Check out http://www.facebook.com/FacebookPages for more information, and links to Facebook's best practices guides with step-by-step instructions to get started.Evolving to Profiles for Everyone and Everything on Facebook
Facebook is moving towards offering everyone and everything on the site the same experience as with profiles – personal web pages that currently represent each of the more than 175 million users on Facebook. In the next week, all administrators of Facebook Pages will have the opportunity to make changes to the new design and can publish the updated design for all users to see whenever they choose. On March 11th, these Pages will automatically change to the new profile design.
Public profiles will be familiar to all Facebook users because they have the same look and function as the current profiles, including these popular features:
Wall – The Wall displays the most recent and relevant information on a profile. The Wall is a collection of what a celebrity or public entity shares as well as what those connected to them are sharing. People can now easily comment on the content posted.
Publisher – Just as a user can add content such as status updates, photos, and videos to any of their connections’ profiles, the Publisher provides a simple interface for sharing content.
Tabs and Applications – Celebrities and public entities choose the default Tab that all users see when they land on their profile. Some applications that a celebrity or public entity has added to their profile are featured on the Boxes Tab.
News Feed – Users will receive updates in News Feed from public profiles just like how they receive updates from their friends and family. Every time users visit Facebook, they’ll see the latest content from their friends, celebrities, and others they care about.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Facebook Public Profiles
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Making Sense out of Thousands of Twitter Apps
Better yet... listen to twitter with twisten.fm, an app that scans twitter for music links and then plays 'em.
With a new Twitter app being launched almost every day, it seems that several people have had the same idea... and they have created wiki's, databases and directories to try to keep up with the flow. So, first off you may wish to look at the following:
The Twitter Fan Wiki is an ongoing group effort at trying to keep up with organizing the ever-mounting number and variety of Twitter apps.My Friend Mari Smith just posted the following suggestion in her newsletter:
Twitbase claims to be the first Twitter apps search engine...
"Twitdom is a database maintained by fellow tweeple like you," say the developers of this Twitter Applications Database.
Dan says his,"...collection (http://twitterapps.co.uk) started off as a post on my blog lo-fi librarian. It quickly got out of hand and a bit messy, so I thought a blog format, where each entry could be assigned to multiple categories, would be more appropriate than a static list. I suppose another advantage is that the comments fields can allow for users to post reviews, or application makers to correct or expand upon my explanations."
Mari is a real guru, one of my favorite coaches in social media... I'd suggest following her on Twitter if you have not already discovered @MariSmith.Do you have your keywords set up on Twitter alert? You never know when your next best client is tweeting about the very problem you help to solve... or a media contact is looking to interview you about your expertise! Be sure to set up an array of your industry keywords and phrases, then follow and respond to people as appropriate.
[For reputation management and seeing where you may want to comment, also set up alerts for your own domain name(s), and your own name including any common misspellings].
There are several great sites to set up Twitter alerts:
I've used http://tweetbeep.com for some time; they just came back online this week after a wee server challenge. Creator @mdjensen (Michael Jensen) is awesome. There's also http://tweetlater.com that provides a great array of Twitter tools, including alerts. Developer @dewaldp provides wonderful customer service. Then there's a new one I just came across http://twilert.com made by @danleach.I recommend just one of these - but certainly check 'em all out if you wish.
Here's my own collection of useful or interesting Twitter apps, but twhirl is my favorite and I use it every day:
tweetchat - create chat-specific rooms in Twitter to post tweets to a select group
tweetube lets you share your favorite videos quickly with short URLs and tracks the visits and comments from the people that follow you on Twitter.tweetworks No more clicking through an endless procession of "in reply to" links, no need for hashtags or writing queries on a search tool to get the whole conversation. On Tweetworks, tweets stay together where they belong.
twibs: lists an a-z collection of all the registered businesses on Twitter
twiddeo: similar to twitpic (below), but for video
twitpic: sends photos from your mobile phone and posts a link to them on twitter
twitteriffic is a way to try making some extra cash on Twitter by monetizing your Twitter profile background and you get to pick your price. twittad shows you how it’s done.
twittertise lets you track how many people are clicking on your links twittbot lets a group post on the same account or a single person post to a group of accounts.
twitzu: creates an event with description and location info and sends it to followers and receive RSVPs from them
twtpoll: just what the name implies, regarding querying followers
Monday, January 26, 2009
LinkedIn Users: Andy Cohen, CEO of Caring.com
With this post, I begin a study section on using LinkedIn as part of your social footprint. My mental picture of establishing a social identity includes three basic steps that match those in "real" life, or life 1.0 as we once knew it. MySpace is High School, Facebook is College and LinkedIn is the Business World.
There is much debate about how to manage your identity in life 2.0 since everything is virtual, changeable (to a degree), interlinked and public. Student applicants to a college may meet up with a Web-savvy faculty member or a future employer that researches them in social media. They may have already seen those drunken cell phone pics you posted on MySpace for a laugh and yes, they know what LMAO means.
My favorite new Presidential quote, "I am a lefty, so get over it," could easily become a mantra in life 2.0. I am a ___________, so get over it... Trying to hide your true self from your business self will make you crazy and schizoid, depending upon the width of the span between your personal and public realities. The possible anonymity of the Web tempts people to do all sorts of odd things... shave a few years off of their age, add things into their resumes that never happened, etc..
It's much easier to work hard at being real! Authenticity is one of the most important traits in life 2.0 - so get comfortable with living like a goldfish in a glass bowl. If the thought makes you cringe, then social networking is probably not for you.