Posted by: Giselle on: September 13, 2011
Myth #1: Social media is a total waste of time.
Not true! Social media is a partial waste of time. Of course you can lose track of your time while using social media, but there are many other ways you can use these networks to connect with people with your same interests and/or potential customers.
The benefit in building relationships and strengthening your connections with friends, colleagues, customers, potential customers and the people in your community is worth the investment. Also it’s a free medium to show off your expertise. You establish a following. Besides that, what’s wrong with a little diversion in your day anyway? Just budget your time, try to spend no more than 30 minutes a day. Most people check their networks in the morning, again around lunchtime, and then at night while they are watching “Wipe Out.” Speaking of a waste of time!
Myth #2: The relationships on social media are too shallow.
Maybe the interaction on social media isn’t the deepest stuff, people don’t always show their real selves and, then again, you don’t want to know some of the information a few people post. Like who needs constant updates about what ice cream place you’ve checked into. But, marketing guru Jay Conrad Levinson says 68% of customers are ignored after the sale in business. How does that translate into people visiting your website, your blog or your business? Social media provides an easy-to-use channel for keeping in touch with the people you want to reach most, like those potential customers or those who are willing to give a valuable referral. It’s the new word-of-mouth!
It’s the fastest, most efficient way to share information. You find an article, blog post, or website that would interest your friends or followers and you’re a couple of clicks away from sharing something that may benefit them greatly.
Another benefit is the support you’ll get as you build relationships. Ask a question and you’ll get an answer – probably more than one. Ask for an opinion and boy, you’ll get tons. Ask for help and you’ll get that, too.
Myth #3: People who use social media are vain because they think that people really care about the minutest details of their lives.
They say people don’t care to hear about what you are eating. But people do care about what other people do and even what they eat. There are entire TV networks dedicated to food. For example, in France people can sit around for hours talking about food, books, and what’s the best way to insult tourists. Critics make it sound like you should only post about really important things and never talk about the trivial. But on social media, you are not expected to only post the important things you are doing. Talking about your day is just how you participate in these networks. It makes you sound human. You are human aren’t you?
Myth #4: I don’t have time for social media, I have more important things to do.
Really? What are you doing that is more important than staying connected with the other human beings in your life? What are you doing that’s taking all of your time and making you so antisocial? Please tell me it doesn’t involve hiding ammo underground! Don’t you have 10-20 minutes a day you could use to share with other people? Do you really have zippo spare time?
Myth #5: Social Media is too overwhelming and hard to learn.
Or could it be you don’t want to dedicate the time it takes to learn to use social media? I imagine when the phone was invented and first placed in offices, some people didn’t think they had time for it either. Someone probably said, “I don’t have time to pick up this contraption and talk into it every time it rings…I am too busy…I write with a feather pen for crying out loud!” You have time to add another vital form of communication to your work if it means more effective communications, don’t you? You have time if it means increasing sales, right?
Giselle Aguiar is a social media specialist and an Award-Winning Christian writer who’s been doing Internet Marketing since 1995.
Posted by: Giselle on: July 31, 2011
Blogging: Why blog?
SEO: Search Engine Optimization Search Engines Don’t see
Search Engines Do see, pick up and follow:
The Best Thing About Blogs
Blogging Tools
Finding Time to Blog
Twitter http://www.twitter.com
Jargon:
Promoting Your Blog
YouTube
Managing It All
Wrap-Up
Happy blogging and tweeting! Giselle www.giselleaguiar.com
Posted by: Giselle on: June 10, 2011
Here’s a Twitter tidbit: Every time you follow someone, they get a message that you’re following them with a link to your Twitter page. They can see your bio and choose to follow you or not.
In trying to build my Twitter following (I was at around 180 followers in mid-May), I started searching for some of the Christian heavy hitters. (The main target market for my new novel is Christian Women.)
I also got the idea, since I’m on a non-existant budget for book promotion, to contact all the female radio personalities on the Christian radio stations. I searched for them on Twitter and started following all that I could find – including the male ones.
Well, the evening DJ on K-Love messaged me back through Twitter asking how he could get a copy of my book!
BTW, as of this posting, less than a month later, I’m at 334 Twitter followers, the majority of them are Christian and several have over 10 thousand followers themselves. When I announce the availability of my novel (very soon), I hope they will “retweet” (RT) it to all their followers. That’s worldwide marketing in 140 characters. Oh, and did I mention – it’s free!
The trick is to search for the keywords pertaining to whatever you’re marketing and find folks with similar interests. Posts should stick with that interest so folks will RT to their followers.
Social Media is the new “word of mouth” – gotta do it.
Happy Tweeting!
Giselle Aguiar
Check out her new novel, Deo Volente
Posted by: Giselle on: April 4, 2011
When a company has a form on their website to contact them, it’s for clients, not for solicitations. Several times now, I’ve gotten contact form submissions from Defend-Expert.com with the Subject line saying: Your Reputation. Well, here’s to their reputation – you are a SPAMMER!
I would never use the service of someone who contacts me in that format just like I would not buy something from a telemarketer who calls me at home.
Unfortunately, there’s no “do not contact” list. Your forms are there for the world to use. You can’t hit the SPAM button because it’s coming from your form. It’s the lowest of the low.
Defend-Expert – you are a SPAMMER. Stop doing it.
Proper Internet Marketing is “inbound marketing”. If someone wants your service or product, they will search for it. If you have your blogs and website done correctly, they will find it.
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