and/or informative to others.

Only using one social site. You don’t want to spread yourself too thin and wind up not doing a good job of marketing at any site, but it doesn’t pay to put all of your eggs into one basket, either. Try several of the most popular social sites, and then narrow it down to two or three that work best for you.

Don’t make mistakes that amount to social media marketing suicide!

 
 
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Ten golden rules for building social networks & forums

Posted by admin at February 24, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Social Network Marketing
 

For some companies, marketing through social networks isn’t enough, they want to create their own social spaces to attract visitors.

Here are ten tips for building social networks and forums…

Occasionally, firms, especially larger brands, choose to build forums into their websites as part of their marketing strategy.

The idea is that the social network or forum will attract new and repeat visitors, build brand loyalty and recognition, boost your organic SEO and increase trust in your website.

Without a doubt, a successful forum can do that, but it can also be a huge amount of work and a gamble, since most forum attempts fail.

Recently, a few of my clients asked about forums and so I’ve been considering best practice. Here are my ten golden rules.

1. Set out some ground rules

Whatever industry your forum is geared towards, you’ll need to lay out some rules. Some are to protect yourself – for example, people must not write anything that could be considered slanderous.
Others are to protect the forum space itself, rules that even you as webmaster will follow. No spamming, no pestering, no trolling, that kind of thing.

2. Break it up

Any visitor to your forum should know exactly where to post their comments or query. If your sub categories are jumbled and confused then visitors won’t know where to browse for answers or leave their own questions.
What those sub categories are depends on your preferences – you may choose to set out an area for debate, one for people seeking help, one for sharing industry news.

Alternatively, you might prefer to lay it out by topic – for example an online marketing forum could have organic SEO, pay-per-click, email marketing and so on.

Just make sure it’s clear.

3. Don’t censor

Sometimes, your visitors may write things you don’t agree with. Of course, if they’ve broken your rules then you can delete their post. However, if they haven’t then you mustn’t arbitrarily delete their comments.

If you start doing that, you’ll soon find people lose trust and abandon the forum. Even on your corporate site you must remember that a forum isn’t your space, it’s theirs’.

4. Don’t sell

Don’t try and use a social space to pitch – it will alienate users and harm brand trust.
The benefits of a forum are more subtle, it isn’t just a space for you to shout about your products. If you’d consider it spam if someone else did it then don’t do it yourself.

5. Don’t lie

We’ve all seen it – a convenient forum post asking a question about a product that allows the forum owner to go in and pitch. Nine times out of ten it’s obvious that the company has set up that question to allow it to rave about a product or service.
This is even worse than spam, it makes it look like the spammer thinks the forum users are stupid.

6. Moderate appropriately

Your forum will need to be moderated. Leave it to its own devices and it will descend into a storm of spam, bitching and off-topic nonsense.
But also consider how heavily you plan to moderate your forum. You don’t want to leap down the throat of everyone who skates close to the edge of the rules, you’ll frighten people off.

Work out how involved you want to be – and stick to it. Let other forum members tell posters when they overstep the mark and give them a way to flag issues with you.

7. Be even-handed

When you’re moderating your forum, don’t blow hot and cold. If you ban someone for spamming on Monday but ignore someone doing to same on Friday, people will become suspicious about why. Do you have a commercial interest?
Nothing will clear your forum faster than unfair moderation.

8. Protect your data

If your forum collects email addresses, make sure they’re safe and don’t communicate with them without permission. No one will return to a forum if they don’t trust you with their data.
9. Promote it

Forums are hard work and they take a lot of promotion to get going, so make sure you’re shouting about yours. Tweet particularly interesting posts, blog about it, mention it in your email marketing, that kind of thing.
Until your forum becomes self-sufficient, it needs feeding with constant promotion or you’ll find it withers and dies.

10. Know why you’re doing it
Before you plough hours of work into your new company forum, work out why you’re doing it and make sure your bosses know.

A forum is an odd asset. Because you can’t use it to directly sell through, it can be hard to justify maintaining it. Make sure your company understands the benefits of a forum to the wider online marketing picture.

The last thing you want is your boss to suddenly demand the forum is used for advertising or that the email addresses of members are used for marketing.

Justify the forum early on, when everyone’s excited about it – not later on when budget cuts are looming and you have to prove a financial return on the investment.

source: http://econsultancy.com/blog/5460-ten-golden-rules-for-building-social-networks-forums

 
 
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Facebook attracts more visitors than Yahoo, moving into second place

Posted by admin at February 24, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Facebook News, Social Network Marketing
 

Marketers still on the fence about increasing their budgets for social network marketing – be it for B2C or B2B – may be missing the boat.

January data from on Compete.com’s list of most visited internet sites showed that Facebook continues to grow, recently leapfrogging Yahoo into the number two spot on its list.

Facebook topped 134 million unique U.S. visitors in January, according to Compete.com.

This is the first change at the top of the list in two years. At that time, Google unseated Yahoo as the most popular website.

But marketers don’t need to eschew Google as it continues to hold the number one spot based on visits for the month, the company said. Its overall grasp on web surfers trails Facebook.

Over the past year, Compete.com shows that time spent by all visitors online at Facebook more than doubled to more than 11 percent in January 2009, versus the prior year. At the same time, both Google and Yahoo saw their numbers hover just above the 4 percent mark Yahoo came in at 4.25 percent while Google had 4.1 percent in January 2010.

 
 
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Social media ‘key to search engine marketing’

Posted by admin at February 23, 2010 | Category Facebook Marketing, Facebook News, Social Network Marketing
 

With Twitter co-founder Evan Williams announcing that the social network set a new record for daily traffic last month, marketers have been reminded not to overlook the value of such microblogging sites in raising their profile.

Indeed, the addition of Twitter to Google’s real-time search saw its overall unique visitor numbers rise by nine per cent from December to 21.79 million in January, according to comScore.

This rising traffic suggests the social network is more than just a fad – and that it can play a valuable role in helping marketers to spark interest in the mainstream.

Sam Tilson, director of marketing strategies at online supermarket Zoombits.co.uk, recently said that sites such as Twitter and Facebook should be increasingly important for search engine optimisation (SEO).

“If you are doing SEO for a contemporary reference, it is vital to ensure your message is placed on Facebook and Twitter to ensure [it is] included in the Google real-time search,” he said.

According to comScore, four out of five US internet users visited a social network at least once a month in 2009.