Is Facebook Hurting our Families and Friends?

I joined Facebook a little over 3 years ago because that’s when we started our business and became specialists in Social Media. We are in the business of promoting Facebook for business. It’s just what we do. Along the way, I started using Facebook more and more for connecting with friends, family and “blasts from the past”. Lately, I have been questioning whether this is a good thing or a bad thing and here’s why:

      1. It has reduced the number of phone calls and actual interactions. While I believe this may be good for business (and not all of the time – face-to-face contact is a good part of an overall business strategy), I am sometimes saddened that the only place to catch up with family or friends is through Facebook. And it really blows my skirt up when someone uses the “I didn’t see it on Facebook” as an excuse.
      2. It has caused unwitting arguments. I had a certain incident where I liked a page that happened to be a competitor of someone close to me. The page was beneficial to us from our marketing standpoint, but I was called out on it and basically forced to “unlike” the page due to this conflict of interest.
      3. Sometimes people post things that they are feeling, which may have a profound impact on another family member or friend. I have had family members or friends remark to me that they were hurt or upset about comments or postings from other family members or friends. While I understand that “intent” is a key factor, sometimes it’s just a post where it didn’t enter someone’s mind that someone else might be hurt before that enter key was pressed. When we post on Facebook, we are generally posting our feelings. Unless privacy controls are strictly set to restrict certain people, everyone gets to see what our feelings are, be they happy or sad. This sometimes causes old wounds to resurface and an argument to ensue or it may just remind a person of losses, things they wish had been different, things they wish are different. You get the drift.
      4. Arguments or “discussuments” with family members or friends happen. Does it hurt you or help you that you can keep up with what’s going on in their life because you can still see the status on Facebook? And if they hide their statuses or, God forbid, the dreaded “UNFRIENDING” occurs, you may find yourself at a point of anger, frustration, hurt, fear or apathy. How does this affect this relationship? If you were not online, wouldn’t you pick up the phone more readily and try to come to an understanding?
      5. Old Wounds. Have you “friended” someone from the past and had it bring up an old wound? I bet most of us have – whether it’s an “old love”, an ex-spouse and their family, or a memory of being ignored by the popular kid in high school. How about a once very close friendship that managed to just disappear? Somehow you manage to reconnect on Facebook but it doesn’t rekindle that once close tie.

When we taught the Facebook class for social media at the local tech college over the last 2 years, one of the examples we gave as “what not to do” was this one:
Now this may be somewhat of an extreme, but it is an example of how things might slip out that others could be hurt by. And, of course, much of the comments that we see may be taken much more to heart than the writer intended. This same type of thing occurs in email.

Emotions are hard to read when you’re not looking someone dead in the eye or hearing the sound of their voice.

A Boy and His Great GrandmotherI’m in the process of evaluating whether or not staying connected with family and friends on social networks is something to reconsider. If I come to the conclusion that it isn’t, and I start the un-friending process, please don’t be offended – it’s not personal. I’d much rather talk to you over the phone or visit with you in person. I am a huge proponent of family and friend get-togethers and meaningful relationships. The featured photo in this post is of my grandmother and my son a long time ago. It is a photo that memorializes a connection that just can’t be made online.

I know there are lists and I know that I can segregate my comments to specific audiences. This thought process is in its infancy stages. We, as a business, will of course stay on Facebook both through transparent personal profiles and our business page. I do believe that Facebook is a fantastic place for businesses to connect.

What are your thoughts? Is this what the future holds and you need to just “deal with it”? Or would you prefer that IRL (In Real Life) interaction with your family and friends? Is any interaction better than no interaction? Are we too internet focused? Is instant gratification the “all important”?

I don’t know about you, but I need a hug.

Ten Steps to Social Media Success

When we meet with clients who want to use social media to grow their business, our project plan includes these 10 steps.  The “strategy” that results is often very different, but that’s OK because no single solution works for every business. If you know you want to get started, but don’t know where to begin, start with these Ten Steps:

Ten Steps to Social Media Success

  1. Educate yourself on the latest tools and techniques in Social Media
  2. Define your business objectives
  3. Identify your target market
  4. Decide how much time you have to spend on social media
  5. Decide who will manage your company’s social media
  6. Choose the social media channels you will use
  7. Develop a strategy to achieve your objectives
  8. Set up your social media channels
  9. Engage with your audience
  10. Manage your campaign and monitor your progress

This is an over-simplification of the process, but it outlines the major steps you should follow to be successful. If you have questions or get stuck on any of these steps, call us. We can help.

Inspiration Comes in Many Ways

As most of my friends and “fans” know, I’m not a huge blogger. I do get a few atta-girls every now and then for writing a small post, but not blogging as often as I should definitely rates an “oh sh_t” instead. Because, as we all know, life is a series of atta-girls(boys) and oh-sh_ts.  But today, I will write.  And I don’t need the atta-girl.  I’m passing out atta-boys and atta-girls today because this week, I have been inspired.

This week, I was invited to attend a meeting for the Milwaukee Chapter of EWI – Executive Women International by a good friend and business associate.  What a fantastic opportunity she presented me with. EWI was established in San Francisco in 1938 by Lucille Johnson Perkins.  Ms. Perkins recognized the importance and potential of an association bringing key women together to promote their firms and improve their community. I plan to join this organization’s Milwaukee Chapter because it embodies many of my beliefs and it will provide another way for me to give back to the community. One of the greatest things that I left with after this meeting was a renewal of spirit and drive courtesy of this group of lovely, friendly, professional women. They shared a fantastic poem during dinner that every person should read. They should read it to their daughters and their mothers and their friends. It is quite simply called “She”, by Kobi Yamada. Not only was I inspired by its words, but I was inspired to create the image in this post reflecting the words of that poem. Click on it and read it. And then celebrate and share it with a woman you know and love.

My second atta-boy is posthumous. As has been relayed across every media channel yesterday and today a thousand times over, a great man, Steve Jobs, has left us. I have only become an Apple fan in the last couple of years after purchasing both an iPhone and a MacBook Air. I can tell you that I’m a huge fan of both. But it’s not the products that bring Mr. Jobs the atta-boy or me the inspiration – it’s his pure, unadulterated quest to follow the beat of his own drummer. It’s his speech to Stanford University in their 2005 Commencement. It’s his brilliance in forward thinking. It’s his resilience in the face of once being fired from his own company. And it’s his obvious determination to keep moving forward until the last hour – even as he battled his life threatening illness. This is deserving of an “atta-boy” – and so much more. And I just needed to say that. Rest in peace Steve Jobs. Your body may have left us, but your legacy and your spirit will live on and inspire so many more. And your family is in our thoughts and prayers.

So, for you, today – move forward, give back, aspire to do more, inspire those around you.

5 Quick WordPress Plugin Tips

I love WordPress. And it’s pretty much my site builder of choice these days. Adding functionality through plugins is a pretty common thing  to do, but too many plugins or those of the wrong kind, can sometimes make a mess of your site. There are also plugins that are put out by some unsavory types that are guaranteed to make a mess of your site. When you search for plugins through WordPress, there is a link on each plugin entitled “Details”.  Always click that link before installing and review each tab of information on the plugin. In addition, let these 5 simple tips help guide you in your decision making process:

  1. When was it last updated?  If it was 2 years ago, this might be an issue.
  2. What version of WordPress is is compatible with? It really should be compatible with the latest version.
  3. How many times it has been downloaded? This gives insight into its popularity.
  4. Visit the actual “Plugin Homepage”.  Is it a valid and up to date URL?
  5. Ratings – What do other users say?  Does it have a good rating?  Do most say “It Works”?

If you go with the plugins that are recommended and check the above points, you are more likely to be able to trust it.  And of course, always back up your site before installing anything that you are not sure of.

Cloud Computing – Is it the Future?

Per Wikipedia “Cloud computing is a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction.”

In more simple terms, cloud computing allows people to use applications, both business and social, through the internet, rather than having to install software and hardware in their own home or company. Many people use cloud computing without realizing it. As an example, if you’re using Google mail or Hotmail, you’re using the cloud.

The concept of cloud computing does solve a significant business need. It provides a way to increase capacity or add capabilities without investing in new infrastructure, training new personnel, or licensing new software.

The three main factors driving companies toward the cloud are:

  1. Cost – Cost savings by requiring a smaller in-house IT staff, less software licensing, and less hardware.
  2. Ease of use – Cloud customers don’t have to worry about software upgrades, hardware upgrades, or any of the technical management issues that come with running a datacenter.
  3. Data storage – Many companies will keep the primary copy of their data in-house, and use the Cloud for the redundant copy(s).

The three main barriers preventing companies from moving to the cloud are:

  1. Fear – If a company loses its data, they are likely to go out of business. Some companies would rather manage their own data than rely on someone else for its safekeeping. Also, it the internet is unavailable for any reason, you can’t get to your applications or data.
  2. Smaller IT staff – Many companies see their IT staff as a competitive advantage in their field and do not want to give up this advantage.
  3. Too new – For a lot of companies, the cloud is still just an idea, and they don’t understand how the cloud is built or operated. This is a learning curve that the business industry is now going through.

In a recent post, I commented on the vast growth of mobile devices. A mobile device is a pocket-sized computing device. After the release of the Apple iPhone, the mobile device usage has been growing steadily. Smartphones today have large color touch screens, nice user interfaces and are highly optimized for browsing the web. With the use of cloud computing, smartphones and tablet devices are quickly taking over for the traditional desktop or even laptop PC.

We are entering an era where business will be conducted anywhere, anytime and cloud computing will be the resource upon which this capability is built. It’s not the future, it’s right now.