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Editor’s Note: Skellie is the director for the Envato Tuts+ network and drives the social media promotion for nine brands with over 100,000 Facebook fans. This article is an excerpt from her newest book, Successful Facebook Marketing, sold by Rockable Press.

Your goals with Facebook should not only be to get more Likes and more traffic. One of the first things people learn at Business School is that it costs much more time, energy, and often money to add a new customer than it does to retain an existing customer. Keeping your fans loyal and happy is just as important, if not more important, than finding new fans. For this reason, it’s important to use your Facebook Page to build more loyalty among your existing fans, and to gain a better understanding of them.

As I mentioned earlier, comments are one of the most useful ways fans can interact with your Facebook posts. Every time a fan leaves a comment it is shared on their profile and in their friends’ News Feeds. While you’re building brand loyalty and interacting directly with your audience, you’re also creating pathways for new fans to find your Page. For this reason, content that encourages discussion will be one of the best possible additions to your Facebook Page.

Ask Questions!

If you want to encourage discussion, sometimes the simplest path is best. Ask a question! You’ll see this kind of content on many Facebook Pages. There are lost of different types of questions you can ask.

To ask a question or poll, use the ‘Question’ link under your Page’s ‘Share’ options. If you like, you can convert your question into a poll by selecting ‘Add poll options.’

Create a Question

Create a Question on Facebook.

Questions about your brand, product, or service. Though these kinds of questions do stimulate discussion, they’re particularly useful for the insights they can give you about your audience. Here, you can see an example of a Page asking for feedback on how fans consume the website’s content, and how this could be improved.

Question about your business or brand.

Questions that are relevant to your audience. This operates on the basic social principle that people like to discuss the things they have in common. If you ran a blog about graphic design, for example, you’d be safe in betting your Facebook fans are interested in the topic. So why not post a general question or discussion point on graphic design?

The same approach can be applied to any Facebook Page. Here you can see an example of an expert in making money with blogs asking fans whether they sell eBooks through their blogs.

Ebooks question (by Darren Rowse/problogger)

Questions that are relevant to everyone. Facebook is, by its nature, a fun and informal platform. People are familiar with using it to chat with friends, organize their social calendar, and share bits of their everyday lives. Brands have been able to add a similar feel to their Facebook Pages by asking fun, informal questions that everyone can participate in. This can include questions like ‘What are you doing right now?’, ‘Do you prefer Coke or Pepsi?’, and ‘What’s your favorite video game of all time?’

If the tone of your Page is usually quite formal, you may need to set up your question a little bit, or the change in tone could be too jarring. Try something like: ‘Fun question today: What’s the most beautiful place you’ve ever visited?’ By making it clear that this informal question is a departure from your usual content style, fans will be more accepting of the change in tone.

If you’re still concerned about changing your tone too much, try saving these kinds of questions and discussions for the weekend. Fans may be much more receptive to a ‘Favorite movie?’ discussion point on a lazy Sunday afternoon than they’d be on a hectic Monday morning!

Who doesn't love pizza?

 

Want to learn more about successfully using Facebook to grow your business? Check out Skellie’s book, Successful Facebook Marketing! It’s available  from Rockable in three e-book formats, or in print on Amazon. All Rockable e-books come with a 100% satisfaction money back guarantee.

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Credit: Yuri Arcurs on Photodune

I’ve exchanged business cards with plenty of freelancers. There’s one thing that strikes me over and over again, though: a freelancer may have an incredibly well designed business card that lists a link to some random portfolio site that the freelancer in question has set up a profile on.

It’s an easy way to get a website up: fill out a short form, upload a couple of images and you’re ready to go. But listing such portfolio sites on your business card, or as the main point of contact for seeing your work, can be dangerous to your freelancing career. Instead, it’s important to purchase your own domain name and use that.

The Danger of Not Having Your Own Domain Name

Sometimes things happen — things that can leave you with a thousand business cards listing a link to a portfolio site that doesn’t even exist anymore. When you don’t control the link that you use to connect with clients, if anything ever happens to that platform, you may have all the people you’ve connected with in the past trying to find you at a place that’s disappeared off the web entirely. That’s a dangerous position to be in.

Having a domain name of your own, even if it just redirects to that portfolio profile you’ve set up, gives you much more control over the situation. If a site goes down, you can quickly redirect your domain name somewhere else, even if it’s just to another portfolio site. The same goes for an email address based off of your domain name.

Control is the name of the game: there’s a reason that big businesses buy up domain names that include all sorts of variations on the company’s actual name. As a freelancer, it may not be necessary to pick up every variation on your own name, but having at least a domain name associated with your freelance business is important if you want to control how easily clients and other contacts can find you. And it’s worth remembering that it’s probably going to be easier to find a domain name today than it will be down the road. It’s gotten somewhat difficult to find short .com addresses, and as more and more businesses build an online presence, it’s only going to get harder.

Don’t Let Cost Stop You

The biggest objection to setting up a freelancer’s website is money, followed closely by time — and time really is money in this situation, considering how easily you can pay another freelancer to set up a site. But cost shouldn’t be the biggest factor for freelancers: it should be the potential return on your investment. Considering that you can do the bare basics of buying a domain name and redirecting it to some free site you’ve set up somewhere for about $10 per year, it’s hard to argue that you can’t afford a website at all.

But there’s a bigger question at stake: how much can a website earn you over time? Just the fact that you have a website can communicate all sorts of information to a prospective client: a website sends the message that you’re serious about your business and you will handle projects professionally. Whether or not you can be a professional without a website is unimportant — many clients will subconsciously judge you on the basis of your website. That means that your website can be key in converting potential clients into actual clients — making it a matter of whether or not your site is providing you with a valuable return on your investment, rather than just a question of how much it will cost you up front.

Photo credit: Some rights reserved by Yuri Arcurs.

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Austin, Flash Website, HTML, XHTML, CSS, Flash Website, Flash Websites, Flash Website Design, Flash Website Templates, Web Design, Website Design, Web Designer, Alaa Haddad, www.FlashWebCenter.com, Austin Web Design


Source Files – www.developphp.com Series Playlist – www.youtube.com In part 5 we create the administrator directory and set a link to the CMS administrator back end from the bottom of the home page. The back end admin directory will have its own index page to be the central home of the control panel. Learn how to build custom content management systems using PHP and MySQL. Cool dynamic basic sites that anyone can edit.


This is part 2… A very simple approach to build a professional website the right way using Dreamweaver CSS build your css site without knowing html code – learn more go to www.thinkdreamweaver.com taught by master adobe teacher since 1987 – 23 years

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This video series, hosted by Michael Gross, will teach you the simple how-to workshop techniques you need to know to take an HO scale electric train set and make it a scenic model railroad. Well show you how to build a 4×8 model train table (benchwork) from plywood, lay sections of track, create easy realistic scenery using foam and paint, assemble model buildings, and wire your layout with a DC power pack. When youre done, youll have a railroad that operates well and looks real. Our techniques would work in N, O, S, G, or Z scale also. This video is scene 8, Scenery part 2 how-to. For more information and a free booklet with more tips visit greatesthobby.com. The Worlds Greatest Hobby program is a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the fun, relaxing, and fascinating hobby of model railroading. Primary sponsors of our series are Atlas Model Railroad Co., Bachmann Trains, Kato Precision Railroad Models, Wm. K. Walthers Inc., and Kalmbach Publishing. Co, publisher of Model Railroader and Classic Toy Trains magazines. To contact the World’s Greatest Hobby e-mail Info@GreatestHobby.com Visit our website at www.greatesthobby.com


www.1stoptutorials.com – In this tutorial we will start building our div tags and html coding for our top link bar. You will notice once we have finished that we do not have much html code atall to make this work. Let me know if you get any problems and i will be more than happy to help. Ali


How to build a website with html/css – Dreamweaver layout


A very simple approach to build a professional website the right way using Dreamweaver CSS build your css site without knowing html code – learn more go to www.thinkdreamweaver.com taught by master adobe teacher since 1987 – 23 years

Artisteer - Web Design Generator