Facebook Marketing: Groups And Pages

Have you thought about Facebook marketing? Many businesses are using Facebook groups, pages, and advertising to promote their business. Don’t be left behind! Read on to see what Facebook can do for you.

Facebook Marketing with Groups

Community building is still a popular method of online marketing. You can set up your company as a group, and it can be the center of everything that has to do with your brand. Customers and prospective clients can take part in discussions on your Facebook page. Then you may want to encourage them to share the information with others. Setting up a group can be a great way to stay in touch with your potential and existing customers. [Read more...]

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How to Kill a Facebook Spam Bot

A website application knows it has achieved maximum popularity and dazzling success when it begins experiencing withering attacks from viruses. If that’s true, then 7-year-old Facebook has arrived.

According to computer threat experts at Kapersky Labs, there are nearly 340,000 different strains or “signatures” of computer viruses roving wild on the Internet today.

Facebook is now so popular that it too is a breeding ground for all sorts of bugs. Facebook users are reporting widespread attacks including email “bot” SPAM operations, fake alert attacks, phishing gambits, and theft of Facebook account login information and credit card numbers. Many Facebook members may not notice anything amiss and, worse, they may believe they are already using a superior anti-virus product.

Facebook is responding to this growing threat as best it can. In January of 2010, Facebook announced it was initiating a radical security protocol: members may have to show “proof of inoculation” before Facebook will allow them to log in. Facebook Project Manager Jake Brill reports the network may soon block members whose computers have not “scanned clean” recently.

If you suspect you have already been victimized by a Facebook virus, log onto your Facebook account and radically change your password immediately, Brill advises. Then, clean up.

Fortunately, removing a virus that has already taken root on your computer will require only a few tools and an hour or two scanning time. But avoiding repeated infections in the future will require new Facebook, and web-surfing, habits.

News Corp Reports Steep Drop at Digital Unit

News Corp reported a double-digit decline in its digital media business revenue this afternoon. Compared to the previous quarter, the firm said digital revenue dropped 26 percent as a result of lower search and display ad revenue in Q1 2010. In addition to the ongoing economic downturn, the company pointed to “significant transition” at its digital unit.

News Corp CEO Rupert Murdoch suggested the company sees the light at the end of the economic recession’s tunnel. “We appear to be emerging from the bottom of that cycle,” he said. However, he later qualified his statement noting he is “treating this recovery as still a little fragile.”

Slowing traffic at MySpace is negatively affecting the site’s search advertising revenue. “We have not been making our minimum guarantee so our search revenues will not be what was advertised much earlier,” said Murdoch regarding search ad revenues on MySpace. MySpace relinquished to Facebook the title of top social networking site in the U.S. this year according to multiple Web traffic trackers.

In the hopes of deterring comparisons to Facebook, the firm said that the focus at MySpace is on “key content sites.” MySpace is setting its sights on music, video, and gaming content, rather than competing directly with Facebook or Twitter, said the company.

Last year, News Corp. cited a softening in display advertising. However, by early this year, the firm expressed a positive outlook regarding online display advertising.

Last month News Corp changed the name of its Fox Interactive Media unit to News Corp Digital Media; the division encompasses Beliefnet, MySpace, Fox Audience Network, IGN Entertainment, Photobucket, and Fox Mobile Group. Along with the name change, the firm made several additions to its digital staff.

Marking progress at WSJ.com’s efforts to supplement its online advertising revenue, Murdoch said the site now has more than 1 million paid subscribers. This is “important as we work to get compensated for our online content from all our news sources,” he added.

News Corp reported $571 million in profit in Q1 2010, up 11 percent over the same period a year ago. Strong growth in its cable and film divisions offset losses in other segments.

Google experiment to search your friends’ Twitter, Facebook and other postings

Google launched a new product Monday that will allow users to find recently updated public online postings by a person’s network of friends, colleagues or media sources.

The goal of “Social Search,” available Monday afternoon at www.google.com/experimental, is to find relevant postings on Twitter, in blogs or other public Web content published by a user’s circle of online colleagues.

[Read more...]

Facebook To Crack Down on Sponsored Status Updates

Facebook To Crack Down on Sponsored Status Updates

Facebook has decided to keep its platform clean from advertisements ran by its users in a proposed update to the Statements of Rights and Responsibilities Site Governance.

2. You will not use your personal profile for your own commercial gain (such as selling your status update to an advertiser).

Facebook users have time to leave feedback on the proposed changes until 18th August 10.00PDT.

This is a bold move in a fight against the the Pay Per model, better known from Izea (Formerly PayPerPost), who recently launched Sponsored Tweets.

At the same time Facebook announced that they can block the right to publish page updates to the newsfeed, killing the concept of generic pages.

When you publish content or information to your Page we have no obligation to distribute your content or information to users.

When the Facebook redesign was launched one of the main features was the new power which was given to pages and it should have come as no surprise that companies but also marketers would play with these. I have found the new pages to be a great social tool and potentially a vertical business. It did not take long before new companies such as Status Plug launched and offered sponsored status updates for page owners. Status Plug which listed several page with more than 1m fans at premium rates, such as Laughing when someone fails (minimum offer $390), pulled the plug today after the new policy for pages.

Although I can understand that Facebook doesn’t want users to earn money from the platform I think they are missing out on a major stream of income here, just like Twitter does. With the size of both platforms each could easily set up their own ads market place and cash in all while making the users happy. The argument here is simple: it are the users who contribute to the popularity of the platform and certainly deserve some credit. No one else can better implement and control a maintained disclosure policy than the platform development team.
For Facebook at the same time it would be a great opportunity to show that they know how to implement advertising, while using the users name, without creating havoc, because I for one am still waiting for the first pundit to shout: ‘Facebook, DO evil’ as new motto for the Palo Alto company.

Of course you can always become a fan of Google Adsense on Facebook.