Category

Social Media

Celebrating Success, Mourning Loss

By Communications, Social Media

When I learned the other day about a client facing the sudden loss of a long-term team member, immediately my own experience with this came to mind. My young colleague Amber Morris passed away, shockingly, in 2011.

We spend so much time with the people in our offices and our work lives, that they become like family. When we lose them, it’s jarring, particularly when there’s no foreshadowing of illness or old age.

Marie postSo my heart lurched a little bit when The C’ville Market told me that one of their most visible team members, a cashier whose face was familiar to customers and community members, was gone, knowing that for years to come customers would look for and miss Marie, and store staff would continue to feel her absence.

When a company suffers a loss like this, it’s important to stop and let the public know. We all feel loss, and sharing it with the public is not only OK, it’s a good idea. It helps the team process the loss and the community to understand why someone they’ve grown accustomed to seeing is suddenly no longer there. We have empathy for loss and sharing it on the professional side of our lives allows our businesses to be human — we’re all looking for authentic, human relationships in our business lives. I’m a stalwart champion of allowing loss to be part of the professional conversation.

If you’d like to leave a note of condolence for The C’ville Market team, there’s a post about the loss of Marie Phillips on the store’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/cvillemarket

 

What to Do When You Goof on Facebook

By Communications, Media, Social Media

Here’s the deal: we all “like” stuff we don’t necessarily want people to know about. Like, is naturally in quotes here because it refers to the practice of blithely clicking a button that says “like” on an image, a video, a blog post, an article, an essay, etc. What we forget, sometimes, is that we’ve previously given a website permission to interact with Facebook and to let the Facebook universe know about our “likes.”

It DOES come to our collective attention when a “friend” (and yes, now I’m just being silly with the superfluous quotation marks) “likes” something that uh, I have to cover with black boxes to both hide that “friend’s” identity and the nearly naked body of a “public figure”/sexy model.

Jenna

It may have happened to you. It may be happening right now, without your knowledge. I’ve done it (well, not quite THIS badly), and close friends (minus quotes) have done it, too. So Privacygiven the inevitability of the situation, what do you do, when you “like” something private out loud?

  1. Manage the situation. If it’s brought to your attention, or you suddenly notice, get into Facebook and UNLIKE that page. 
  2. Review your “likes” to make sure they’re appropriate for public sharing. If you don’t like what you see, fix it.
  3. Take note of the privacy shortcuts and settings — the little “lock” icon in the top right hand corner of your Facebook profile. Pay attention to who can see what you post.
  4. Go into App Settings (under settings) and make sure you’re comfortable with what apps have access to your Facebook account, and who can see what’s cross posted from those apps. You may be surprised at permissions you’ve unknowingly given in the past.

WTF? Friday: LinkedIn Bans Prostitutes, Allows Goofy Endorsements

By Social Media

It’s outrageous, right? That all this time, LinkedIn has had users whose professions include prostitution, and that endorsements like “rape,” “shoplifting,” and “manslaughter” have been WTF?allowed?

HOW DID WE NOT KNOW THIS? And really, who wants a prostitute with a well-developed professional net . . . oh, never mind.

LinkedIn is busy revising its user agreements while the rest of us grow weary of the request for endorsements. My friend, optometrist Mike Murphy, sent a message to his LinkedIn contacts this week:

I am sending a blanket email to all of my connections on Linked-In regarding endorsements.

Please be advised that I do not value empty endorsements. If you have never worked with me, been a patient of mine, or in some cases never MET me please do not endorse me.
Nor should you ask for or expect that I will endorse you for your skills if I have not experienced them first hand. I don’t want to seem ungrateful, but seriously if you do not know me how do you know that I even know which end of an ophthalmoscope to look through?

That said, I have received a few endorsements from people who I have a professional relationship with and those I welcome warmly and value highly.

Thank you for your consideration.

Mike Murphy

Endorsements have quickly lost their value. What still holds up, however, are the thoughtful recommendations that connections have written to formally recognize one another.

If you want to provide value to someone in your network, don’t endorse a skill, write them a recommendation.

Getting Freaky with the Facebook

By Social Media

Due to that scene in The Social Network, my teenage daughter and I often call Facebook “The Facebook,” just to be ornery. Facebook is making me ornerier than usual these days. I think about disconnecting Spotify from Facebook, due to the reactions I sometimes get from others based on my musical choices.  (Yes, a person can like Bruno Mars AND Coolio in the same day.) Usually, however, those reactions delight and amuse me, so I haven’t made that leap.

Now, though, the Facebook has decided to help me figure out how I’m feeling or what I’m doing by offering prompts:

Facebook status updates

 

THANK GOODNESS BECAUSE IF IT WEREN’T FOR FACEBOOK I COULDN’T FIGURE IT OUT!

Sigh. Anyway, I was playing with the new updates and decided to post one, for fun (and if you haven’t yet figured this out, THIS IS A CAUTIONARY TALE.)

Loved

 

Heaven forbid!

Well, I didn’t find this scandalous, and still don’t, but BE WARNED, if you listen to a lovey-dovey song, and then post something like this on your Facebook profile, RUMORS WILL FLY.

Good thing no one is paying attention to me on Pinterest.

 

Replies are ON! At Last, a Facebook Update that Makes Sense

By Social Media

New RepliesReplies are On

If you’re a Facebook Page administrator, log in today and opt in to the newest Facebook feature — replies. This is a great conversational tool that allows comments to thread properly, with indented replies indicating the responses to comments where they should appear, not just at the end of a long stream.

This is an update that’s overdue, and one we’re glad to see!