Browsing Tag: internet

    facebook-flipflops
    Miscellany

    How I Learned to Love … Well, Like … Facebook

    July 23, 2012

    facebook-flipflopsA year ago, I had almost 400 “friends” on Facebook, and another 300 or so friend requests that were awaiting replies.

    And I hated Facebook.

    I’d log on a couple times a week. Every once in a while, I’d see something fun or cool from my wife, one of my sisters, a different relative or a friend across the country. But most of what I saw was unwanted advertising (SEOs and online marketers promoting their articles) and other garbage (Farmville updates, etc.).

    I thought about just zapping my account into oblivion and forgetting Facebook altogether. But there were a couple things pulling me away from that option:

    • I really enjoyed seeing what my relatives and friends were up to, and Facebook was the best way to do that short of calling each of them every day.
    • My wife was using Facebook unconventionally to build her local real estate business and I wanted to see what and how she was doing it. (By “unconventional” I mean she wasn’t using a business page, she’s using her personal Facebook account.)
    • As a guy who speaks about social media at the GetListed.org Local University workshops, I really couldn’t toss in the towel on Facebook and then try to educate small business owners about it.

    I really had no choice but to stay on Facebook and learn how to enjoy it. Here’s what I did:

    1.) Changed my definition of a Facebook “friend.”

    I set rules about who would be on my friends list. I rejected all of the outstanding friend requests that were in my queue. I started mass unfriending — too much self-promotion, too much politics, not enough real friendship with me? All gone. I figured they’re called “friends,” not “acquaintances” for a reason. I can keep in touch with my industry acquaintances just fine on Twitter, so no need to try the same on Facebook.

    I’m currently down from almost 400 friends to 116, and I think I’ll end up with about 100 when I’m finally done.

    2.) Changed my default sharing settings.

    I set “Friends” as my default posting setting, instead of “Public/World.”

    3.) Got more active.

    Since pruning my friends list and changing my sharing settings, I’ve been posting more often and getting responses from people that matter to me.

    The Result

    The content that I get in the News Feed is a million times more enjoyable now. I see stuff from close friends with whom I have real friendships, and from family members that live all across the country. I’ve gone from checking Facebook a couple times per week to checking every day, and sometimes a couple times per day.

    The content that I post is seen by people I care about the most (when I share with friends only), and yet I still have the option to share certain things with the 100-200 people who aren’t on my friends list, but are subscribing to my public updates.

    And that’s how I’ve learned to like Facebook.

    (But I’ll still be watching my privacy settings like a hawk. There’s a difference between liking and trusting.)

    (Image via kudumomo and used via Creative Commons license.)

    spam-comments
    Miscellany

    Blog Comment Spam: Not Quality, but Quantity

    July 18, 2012

    Sometimes blog comment spam isn’t about the quality of the comment, but about the quantity of comments.

    Earlier today, Kelsey managed to leave 10 comments on my small business search marketing blog in the span of nine minutes.

    spam-comments

    (You can click for the full-size image.)

    I’m a big believer in brevity, and I try to publish short blog posts that don’t waste people’s time, but there’s no way Kelsey read those 10 articles in just nine minutes.

    The comments themselves aren’t fabulous, but if there were just one or two of them, I would probably have approved them. But at this quantity? No chance. They were all zapped.

    Good luck with that blog commenting strategy, Kelsey. Shame that s/he didn’t read this post: Case Study: Power of a Blog Comment.

    song-pop
    Music

    Room for Improvement

    July 15, 2012

    As you get older, it’s important to continue to identify areas of your life where you can do better and learn more. You should always be growing and striving to do better.

    Clearly, based on my performance in the Song Pop game, I have a lot of room for improvement in knowing the Modern Rap category.

    song-pop

    (My friend and competitor in this game also has a lot of room for improvement, too. But she still beat me in this round.)

    Miscellany

    Bing vs. Yahoo on Twitter

    June 30, 2012

    There’s all this talk in the search industry about Bing’s market share vs. Yahoo’s market share, and how users are finally using Bing more than they use Yahoo, etc., etc., etc.

    But what I want to know is … when will Bing finally have more Twitter followers than Yahoo??

    bing-yahoo-twitter

    More importantly, here’s how Twitter followings are like search: They both pale in comparison to Google, which currently has close to five million Twitter followers.

    spam
    Miscellany

    Dear Disqus, Here’s a Simple Way to Slow Down Spam

    June 21, 2012

    spam

    One of my responsibilities at Search Engine Land and Marketing Land is to monitor the comments on both sites as much as possible. I usually check 2-4 times per day to make sure our community guidelines are being followed and to keep an eye on spam.

    We recently switched to Disqus on both sites for our comment system, and while comments have increased since then, so, too, has the amount of spam we get. Ugh.

    What’s frustrating about it is that there’s a simple fix that would cut down on probably 80 percent of all the spam we see on both sites: limit the number of comments a new Disqus user can post.

    The vast majority of spam we get is from users like this:

    disqus-spam

    disqus-spam-2

    disqus-spam-3

    Seriously, if you’re leaving more than 5-10 comments on your first day with an account, I bet chances are pretty good that you’re spamming. But 182? 223? 303? On the first day? Wow….

    Yes, I’ve blacklisted all of these accounts and yes, I’ve made this suggestion to Disqus via their feedback system. Fingers crossed someone’s listening.

    costco-shop-online
    Miscellany

    Now You Can Shop Online!

    June 11, 2012

    As I mentioned before, I’m still in the process of unpacking some boxes — primarily old personal paperwork like bills and pay stubs and stuff like that.

    I was going through a folder with stuff from 1999 (yes, really) and found part of their membership statement/invoice. It had this:

    costco-shop-online

    How’s that for a blast from the past?!?

    I love the second line, how instructional it is:

    Simply type www.costco.com in the address field of your internet browser….

    You just know that a lot of their customers were like, What’s an internet browser? Where’s the address field?

    Great stuff. I’ll post more if I find any other archaic gems like this while going through the old boxes.