Archive for May, 2010


I realize that for adults on the social networking sites, many of these tips are common sense. As I point that out, I also know that nothing is “common” about common sense. The tips are not listed in order of importance. Here they are!…..

1.) Decide on the type of networking you would like to engage in.

Most people that are new to social networking are nor aware that different sites cater to different groups of networkers. Some sites are for people in particular age groups, others are for people with specifics hobbies and interests. Still other sites cater almost exclusively to business networking. Before you join a site, spend some time getting a sense of what type of networking is most popular. For the newbie to the networks, MySpace and Facebook are good choices. Generally, these sites have wide appeal to a large cross section of networkers with a wide variety of interests.

2.) Have A Plan When Putting Together Your Profile

Virtually all social networking sites provide members with a personal profile page. Unfortunately, many people spend very little time planning the content to be included in their profile.

WRONG!
Remember, people will usually review your profile before deciding if they want to contact you. The information that you supply can attract quality networking opportunities. Let people know, via your profile, exactly what type of online relationships you want to pursue. Answer ALL profile questions honestly, with no hidden agendas. Oh, and by the way, include your picture. People want to “see” fellow networkers!

3) Let The Online Relationship Develop Naturally

One of the biggest mistakes made by social networkers is to “force” their agenda on new contacts. This type of selfishness does not work in the offline world, so why would it EVER work online? Become acquainted with your contacts first. Let them know that you intend to be a useful resource. During this process of getting to know each other, both of you will discover if you have mutual intentions. Do not rush this process of discovery. It could provide the foundation for a very beneficial, long term, relationship.

4) Do Not Get Too Personal Too Quickly

This tip is in the ‘common sense” category, and is similar to tip #3. Personal experiences have prompted me to include this tip. I have been contacted by individuals, and within the 1st EMAIL, they are disclosing very personal information, even inviting me to come meet them!! This approach is dangerous and leaves a bad 1st impression. It is a definite “red flag” if individuals give you “too much information” too soon.

5) Do Not “Hit And Run!”

 

Many people make the mistake of joining too many social sites. In their excitement to begin networking, they fill out profiles to every site under the sun! These same individuals spend very little time navigating each site. They will also make the mistake of adding a bunch of “friends” at first, and never following up with them. This “hit and run” approach is not a good way to form online relationships. Only become a member of a site if you plan to become an active member of the community. Without active participation, you will never achieve trust within the group.

In Conclusion….

Hopefully, these tips, and your common sense, will make social networking more productive. If you are specifically interested in the adult social networks for business, the FREE curriculum at Renegade University is a perfect training ground. It is possible to earn while you learn marketing with video, articles, email, and even marketing to the Web 2.0 communities.

You will also learn how to brand yourself in the social networks, and how to gain access to FREE social media tools.



Chiropractic internet marketing with social media has gained a great deal of traction in the last year among chiropractors looking to marketing their clinics online in 2009 and beyond. Many doctors are seeing the benefits early on of building relationships in their community with social networks like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. These relatively new forms of communication have ushered in a new era of chiropractic marketing, extending the doctors presence into the virtual realm.

Perhaps the most important thing to consider when utilizing web 2.0 or social media in a chiropractic internet marketing campaign, is the fact that it’s more about relationship building than anything else. Getting your audience to know, like, and trust you goes a long way and will make the most impact. Focus your attention on them and, in return, they’ll focus more on you.

So, what’s one of the most powerful ways to build relationships on social media outlets? Listening to what your local audience has to say is a great start. It might not seem like traditional chiropractic marketing, but folks want to know that their voice counts! Facebook, for example, has a “like” feature that basically tells your online friend that you are in fact listening to their posts and comments. Don’t underestimate this simple tactic.

Think of how you like to be treated. Do you like to receive compliments? Of course! So, why not give others compliments on social media based websites like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Myspace, Friendfeed, and such? This is a very indirect form of chiropractic internet marketing but it works very well. Don’t be shy and afraid to tell someone that you like what they are doing or the messages they are putting out.

When possible, post inspirational quotes that others will feel compelled to share with their friends. This can get you known very quickly in your local community as someone that’s trying to consistently uplift others. This is just another way of spreading value but is indirect chiropractic marketing, too. You can Google inspirational quotes to get a list to post periodically.

This type of chiropractic internet marketing is very subtle yet people are continuously coming back to your page for more information, which in turn, is getting your more exposure. Take this tips and implement them today and you’ll see your influence rise and potential new patients contacting you.



SNS, full name social networking service, specifically refers to the internet applicable service designed to help people build social networks. New Infrared Thermometer Fashion Style from 2010 It also refers to popular and mature information carriers existed, such as SMS messaging service. Hot Exhibition – Pulse Oximeter Modern Another common explanation of SNS: Social Network Site, ie the “social Web” or “social net.”

When ordinary people can have computing and communications resources which may compare to the web server by installing the SNS software, what will those Internet companies investing in a large number of servers do? What are their advantages? Will there be more new Internet companies, whose front end and background might not be present Google, EBAY or Sina model? Even the 3 million strong server clusters of which the operator like Shanda games is proud is the core competitiveness? When the machine in a cartoon’s home can play his work through the SNS video device, does he need to go to manage a website? Probably a housewife does not know Html programming, doed not know the word site, but she can only use the SNS cookbook publishing program and a PC in the kitchen to help millions of people master her craft, and her stances on the stove is quite clear. What are you thinking at that time? In today’s Internet now, we as the clients are like a dummy, do some slavery things only through the server, look at other people’s sites, play other people’s games, send emails, in addition to these, we have no freedom.

Now is the time to start a revolution! Central task of the revolution: how to let more than 10 million computers play their own roles, let users create and control their own information, without the company’s servers manipulating us. Individual power is weak, the birth of the Internet makes syntaxis of individuals’ and strange forces in a short time possible, while SNS makes the possibility become a reality. The ultimate significance of SNS is to integrate the scattered individuals in the Internet orderly and organicly, just like the silk thread strung pearls. The key is to make the pearls find the pearls and the fish balls find the fish balls. If an SNS always let the fishball fall into the pearl base, or vice versa, it is definitely a disaster.

To let the same type of individuals associate perfectly is the core application of SNS. Now almost all of the SNS take the webgame as the core applications for getting users together, which is obviously a departure from the basic value of SNS. SNS takes human relations as a basis. The user inevitably have the behaviour characteristics of participation, communication and sharing. This kind of behaviour spends a lot of time. Therefore, the core applications of SNS should invovle two basic characteristics of simple operation and high frequency property of participation. Internet application which now can meet the two characteristics is only the microblog.

Living the life from the days into the scripts is the inevitable result of the information age and the rapid urbanization, which is also the reason why microblog is highly regarded. Significance of microblog for the individual is not confiding but listening. Individuals will be more concerned about the content published by the objects followed, and associate by responses. This series of acts like release, attention, following, recovery, re-release form a virtuous communication cycle. Each man and followed object form a small circle, a number of which link together to form a SNS Network. Microblog makes SNS more valuable. Microblog can not be said to be the only core application of SNS, but the success of microblog definitely can promote the success of SNS, which is of course only the success on applications. From the time used, the mobile terminal has more potential than a computer to become the main platform of SNS. The successful commercial application must tie the other twin brother SMS. Microblog and text message are born to make a pair. Break down the boundaries between the two means not only to create a new network application, but to create a new business model. The key is how to merge the interests of the enterprise, microblog and the user into a harmonious business system.



When I tell other business owners and clients how active I am in social networking and what a valuable marketing tool it is, they ask me how I find the time? If you’ve dabbled a bit with Facebook and Twitter it can seem like a lot of work to keep up with everyone. For a busy business owner it seems impossible to find the time.

The truth is that I spend no more than 20 minutes a day on social network marketing—sometimes less. There are so many ways to automate and more apps appear each month. Take a few hours to set these up and then watch them do lots of the work for you.  Let me share what I use:

To manage Twitter I use TweetDeck and SocialOomph. TweetDeck allows you to create columns of users that you want to follow for different reasons. And you can enter all your tweets from there. So you could have a VIP column for example, or a column for people that tweet about a certain keyword or topic. This allows you to easily wade through the hundreds of tweets on your Twitter homepage and only read and respond to the followers that it’s important for you to interact with. That doesn’t mean I ignore the rest. I do sometimes scroll through them. But with thousands of followers reading them all would be impossible. It also will separate your direct messages into a column, as well as other tweets that mention your name. Overall it’s a command central for Twitter.

SocialOomph is like an autoresponder for Twitter. I use it to do 2 things:

1)       to automatically follow anyone who follows me and to send them an automated message when they begin to follow me

2)       it can function as an autoresponder, so I load up tweets and tell SocialOomph when to post them to Twitter. Then I can walk away and continue to have my tweets appear.

Then I add my Twitter feed to my Facebook and LinkedIn profile pages, so each time I post to Twitter it appears on my wall. My blog feed is also set up to appear on my Facebook and Linked In pages, which means when I enter a new blog post the information immediately appears on Facebook and Linked In.  I outsource the managing of my Facebook account to my wonderful virtual assistant, who handles friend requests and invitations for me in just a few minutes a day. My VA also knows the system we use for creating events on Facebook, inviting friends and announcing it on Twitter.

I also have accounts at social bookmarking sites like Digg and StumbleUpon and have my blog listed at sites like FriendFeed and Technorati. I added my twitter feed to my profile pages on those sites as well so my tweets also appear there. So in essence, whatever I tweet about on Twitter gets sent out to a lot of different sites making it easy to keep active and making it appear that there’s fresh content on all of them each day.

Just like anything else in your small business, setting this up and creating this Social Network Marketing system will save you lots of time. Sure it will take some time initially, but once it’s on autopilot your social media marketing will help you create new fans and followers who are interested in your business and products and in very little time.


May 20

Have you heard of the word “microblog”…yet? Chances are, you will…soon. Microblogging is the erstwhile form of talking on the telephone, of reading celebrity gossip, of sending e-mails, and of constantly changing Facebook status. Microblogging is changing the way we live.

In a nutshell, microblogging (also known in its hyphenated form: micro-blogging) is an Internet-based communication that is distinctive for its short and constant messaging. Usually, a microblogger joins a microblogging site (see below for the options), gathers a group of fellow micro-bloggers around him who ‘follow’ him, and periodically changes his ‘blog’ to reflect what he is doing.

”Blog” is a word that sounds too big to use for these mini updates, though. They can be compared to status updates on a Facebook profile. E.g., “Bob is getting ready for work.” Or, “Dianna is glad that she remembered to put on her makeup before she left the house today.” This is the microblog, but it is far more than just a periodic status update. People now using imcroblogging to exchange video, audio, pictures, selling, socializing, and et.al.

Where Do I Go to Microblog?

As mentioned, Facebook has its own type of microblogging-the status updates. But now, any social networking site has this feature: Myspace, Plaxo, LinkedIn, Xing, etc. Even Gmail users can regularly update their status, a tacit admission that microblogging is now an expected for any site with any social dimension. The king of all microblog sites is Twitter. Twitter is now a household name, and the millions of people twittering today is rivaling the member statistics for Facebook. Other sites have found their way into the microblogging niche: Plurk-does a great job of integrating pictures, videos, and the status feature, and does it all using a timeline-a unique, but helpful feature. Pownce-takes microblogging to a higher level of sophistication (and potential usefulness) by integrating it with invitations, calendar events, and even sharing of files. Rakawa-uses the Twitter concept of status messages based on a question. Twitter users answer the question, “what are you doing right now,” while Rakawa users answer the question, “What have you achieved today.” The usefulness of Rakawa for business and productivity has yet to be determined.

What is the Best Place to Microblog?

It all depends on what you are trying to accomplish-and what kind of constituency you have. Do you want to microblog just to give your friends an insight into your daily routine-a Gmail, Facebook, or Twitter update is sufficient. Or, are you trying to gain traction in a new business? Expose your microblogging thoughts on LinkedIn, a professional resume-like networking site. Or you can Twitter to businesses or business owners. It’s not easy to decide.

Pick One. Often, it’s good to pick just one microblog and stick with it. That way, you gain familiarity with the site, you gain a following, and you work the system well.

Pick Several. The limitation of just picking one and sticking with it is that you may be missing out on interaction with friends, fans, or other business. In that case, you may need to join several microblogging sites in order to gain broader visibility. Obviously, things can get complex from here on out. How often do you change your status? When was the last time you changed status? Should you do it on all?

Pick them all. Ah, but thankfully, some have devised solutions. It is now possible to update all of your microblogs with one fell swoop (or click) by using aggregators. These powerful updaters will simultaneously update all of the microblog statuses that you give them permission to do. These sites are Socialthing and Profilactic.