Posts Tagged ‘web 2.0’

Finding Time For Social Media

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Recently I was invited to join my first social networking site. I thought I’d blog about it - you always remember the “first time”. Joining was something I’d been putting off for ages. (Do I sound like a reluctant virgin?) Seriously, I can barely keep up with my emails as it is.

Where would I find the time? There was too much to do to spend hours lounging about with a bunch of cyber mates.

So I bowed to the inevitable and started with Facebook, Twitter and a study group on Ning. After all, there was no value in being the only one missing out. Particularly as social media is shaping up to be the driving force in website traffic for years to come.

Google’s search market growth has peaked. Newer competing technologies are on the rise. With each one there are also new challenges to face.

Employers hate the thought of their staff squandering precious work time on social networking. But they can’t afford to stand apart from it either. Offline it is said that an unhappy customer will tell 10 people about it. If he rants in social media, the complaint is instantly broadcast to 1000’s if not tens of thousands of people.

But that much leverage can work in a company’s favour too. By delivering good value and service, the benefit of that can be multiplied many times via the web. Combine that with clever traffic strategies and a website could become your biggest cash register. Thanks to social media it’s possible to do remarkable amounts of business without ever needing to get a page 1 search rank. (Though it certainly helps).

Time for social mediaWeb 2.0 is here to stay. We might as well use it to our advantage. So how does one cope with a dozen different profiles without drowning in the minutae of day to day trivia?

Simple. Treat it like you would any other business exercise.

• Know EXACTLY what you want out of it
• Have a social media PLAN
• SCHEDULE time to work the plan
• Be DISIPLINED and avoid all distractions

This last point is probably the hardest. Social media is neither good or bad. Just like guns or fire, it’s all about how you use it.

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How Do I Delete My Profile?

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Social media sites: friend or foe? What happens when you want to move on from a social media website? Ever noticed that not one of them provides an easy to find “unsubscribe” button?

And why would they?

The information you put on your profile about YOU is a marketer’s dream come true. Big business will pay even bigger money for this data and social media sites know it. Why else would Google have paid $1.65 Billion for YouTube, a company that had never earnt a cent?

Delete my profileConsider how it used to be done. Survey companies would round up a few people and paid them to take part in focus groups. Then they’d grill them hoping that the results reflected a fair cross section of the target demographic. These days people voluntarilly rush in their millions to spew out their personal and private details online.

Read the terms of service clearly. Web 2.0 sites control everything you put up on their pages. Sure they say you still “own” it. But you sign away your right to stop them doing anything they want with it. So how is that really ownership?

Does something really delete when you delete it? And what if you want to get rid of your whole account? Leaving evidence of your wild partying days online forever might not be a wise move. What if you later climb up the corporate ladder or get a job in the public spotlight?

Anything can be searched and dredged up about you in seconds. A jealous colleague or spiteful jerk could present it out of context and ruin your reputation instantly. Too bad it took you years of hard work to build up in the first place. Consider the fake sex photos that caused Pauline Hanson her last election defeat.

“It seemed like a good idea at the time,” will be a poor consolation.

Signing up is easy but deleting a social media profile is anything but. It would be a simple thing to put an “unsubscribe” link like you see at the bottom of automated emails. Instead they make you jump through 20 hoops. Most people don’t bother which leaves these companies free to make a fortune from your personal data.

If you decide to “unfriend” your current “friends forever” social media site but don’t know how just follow the links below. They contain step by step instructions for many of the popular sites.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2342599,00.asp

This one for ning:

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080921091159AAZwfMy

Ever had rough treatment at the hands of a social media site? Do you know how to unsubscribe from any others not covered in these links? Help someone else by leaving a comment.

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