Social Media

NEW! Leave A Review Tuesday - Help A Biz

Small businesses need us! Not just for dining, shopping, etc., but to leave them a good review so more people are inclined to visit them. We are challenging you to leave a good review somewhere every Tuesday. ‘Leave A Review Tuesday’ is what we’re calling it!

It’s easy to think and write negatively, and publishing negativity hurts small businesses. Online reviews on sites like, Yelp, Trip Advisor, and even Facebook can mean the difference- particularly if you are a restaurant. Something else to consider is that having no reviews at all can also have a negative impact on a business. 

Bottom line, lots of positive reviews is great for businesses and for customers! Leave a review every Tuesday & share with us on our instagram @tinshingle where you left the review!

Ladies: Regarding #ChallengeAccepted And The Black And White Selfies

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What Is Happening…

The #ChallengeAccepted Instagram hashtag trend percolated up a few weeks ago. Beautiful pictures of women you knew were popping up in your feed, with messages of empowerment. Women supporting women. Women nominating women to step into their power. Ok fine. But why now?

As we are quickly learning, trending hashtags need to be looked into before participating, to make sure that one understands them fully before passing them along. Passing along mis-information is so easy right now. The easiest thing is to say nothing - risk nothing - and be silent. That’s not an option you want to take. You are a leader for your people, and they want to hear from you.

The Turkish Angle

A young female reporter from the New York Times first broke the story: Taylor Lorenz. She is a reporter for the Style section and writes about technology, memes, influencers, and online culture. After she traced the trend back to 2016 Brazil, and pointed out that by the time the trend made it to the United States, many women’s black and white selfie’s were posted with sometimes no message or meaning, yet some women were asking the question of “why?” Her article did receive backlash for being critical, which she defended on TMZ. Fellow New York Times travel reporter, Tariro Mzezewa, also defended Taylor’s article.

Taylor credited Imaann Patel’s tweet with explaining the Turkish association, but Imaann’s account at Twitter has since disappeared. Her quote, however, lives on in this Apeshka News article: “Turkish people wake up every day to see a black and white photo of a woman who has been murdered on their Instagram feed, on their newspapers, on their TV screens. The black and white photo challenge started as a way for women to raise their voice. To stand in solidarity with the women we have lost. To show that one day, it could be their picture that is plastered across news outlets with a black and white filter on top. I have seen many of my international friends participate in this challenge without knowing the meaning. While I am aware that there is no ill will, it is important to remind ourselves why posting a picture with a black and white filter is a “challenge” to begin with.”

According to Apeshka News and other media outlets: "Many Turkish women are putting their faith in the Istanbul Convention, a Council of Europe agreement from 2014 on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence. The signatory nations committed themselves to creating the requisite conditions for fighting the problem. Turkey ratified the agreement 5 years ago and gave it a legal basis as a law for the prevention of violence against women and the protection of the family."

Fresh efforts by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s ruling party have been made to repeal the Council of Europe treaty, the Istanbul Convention, which protects victims of domestic and gender-based violence and effectively prosecutes offenders, according to Apeksha News and other media outlets.

Gokce Yazar from the Sanliurfa bar association sees patriarchal family structures and cultural customs as the problem. "It is normal for a woman who is threatened by her husband and fears for her life to seek protection from the state. The legal provisions are clear, but even so, they are often told: 'Go back to your husband.'"

On November 25, 2019, some 2,000 women gathered in Istanbul on the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women to protest against femicides, among other things, police broke up the rally with tear gas and plastic bullets, according to Apeksha News.

Fidan Ataselim, the general secretary of the campaign group We Will Stop Femicide (this is the English translation of their website), reiterated the intention: “The black and white photo challenge and #challengeaccepted movement did not start in Turkey, but Turkish women sparked the latest round of pictures because we are worried about withdrawing from the Istanbul Convention. Every day, after the death of one of our sisters, we share black and white photographs and keep their memory alive.”

So when Pinar Gültekin was killed "by a jealous ex-boyfriend - who strangled and beat her before killing her, then dumped her in a bin and filled it with concrete when he was unable to burn her body," according to every news outlet, shock waves were sent through Turkey, and the tool of #ChallengeAccepted was revived.

What To Do…

Research.

Take deep dives down people’s Instagram accounts. News media might not have published stories on this yet, so word of mouth may be leading the way. Regular people just like you, but who are experts in their field and are confidently voicing their opinions. Listen to their opinions, but form your own. During Blackout Tuesday, feelings were mixed on if people should post a black square or not. Logically, if you should do something that makes sense for your business, do it. But what to say? And what to show?

Absorb The Message.

Take this opportunity to learn something. This challenge was for women dying in Turkey whose killers are people - men - who they know. The men may be arrested, and are let off with light sentences. If they are arrested at all.

Is Participating Right For Your Brand?

If this is a cause you believe in, then carve out the time to see how your brand will participate. If you are a solo-entrepreneur, this will be an easier debate. If your brand is a company with people working with you, you may want to have a team meeting to discuss their feelings as well, as it can help shape your broader view of the issue. Some people will have dissenting opinions, or have their head safely in the sand. All of this is fine, and you’ll need to decide if showing support for this will strengthen your brand or distract.

What Should You Say And Show?

Ruminate about it, and find your words. In this case, Turkish women need a platform. They need the global spotlight. Their freedoms and respect is way behind ours (in the United States) it seems, so they need our help. We live in a global community now, so showing support for your global sisters is important.

If you can’t find your own words, or don’t trust your style or can’t say something succinctly enough, borrow someone else’s, but give them credit. The slides shown below were first seen on BFF Therapy’s Instagram account (run by Moraya Seeger DeGeare, a therapist based in Beacon, NY). They were used in the sharing of the post, to help explain to follows quickly and easily what they need to know. Credit was given to her in the caption. Original hashtags were used. If the hashtags are in a different language, dig down and find the translation, and keep the hashtags. Don’t ignore them just because you don’t recognize a word. That’s how a social movement gets diluted and erased. For instance, in the most #ChallengeAccepted of July 2020, this hashtag was used: #İstanbulSözleşmesiYaşatır, which means “Enforce the Istanbul Convention”.

If this challenge revives in another form a whole new set of hashtags may be used. Just pay attention to which ones, look them up first, and include them.

After learning about this version of the #ChallengeAccepted, I still wanted to participate. Women’s rights - and lives! - are very important to me, and are often taken for granted now after the fight to attain them. Raising awareness of this in other countries is also important to me. So, #ChallengeAccepted, and I used Tin Shingle’s platform to add to the conversation. On my picture, I used the words: “Turkey. Here’s Why.” to be very clear about the message contained in the photo, that it wasn’t just another selfie for the sake of posting a selfie.

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Where To Learn More

During this whirlwind, I dedicated a Tin Shingle TuneUp to teaching about how to handle Instagram Hashtag Challenges. Listen to it here (members of Tin Shingle get to stream it for free). The hashtags for this challenge have been added to Tin Shingle’s Instagram Hashtag Cheat Sheet, so that you’ll have them all in one place as you research. If this challenge gets revived to spotlight another group of people, then we will add to that list in the Cheat Sheet.

Is The Facebook Ad Boycott Still Happening? And Should It Be Forever?

During the past week, more than 500 companies, like The North Face and Rei, joined the campaign of boycotting Facebook ads with the intent of placing pressure on Facebook to take a stronger stance against hate speech.

The current boycott is like nothing Facebook has experienced before. The Anti-Defamation League launched a #StopHateForProfit campaign asking companies to stop their advertising. “Let’s send Facebook a powerful message: Your profits will never be worth promoting hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism and violence,” the campaign’s site reads. Hundreds of companies joined in. “When we re-engage will depend on Facebook’s response,” Levi Strauss CMO Jen Sey wrote in a blog post.

This began in June after advocacy groups and others began pushing for Facebook to refrain from sharing hateful content such as ads featuring nazi symbols from President Donald Trump and white nationalist content from Red Ice TV. More specifically, calls were spurred by posts from President Trump responding to the demonstrations against police brutality and the death of George Floyd, including one in which he suggested the “THUGS” protesting should be shot.

Owner & Co-Founder, Katie James, shared that,

“Facebook Ads have long been censored. The reason that they state is that the content is too controversial or divisive. In my experience, this has been for an inter-faith group meeting after a church received white supremacy flyers posted onto their church in October 2017, and most recently, an article about Beacon’s Mayor giving his decision about moving a memorial bench. Both were declined to be paid.

So for Facebook to say that they are not into censorship is false. They do censor. And they should censor. All media publications should and do censor. One cannot possibly publish everything, so natural censorship happens all of the time when left on the cutting room floor. But to not censor hate speech of the president of the United States is bias and wrong. Clearly they support it, if they will not censor it.”

Tin Shingle has always advocated not to put all of your eggs into one basket. Right now, Facebook is not only controlling the levers with which you can reach people, but it is developing the feeling of a bad taste in your mouth. They’ve had that stigma for years, but their recent lack of censorship added to the amount of frustration that people unleash on that platform, leaves it all gross. Do you really want your brand to be there?

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told employees: "My guess is that all of these advertisers will be back on the platform soon enough," according to The Information.

Just An FYI: WWE Comes Onto TikTok With Ability To Create Shareable Stories Using Entrance Themes

In “young people” news, WWE (World Wide Entertainment) has started a channel on TikTok. They will begin with making “entrance themes” available for users to create and share expressive content in their own TikToks, as reported in Variety.

Hold Up - What Is TikTok and What Is An “Entrance Theme”?

TikTok is a video-sharing app that kids use. According to TikTok, about 60% of TikTok’s 26.5 million monthly active users in the U.S. are between ages 16 and 24. TikTok started as a video sharing app created by ByteDance, which is largely described by U.S. media as a “Chinese Internet company” (though the website’s home page shows primarily white people and one brown person at a conference table working on laptops).

TikTok then bought a social music video creating/sharing app called Musical.ly, which according to Slate was equally as popular and was all the rage with musicians and regular people who would use the music to make videos. TikTok also favored comedy and lifestyle content, so the name Musical.ly got dropped, and music got heavily absorbed into TikTok. You can read all about it here at this Guide To TikTok at Slate.

According to the Variety article who attributes TikTok, “Amoung U.S. users in 2019, the most popular music artists on the platform were Lil Nas X, Mariah Carey, Lizzo, Stunna Girl, Blanco Brown, Y2k & Bbno$, Kyle, Luh Kel, Billie Eilish and Ashnikko. The top celebrities on TikTok were Will Smith, Miley Cyrus, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Howie Mandel, Terry Crews and Selena Gomez.”

Back to “entrance themes.” That’s a WWE thing, where the wrestling characters have videos that illustrate the base and depths of their characters. Vice did a roundup of the 25 Best Entrance Songs Of All Time in 2018, which gives you an idea of what content will now be easily accessed by kids to create their own expressions.

What Does This All Mean?

For businesses and brands, this simply means that TikTok is getting ever more solid as a social media platform that is in your regular deck of social media apps to create content for and/or be aware of what other brands are creating there.

Advertising is definitely available on the platform and is reaching people with well-crafted content. If you are a musician, it seems like TikTok is solidly a place you want to be and have your music on. TikTok is not limited to music, however, and can include humor, challenges, experiments, how-to’s (the weirder the better), and other oddities. The content is at best imperfect, and extremely raw - meaning you don’t need to make slick, high-polished/produced videos to upload here. The end-game is all about what kind of emotion you create for the person who just scrolled through the dozens of videos and absorbed yours.

At the end of the day, creating content for TikTok would be connected to brand loyalty for you, and falls into the category of “what kind of emotional output are you putting out there?” The answer to that question would determine if you want to start investing your time and energy into making and publishing TikTok videos. And if you wanted to pursue/pitch influencers to incorporate your brand into their videos.

Want to talk more about this strategy? You can in Tin Shingle’s members-only forum or in PR Challenges, where we talk shop about things like this. Learn about it in our Media Kit Membership program.

Instagram's New "Restrict" Tool; Possible Removal Of "Likes;" And What This Means For Businesses

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Instagram released a new tool to softly reject someone’s bullyish or ugly Comment. “Restrict” is pretty simple to use, and the person who Commented doesn’t know you deleted the Comment, or restricted their future Comments. What will this mean for businesses?

When I was first hired to consult on a company’s social media strategy, I was conflicted about it. The whole thing felt like the Emperor’s New Clothes. How can you really tell if social media is working? All of these numbers of Likes and Comments and Shares of a social post or article were the way in measurement of the success of a social media campaign, or company in general.

At the end of the day, social media totally works, but what does that success look like? The easiest way is in the numbers and comments. Both of those are on their way out now, as Instagram rolls out its new “Restrict” feature, and as both Instagram and Facebook consider removing public-facing “Likes” from their platform.

Instagram Rolls Out The “Restrict” Feature - A Softer, Invisible “Block”

Instagram’s new “Head of Instagram,” Adam Mosseri, (don’t call him the CEO), has been on an interview circuit, like this one with the Today Show, to talk about how Instagram wants to be the leader in ending bullying online. One of their steps was to hear from people using Instagram and learn what would make them feel safer on the platform. Why couldn’t they simply use the “Block” feature?

The answer was “Because when we Block someone, they know it, and it escalates. They try harder.”

The “Restrict” tool is one that people can use after a Comment is posted, and they want it removed, but they don’t want the author of the Comment to know that. They can Swipe-Left on the Comment to Restrict it, and then all future Comments from that person will require approval from the person who is the Instagram account. The person Commenting will see their Comment there, and not know that it has actually been removed.

Muahaha.

More Emperor’s Clothes! But perhaps these invisible clothes are good.

The “Following” Tab Is Gone

Adam announced via Tweet that the “Following” tab is gone in Instagram. This showed you who of your friends Liked or Commented on what. You could find it in your Heart tab, which was annoying because presumably only things Hearting you were in that tab. This is a good move, as it reduces people obsessing over each other, and is one less thing to be distracted by. Read more about it in this Buzzfeed article.

Hiding “Likes” - It’s Coming

The next step will be removing “Likes.” This will make marketers crazy, and Influencers might totally freak out, as some of them use these numbers as proof to their marketing clients who pay them to post. However, everyone knows that bots can be bought to artificially Like things and drive up the popularity algorithm. Smart businesses won’t rely on such numbers to measure success, and instead will look to see if their bottom line is on the rise - with sales.

In Adam’s quest to make Instagram the leader in removing online bullying, he seems committed to creating a less toxic atmosphere. “The big idea is to try and make Instagram feel less pressurized, to make it less of a competition," Mosseri said during the Today Show interview. "So, you can spend a little bit less time worrying about how many likes you have and a little bit more time connecting with people or things that inspire you."

Facebook has also confirmed that they are testing removing Likes from their platform, as reported by TechCrunch. It should be noted that Adam Mosseri used to work at Facebook and is noted as developing the News Feed, which created this whole popularity obsession in the first place. When Instagram’s creators and co-CEOs resigned last year, Adam moved into his head position with Instagram.

What This Means For Businesses Who Pay Advertising Dollars To Social Media Influencers and Media Outlets

At first blush, not having these numbers will mean that advertisers can’t tell how their advertising investment is doing. But it doesn’t end the power of social media. It just throws a wrench into these measurement areas:

  • Harder To Measure ROI (But Can ROI Really Be Measured?)

  • MYTH BUSTED: ROI Really Can’t Be Measured By Like Counts Anyway!
    Major buyers or clients may not ever Like something at all, but may hire you for a job worth thousands of dollars. Totally un-measurable.

  • Harder To Know What Of Your Content Is Popular
    When you publish something, and get engagement, it’s nice to know how the content is going over so that you can provide more of it, or switch tactics.

  • MYTH BUSTED: Algorithms Make Knowing What Content Is Popular Impossible
    Here’s the thing. Algorithms mean that no post is posted and seen by the followers. Nothing is organic. Nothing works like an off and on switch (except for targeted PPC pay-per-click campaigns). If you put up a personal post in Facebook, and link it to a website, there’s a chance it won’t fly, simply because it has a link. If it’s talking about a currently sensitive topic, it also may be suppressed. Because Facebook is building math into its censorship of everyone - all of us - no post is created equal. If one post gets a ton of likes, and another doesn’t, it simply could mean that the unpopular post simply never saw the light of day for certain algorithmic reasons.

  • Faking It Can’t Happen Anymore
    Those considering paying a social media influencer or news media outlet will need to really get to know that outlet’s social handles that they are about to invest in, to see if it’s a good fit. Numbers alone won’t guarantee you sales. Relationships do.

How Do Businesses Measure The Un-Measurable?

If you can’t trust numbers to give you a simple answer, how can you measure your success rate? Pay attention. As you’re sharing photos and musings in social media, pay attention to who percolates to your inbox, your text, or your shopping cart, and when. You’ll wake up prospective buyers, or keep them loyal, with your consistent messaging.

Facebook Buys Shop-By-Picture Tech Company

Photo Credit: Tin Shingle

Photo Credit: Tin Shingle

Facebook just bought a shopping tech company, GrokStyle, that was a shopping tool created for the visual search space, and was used in Ikea’s mobile app. The way it worked was, a person could take a picture of a piece of furniture, and the technology would match it to similar pieces of furniture that the person could buy.

Deep dives by the media (social or print/digital brands) into shopping integration with online content continues. As StarOnline pointed out in their article, GrokStyle stated that they were shutting down as a company, but would continue on in team and technology. The statement did not include that the team would be at Facebook.

Screenshot of GrokStyle’s announcement of winding down the company as it’s known now.

Screenshot of GrokStyle’s announcement of winding down the company as it’s known now.

According to every article that published a story about this, they credited Facebook’s statement announcing this purchase including Bloomberg News, quoting Facebook’s spokesperson Vanessa Chan: "We are excited to welcome GrokStyle to Facebook. Their team and technology will contribute to our AI capabilities."

How Facebook Benefits By The Shopping-By-Picture Feature

Print media began adopting shopping into its print and digital pages, by way of picture scanning, like at Seventeen, and via good old fashioned affiliate links like with GQ, or that time in 2012 with Nordstrom sales. Facebook replaced Craig’s List with its group selling groups, where you could post a picture into a Buy/Sell group, and get immediate response as to if you had a buyer.

Then Facebook released Marketplace, where this buy/sell activity could begin happening instead. Simultaneously, visibility of anything posted at the then old Buy/Sell groups got slow. Instead, Facebook suggested ways to share the post (ie more work for me, and to keep me on the website), which is an attempt to increase activity on their website. I used to use the feature quite a lot. People in Buy/Sell groups moved to Marketplace, and is now is the place where people can have instant garage sales. Brands can also have a shop on Facebook and sell that way. Anyone can start Donation pages. Collections for birthdays, etc.

Facebook is trying to hook the next generation. The children. But the kids these days see Facebook as a Grandma and Parent Hangout, and don't want to hang with their parents. If Facebook can’t lock in teens and kids by way of whichever strategies they are attempting at the moment, Facebook is trying to lock it in with shopping. It must be hard to appeal to all of the people in all of the world all of the time. That’s a big customer base!

In Other News, Facebook Snuggles With Cryptocurrency…$$ To Buy The Stuff? Or Kill It…

Bloomberg also pointed out that Facebook acquired a blockchain technology company earlier this year. “The GrokStyle purchase marks the second reported acquisition by Facebook this year. Earlier this month, the company bought the team behind blockchain technology company Chainspace for an undisclosed sum. The company purchased at least four firms last year, including startups focused on messaging and AI.”

Interestingly, Facebook had blocked ads related to cryptocurrency, stating that the crypto marketplace is too high risk. This done in Facebook’s attempts to step away from being the vehicle people use to guide people down a bad - or wrong - path. In June of 2018, Facebook reportedly lifted that ban on cryptocurrency ads a little bit.

However, since that time (November 2018, actually), Tin Shingle wrote an article about cryptocurrency when we highlighted a blogger, Digiconomist, who covers cryptocurrency in depth. Facebook blocked our ability to Boost that article on their platform in November 2018.

Insert: Thinking Emoji…

Good 'Gram: How Blix Bike Is Using Instagram To Stay Fresh And New

GOOD 'GRAM

Tin Shingle Member Blix Bike has been killing it with their Instagram. Though they sell a handful of products - a variety of models of ebikes and accessories like a basket and touch-up paint - their Instagram feed is always fresh and new. One way they do it is to show customer photos of how customers are enjoying the bikes. See how these two bikes fit into this mini car!

Google + (Plus) Shuts Down...Why This Matters, And The Huge Implications For Everyone

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Google+ is/was Google’s social network for people. Google+ launched in 2011, and wasn’t the first social network that Google tried to create to compete with Facebook. Led by Vic Gundotra and Bradley Horowitz, the philosophy coming out from them back then about social media was: “we believe online sharing is broken,” as stated in this TechCruch article. This was back in 2011. Imagine what they think now. Super broken on many levels, from broken data security to human behavior. Both of these reasons contributing to the expedited and now immediate shutting down of Google+.

What Is Google+?

Google+ was a place where you could share articles, share photos, connect with people who were your friends or random people you’d never met. You could organize them by “Circles,” which was at first neat, but then became laborious as you kept organizing and micro-organizing your connections. You could chat with others, message, and just play like you would in a social network.

For SEO (search engine optimization) purposes, Google+ was great. Because it was a product of Google, the leaders of how SEO works, you had some faith that articles shared on Google+ would get higher treatment in search results. For instance, posting an article I wrote to Google+ would be part of my digital content strategy, because that post would show up in search results, thereby taking up space on Page 1 of Google search results to elbow out my competitors, especially if my actual article was already ranking highly. In fact, according to Google+ Support: “there's no way to make the content you share not searchable.” Hurray!

Google+ is much more than SEO, however. Google recognized that people like sharing documents, conversations and photos with each other, so they built a Google+ enterprise tool where companies can use it internally on private networks. The enterprise version of Google+ will continue to live.

What Happened? Why Is Google+ Shutting Down?

Two reasons: people just weren’t using it, and a data leak impacting 52.5 million people.

Despite myself knowing the high value of Google+, even I stopped using it years ago. Of all of the hundreds of articles I’ve ever written, I’d only shared/posted maybe 20 to my Google+ account. Google+ was just so clunky to use. Normal things to do, like sharing an article, or connecting with someone, was so hard to figure out how to do. The user experience of its ecosystem seemed discombobulated - disconnected - sliced and diced.

Developers at Google and these big social/data companies seem to spend most of their focus on creating new tools, and then creating more tools on top of those tools. They seem dedicate less time to studying and understanding how their users are actually using and interacting with their tools.

When Google first announced the shutting down Google+ (aka “sunsetting,” which is the sexy and friendly version of “shutting down”), they marked “poor usage” as a driving factor. They finally did a very deep dive in October 2018 into how their users used the tool, and found that most people actually didn’t.

But in that deep dive, Google also found a data leak. Impacting 52.5 million people. Eeps. That’s when Google announced that they were shutting down Google+, and would do it gradually, ending in August 2019.

However, they announced in December 2018 that they were speeding that up, and were starting everything now, and would end in April 2019, with some connections ending on March 7, 2019. 9to5Google laments the shutdown, and alerts people to different API failures that will begin happening if developers don’t update their tools to stop using Google+.

Is Google+ Widely Used In Places You Don’t See?

Creators at Google believe in sharing. That’s why the Google search engine was created in the first place. To share the world’s content. Google has also been known to respect its users and their privacy (I know - debatable as they have all of our data - but they’ve arguably been the most proactively protective about it). An “open source” market was born, which means that developers (i.e. people who code and make things work on the internet), could design things that would connect with Google+ and work with it. These are called APIs.

The ability for developers to connect into Google+ using an API to grab your data for some reason (like to log into something to make your life more convenient) was exposed. Google patched that, but got spooked, and have expedited the shutdown. There are probably more vulnerabilities, and for a tool that nobody is using, what’s the use in maintaining it. As they said here in their announcement.

What This Means For Buzz Building Business Owners

One less thing for you to do! You don’t need to share there, and you don’t need to know how it works anymore. Hurrah.

Why Google+ “Sunsetting” (aka Shutting Down) Is A Bummer

For the SEO reasons, and for the “let’s not depend on Facebook to share our information” reasons. If Google’s shutting down has a theme song, it would be Tiffany’s: “Could’ve Been.”

Why This Matters To People

Social media is run by Facebook and Twitter right now. It used to also be run by Instagram, but since those co-founders resigned in late 2018, implying too much meddling by Facebook, it’s down to Facebook and Twitter (Facebook owns Instagram). Oh right. Pinterest, LinkedIn, Twitch, and a few others. But really, it’s just the first two.

The Facebook and Twitter founders approach life very differently. We have Jack Dorsey at the helm of Twitter, trying to keep it going and steering it in the turbulent sea of trolls and bad human behavior and data privacy. Jack gets very philosophical and thinks deeply about the social product and how it impacts people.

In the other corner, we have Mark Zuckerburg, who is nobody’s favorite, and maybe nobody’s friend despite his high friend count on Facebook, who is snarky and condescending when appearing before Congress and in any news interview, yet still remains relevant because people keep using Facebook.

There are other social networks, and each one will be tested by the trials that Google, Facebook and Twitter are currently enduring. People have asked: “Can’t someone just create a new social network so that we don’t need to use Facebook?” But can we wait for each of these new social networks that pop up to prove themselves and carve their belief system and actions to back that up?

Google was a big daddy that has flaws, but is a leader in (trying) to do right by its users. Google grew so big, working in so many different fields (healthcare, cars, phones), that they renamed to Alphabet (their website is abc.xyz - cute), and Google is a fraction of what they now offer to the world.

Google+ could have been a social network for people to turn to after Facebook burns down. But it just wasn’t designed visually very well, and there were no signs that that would have improved.

Could have been so beautiful…

Next Live Broadcast of TuneUp: SEO + Social

We’re in the middle of a “social migration,” as we’re calling it here at Tin Shingle. Behavior at social platforms like Facebook and Instagram are changing. Usage activity at Facebook is still high, but it’s an increasingly questionable place, both with data privacy, and being over-designed and over-stuffed with information, causing users to miss a message.

As reported by CNBC in March 2018: “Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg broke his silence Wednesday on the Cambridge Analytica data scandal that's plagued the social media giant in recent days and slashed stock value. ‘We have a responsibility to protect your data, and if we can't then we don't deserve to serve you,’ Zuckerberg said in a statement posted to his Facebook page.”

Instagram’s co-founders abruptly resigned from Facebook two weeks ago, just one week before Facebook announced another data breach. They had worked there for six years after the merger, which apparently is a long time in the world of acquisitions. Would Facebook ever pull the plug on their-self if they were too weighed down with data issues? It's a very unlikely scenario, but is implied by Mark's statement. Plus, Facebook has deleted websites they have purchased in the past (like that data storage website Drop.io that was pre-Dropbox and we stored lots of stuff there!).

So social is on shaky ground. We all want to connect, and we will, but what do you have in your own tool belt (hopefully) all of the time that you can control?

Your website.

And how are people finding it?

Googling stuff.

What are they going to find there?

Amazing content you’re going to put there, and lots of pictures.

What do people do after they Google things? They buy things and subscribe to newsletters. Your newsletters and your products and services.

That’s right. Good old fashioned SEO.

The three most important things you can be doing right now for your business is what we will be covering in this TuneUp - so go register for it right now:

  • Making your website pretty and alive

  • Sending newsletters to the people who subscribed and really do want to hear from you - frequently (they really do!!!)

  • Posting to Instagram (yeah, do it, we’ll be watching to see if and how the user experience at Instagram changes, but so far, keep posting)

Join Katie live at 3pm EST to hear refreshing SEO Tips, Newsletter Tips, and how to be treating your social.

Private Training Workshop In Motion

Conducted a Private Training Workshop for these ladies yesterday, who have varying degrees of comfort online and with social media. This session covered a lots of Technical. A next session can indulge in Strategy.

Are you in need of Strategy and clever ideas? You can go pro with Tin Shingle with our Private Training Sessions. Booking on Monday’s only right now. Save your spot! This session was hosted in person in our Beacon, NY office, but can be condicted remotely via video conferencing. We make it easy.  www.tinshingle.com/private-training

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