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affaholic has been a member since July 16th 2009, and has created 34645 posts from scratch.

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Doing Facebook Hashtags the Right Way

If you’re not using Facebook hashtags the right way, you’re definitely using them the wrong way.

After what seems like years of speculation, Facebook finally announced that it now supports clickable hashtags. Facebook calls the addition the first step of “a series of features that surface some of the interesting discussions people are having about public events, people and topics.” If you know how to use them the right way, hashtags can be so much more.

Few of the Facebook features released over the years have lived up to their hype and really transformed how social media power users interact with the network, but hashtags have the potential to change all that. Hashtags are essentially identifiers (denoted with the pound – # – symbol) that indicate a similarity of a content theme or interest. You’ve likely seen hashtags pretty much everywhere, as Facebook’s own Instagram, as well as Twitter, Pinterest and, even, Tumblr support them. Hashtags are essentially just a way for users to scan strings of thought and see ‘memes’ without following everyone that is using the hashtag. 

Hashtags are created by users and when clicked upon by others, and they can be linked to the entire conversation thread surrounding that hashtag. Hashtags present the perfect opportunity to follow a conversation, but more importantly, reply to others, interact, and drive engagement for your brand and its social media profile.

Hashtags on Facebook work pretty much the same way they do everywhere else – with a handful of exceptions. Let’s explore what the differences in Facebook hashtags are and two tips for how you, as a social media power user, can leverage them to your advantage.

MONITOR: The first step if you’re planning to fully maximize your hashtags on Facebook is to understand how they are currently being used – by your own followers and by those on the broader network. Start by searching for a hashtag. To do this, pick a keyword you’d like to see information about and append the pound symbol (#keyword), entering it into the Facebook search box.
Searching for the hashtag will return updates from other Facebook members that you may not (yet) be connected to, providing an opportunity to ultimately connect (see the next section) with like-minded individuals and potential prospects for your own post. Searching regularly for hashtags related to your brand is also a valuable social listening tool. Hashtag research can provide an understanding of what’s being talked about, shared and discussed – providing competitive insights and an advantage when it comes to creating your own updates, too.  

Facebook, and other social media management tools, aren’t yet providing any statistics (at least that we’re familiar with) about #hashtag clicks, but if there’s some use, count on it appearing in short order.

INTERACT: With a firm understanding of what hashtags are circulating, as well as the tone of those hashtags (positive, negative or neutral) you can and should start interacting with the people using them. To do this, like and share their posts and, if necessary, even make a clever comment related to it. Interaction is a fundamental element of success with social media – if you don’t do it, someone else will. Put yourself out there in front of an audience that shares similar thoughts, experiences or beliefs and you’re better positioned to receive a positive response.

Perhaps the most important thing to know about hashtags is that they exist. It will be important in the future to monitor their use related to your brand, interacting and engaging with the Facebook community as needed. Hashtags don’t need to define your social media presence on the network, but they can definitely support it and in a very positive way.

View full post on ‘Net Features

Daily Search Forum Recap: June 19, 2013

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.

Search Engine Roundtable Stories:

Google Search May Be Updating…..

View full post on Search Engine Roundtable

The Business of Simple

I read recently that the very simple act of walking barefoot on grass is a powerful and natural stress reliever. In the last year alone, the US paid over $42 million in losses related to stress and anxiety (lost time, medication, etc). It’s big business. And yet, taking off your shoes and putting your feet in the grass is one way to relieve stress (at least a little). 2013-06-16 15.00.25-1

All around us, the opportunity to ratchet up and feel a lot of stress and to try and overcomplicate everything abounds. At the moment I am typing this sentence, 325 NEW books on diet have been published over the last 30 days (and that’s only in the English language, that I searched). So well over 325 versions of what you should eat and how it will make you healthier and how wonderful your life will be. Our grandparents and great grandparents (most of them) did okay without diet books. They ate what they could afford. They did a lot of moving around. They didn’t need 325 new diet books.

The Business of Simple

The trick is this: simple has become a choice, and something you have to select over and over again. Simple is now yours to watch out for and care for, like a steward. You can buy the fancy bicycle, or you can buy the one that gets you there. You can use twelve different social networks for different purposes, or you can pick a few and work with those. All “things” answers have a simple and a complex option. Chipotle has about 16 options on their menu and can make thousands of variable combinations. Plenty of restaurants have pages and pages of options.

You don’t want to pay $9 for the hotel water bottle? Stop at the drug store and buy water there before going to your room. Simple. You don’t know how to keep up with MashableTechCrunchHackerNewsGawkerWhatever? Stop. I did. Years ago. Now, I just let you tell me if something’s interesting. Simple is my business. It’s a choice.

The Secret of Simple

Here’s the secret to most things we don’t know enough about: if we can, try it ourselves and learn something. If we can’t try without some base knowledge, learn from someone who knows. If we can’t do that, read something and try based on that. And so on. Guess what new books about lifting weights in them have that the old books don’t? New pictures. And some new names. Sometimes, a new line of thinking. And yet, the paleo diet (pretending we’re cavemen) and the CrossFit fitness craze (pretending we’re Olympic weightlifters) are mostly shiny reworks of older ideas.

Simple is often something we already know, but don’t trust ourselves to believe. (tweetable)

Speaking of Simple

This weekend, Sunday to be precise, I’ll share with you my simple approach on business and marketing. You’ll read it, nod perhaps, and agree that it’s simple, and yet, it’s likely something you’re not doing the way I’m doing it. I’d love for you to peek.

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View full post on chrisbrogan.com

Google Settles Stock Split Lawsuit

Google announced its intention to issue Class C stock last year, however the Brockton Retirement Board and shareholder Philip Skidmore sued the firm, claiming that the firm’s co-founders engineered the stock split to keep control of the firm.

View full post on Search Engine Watch – Latest

SearchCap: The Day In Search, June 19, 2013

Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the Web. From Search Engine Land: New Updates To Bing Ads Intelligence, Excel Add-In For Keyword Research And Analysis Microsoft has released an update to Bing Ads Intelligence, the free Excel…



Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

View full post on Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing