Posts Tagged CEA Marketing Group

New Facebook Profile App – Hurry, it’s Launching!

Back in September during the Facebook F8 Developers Conference, Facebook announced their most significant changes to the Facebook Platform since its launch in 2007. Once of the most talked about is the ‘re-invention’ of the Facebook Profile through the use of TIMELINE.

Broken down, Facebook Timeline will essentially tell the story of you (yes, you ala your Profile)  in roughly three parts – Stories, Apps and an inventive way to allow you to express who you are. The layout will have stories appearing at the bottom of the page. In the middle, there will be tiles to display all of the Apps and the things you have done with them. The neatest thing is the ‘Timeline’; displaying years so you can literally go back in time.

Although currently available in beta stage, developers (apps developers) can try it out! Not a developer? Become one – it’s quite simple. Below are some guidelines to get started:

1. Visit FACEBOOK to start the developer access process.
2. Click ‘Create a New App’ and name it whatever you want. Of course, you’ll have to agree to the Platform Privacy Policy. Then click on ‘continue’ – you will then have to submit a CAPTCHA.
3. Go to your app’s main settings screen and find ‘Open Graph’ on the left hand side. Once there, you’ll be directed to ‘Getting Started Using Open Graph.’
4. Test It Out! Follow along the test route and type in any VERB in the first box and then any NOUN in the second; then click ‘Get Started.’
5. You’ll almost there! You’ll be taken to a new page where you should change your default settings. Of course, there will be a few pages of settings to swim through.
6. Visit the Facebook Home Page; and there should appear an option to tryout the new Timeline on your home page.

Just a note that until this is live (rumors have it that October 9th will be the day); only other developers will be able to see your new timeline.

Here are my ‘Before’ and ‘After’ photos so you can see the difference!

 

BEFORE – OLD PLATFORM

 

AFTER – NEW PLATFORM

WOW!  Huge difference, don’t you agree! Needless to say, now is the time to play with it before your profile changes on you overnight without knowing it.  Heaven knows we’ve seen quite a few changes lately from Facebook; so at least you know have a heads up on this one!

Be sure and share your new profile photos when you’re finished!  Would love to see how it turns out!

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Thoughts on Social Media as a Customer Service Tool

I know a lot has been publicized about using social media as a way of providing excellent customer service. I think this is just one way social media can be used; it’s also probably the most time-consuming and has the greatest possibility for doing more harm than good. The reason I say that . . . unless you have expert personnel able to address customer service inquiries, complaints etc. quickly and efficiently, than using social media to show off how much you care, your responsive and knowledge etc. isn’t really going to work all that well. If you do consumer forums where customers help customers, I can see that working, but none of the social media platforms in my opinion, lend themselves to that function very well. Plus, you have to have highly invested individuals or advocates of your brand or product that would participate – very difficult to gain traction in.

I’m in the camp that social media doesn’t have to be a customer service tool and in most cases, actually should not be one. You, as a company investing in social media, are contributing lots of money and time to making these social pages work for you. Yes, there is the interaction part, which is great and everything, but you don’t have to allow people to bash your brand on a site you are paying for. That’s just silly really. If someone posts something you don’t like on your page, you aren’t committing some sort of cardinal social media sin by erasing it. Just because a lot of people know about this customer service in social media idea, you set the objectives and purpose of your page. Consumers may feel entitled to voice their opinion, but you also have the right to manage your page the way you want. For most of my clients, we will leave criticism up if it meets a standard of intelligence, meaning it’s not the ranting of a crazed and incoherent individual. If it actually has some substance and is written in a respectful and thoughtful way, we keep it. But, set a protocol for how to handle negative feedback ahead of time, because it probably will happen at some point, and you should have philosophy on how to handle those situations. Also, if you don’t want to use your page for customer service, make sure to not include any posts or language that would lead people to think that. That way, you aren’t falsely promising something you can’t really deliver on.

Brought to you by CEA Marketing Group.

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