Archive for category Social Networks

Facebook Social plugins

Add social plugins to your site with just one line of HTML:

The Like button lets users share pages from your site back to their Facebook profile with one click.

The Activity Feed plugin shows users what their friends are doing on your site through likes and comments.

The Recommendations plugin gives users personalized suggestions for pages on your site they might like.

The Like Box enables users to like your Facebook Page and view its stream directly from your website.

The Login Button shows profile pictures of the user’s friends who have already signed up for your site in addition to a login button.

The Facepile plugin shows the Facebook profile pictures of the user’s friends who have already signed up for your site.

The Comments plugin lets users comment on any piece of content on your site.

The Live Stream plugin lets your users share activity and comments in real-time as they interact during a live event.

via Facebook Developers.

, ,

No Comments

New Groups, New Opportunities – Facebook Developers

Facebook has always been a great place to share information with your friends and keep up with what they’re doing. What hasn’t been as easy is sharing information with small groups of people.

My wife and I take tons of pictures of our kids, and we frequently want to share them with just our immediate family. We could post these pictures to our profiles and hope our families see it. Or we could send individual messages to each of them. But there should be a simpler way to communicate with the whole family.

Today, we’re launching a new version of Groups that does just that. With new Groups, we made it easy for you to build a space for important groups of people in your life—your family, your soccer team, your book club. All you have to do to get started is to create a group, add friends and start sharing.

When a group member posts to the group, everyone in the group will receive a notification about that post. Now I won’t have to guess anymore about whether my parents saw the pictures I posted of their grandkids; when I post in my family group, I’ll know that they’ve been notified about it and that only they will see it. Since information posted in my new groups is only visible to group members by default, I can feel confident about who sees what I post.

We’ve also added a bunch of new features to Groups to make sharing and communication with small groups of people easier. One of them is group chat, one of our most frequently requested features. Until now, you’ve only been able to chat with one person at a time on Facebook. Now you can chat with everyone in your group at once.

Facebook developer forum

Basics
Technical
Business
Archived Topics
Basics

Facebook SDKs

JavaScript, PHP, Python SDK, iPhone, Android

Group chat

via New Groups, New Opportunities – Facebook Developers.

, ,

No Comments

8 Quick Tips for a Facebook Marketing Strategy

8 Quick Tips for Developing a Facebook Marketing Strategy

1. Facebook Will Compete with Search Engines
2. Ignore the Anti-Hype
3. Live with Community Pages
4. Facebook Can Be a Dangerous Place for Brands
5. Build It and They Won’t Come
6. The Changing Face of Facebook
7. Facebook the Retailer
8. A Facebook Page Isn’t a Social Media Strategy

read entire article at:  8 Quick Tips for Developing a Facebook Marketing Strategy.

,

No Comments

Facebook is the New Google

Much of the discussion throughout the Web industry this week has revolved around Thursday’s announcement of Google Instant, the revolutionary new feature that has many business owners wondering about the future of search engine marketing in particular and Internet advertising as a whole. There was some other news, however, that Google may have hoped you missed, as it shifts the marketing conversation from search to social – specifically, away from Google and directly on to Facebook.

Facebook Pages
If your business doesn’t have a presence on the site yet, drop everything you’re doing and go set up a Facebook Page. If you already have a Facebook Page for your business, perhaps you could be getting a little more out of it. Some of the basic rules of thumb include the following:

•    Set goals for your Facebook page and monitor your progress
•    Make your page interesting and informative, and update it as often as you can
•    Promote your Facebook page on your business website and elsewhere; add a Find us on Facebook button wherever you can
•    Reward your Facebook Fans with discounts and special promotions
•    Create a Facebook user group that will be of interest/useful to your audience
•    Join other Facebook user groups that pertain to your industry or niche
•    Take advantage of Facebook’s tools; track your success with Facebook analytics Read the rest of this entry »

,

No Comments

StatusNet microblogging platform

StatusNet is the open source microblogging platform that helps you share and connect in real-time within your own domain.

With StatusNet you can encourage collaboration, build and engage your community, and be in command of your brand. Read the rest of this entry »

No Comments

Hellotxt – Read. Update. Organize.

hellotxt is the simple, FREE way to read, update and organize your life on multiple social networks.

Hellotxt V2 for iPhone/iPad

Now with Integrated News Feed, Augmented Reality View, and the Ability to Doodle Your Status Update! Available from the App Store

Web

Hellotxt is the only website you need to manage your life on multiple social networks, blogging, and micro communication platforms.

Follow our simple sign up process to get started saving time and energy online.

Mobile

Manage your life online via iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad and Android.
You can learn more about Hellotxt for the iPhone/iPad here.
You can learn more about Hellotxt Android here.

The mobile site http://m.hellotxt.com lets you access the same great features as on the website.

via Hellotxt – Read. Update. Organize..

,

No Comments

Online tools and applications – Go2web20

Online tools and applications

Find all Online tools and applications on one page, get a short description, compare, read reviews, see what people are saying about each one on the web, see screencasts and more…
http://www.go2web20.net/

No Comments

Designing a Facebook landing page: 12 of the best

Designing a Facebook landing page: 12 of the best

Good Examples of well built  facebook pages.

As many of you already know we are seeing more and more companies jumping on the bandwagon in an effort to extend their reach beyond the typical platforms.

The site wide uniformity of Facebook has been a flagship characteristic of the Facebook and it seems they have worked very hard to stay within their original business model. Despite this, they have created Facebook fan pages with many different apps that you can use as a way to customize your business presence. Up till now, we have mainly seen this space used for coupons and promotions.

via Designing a Facebook landing page: 12 of the best – Web Design Blog – DesignM.ag.

2 Comments

Young Women & Facebook

The First Thing Young Women Do in the Morning: Check Facebook

here are some other interesting stats regarding young women and Facebook:

* 21% of women age 18-34 check Facebook in the middle of the night

* 63% use Facebook as a networking tool

* 42% think it’s okay to post photos of themselves intoxicated

* 79% are fine with kissing in photos

* 58% use Facebook to keep tabs on “frenemies”

* 50% are fine with being Facebook friends with complete strangers

, , ,

No Comments

Less is more when it comes to social media

Less is more. Social media is essentially about sharing content in the form of words, images and videos. This can be accomplished via as few as three platforms: Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. These platforms allow you access to both a mass market and niche markets. You can participate elsewhere if you have the resources, but better to do a great job on a few platforms than a mediocre job on multiple platforms. Social media’s potential is significant but limited and should be allocated resources accordingly. The best programs are fully integrated with marketing and operational activities.

Listen first. Don’t be that guy who barges into a conversation, says something out of context, and gets tuned out. Monitor first. Learn about what people are saying about your property, your destination and the travel industry. Then message. You can facilitate monitoring by subscribing to a listening tool that scans the web for mentions of your hotel and delivers a daily summary to your desktop. Be disciplined: get in, monitor, message, and get out. Otherwise you’ll lift your head and it’ll suddenly be four hours later.

Make reviews a priority. If you do nothing else, monitor reviews of your hotel, share feedback with staff, and respond to complaints. TripAdvisor is the largest review site, but reviews are popping up everywhere, and Twitter is increasingly being used to air grievances. PhoCusWright reports that almost three times as many reviews were posted on online travel agencies than on traveler review sites last year. Moreover, OTA shoppers who visit review pages are twice as likely to convert. Yes, some reviews are false or exaggerated, but all the more reason to respond.

Leave out the boring parts. We all know someone who can tell a story about her old vacuum cleaner and have us in tears, and another person who can tell us about seeing his mother eaten alive by alligators and have us glancing at the time. Traveler reviews are compelling because they tell stories populated with facts, trivia, tips and humor. Use these elements in your messaging. Be spare with words and generous with imagery, and use hooks that make readers want to click for more. And remember, the subtext to every good story is your hotel’s branding, mission statement and values.

Easy on the smileys and exclamation marks. Your tone should fit your hotel’s branding. Be less formal than when dealing with guests in person, but not overly familiar, and always be professional. Show enthusiasm, but don’t be cutesy or overly promotional. And by that I mean annoying—it will cost you friends and followers. If people other than you think you’re funny, then by all means use humor, but never when dealing with complaints, and avoid sarcasm. Each platform has a different audience and communication style, so adapt your tone and messaging to the medium.

Think of social media as a cocktail party. While mingling, we tend to tune out the chatty Cathys, the braggarts and the Debbie Downers, and we don’t even notice the quiet shy guy in the corner. We’re drawn to passionate people who think before they speak and say things relevant to us. How often should you issue updates? As often as you have something interesting and relevant to share with your primary audience of guests and prospective guests, and not a peep or tweet more. That disqualifies photos from drunken staff parties and birth announcements from housekeeping. Unless someone had octuplets.

Should you start a blog? Probably not. The web is a wasteland of abandoned Facebook pages, blogs and Twitter profiles. Blogs in particular are hard to maintain and time-consuming, often devolving into thinly disguised publicity vehicles or random posts from semi-literates. An abandoned social media platform is like a frayed carpet in your hotel lobby: it speaks of apathy and neglect and is off-putting when stumbled upon. A well-executed blog can give personality to your hotel and drive traffic to your website, but unless you have the skills in-house and are in for the long haul, channel your resources elsewhere.

Turn guests into advocates. Out of ideas and content? No problem. The most compelling social media content comes not from hotels but from guests. Encourage them to use your platforms and their own to share stories, news, reviews, photos, videos and tips. You may be surprised by their enthusiasm. It’s okay if guest content is a bit amateurish—in fact, it’s more authentic. Be sure to acknowledge their efforts.

via Less is more when it comes to social media for hotels.

, ,

No Comments