TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List

Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Pinterest- To pin or not to pin? THAT is the question!

We launched TAFA's new site mid-January, then I was gone for a month.  When I got back, I jumped into working on the site again.  Members have been slowly adding their profiles, but so far, not even half of them are up yet.  I have the site on Google Analytics and absolutely LOVE the Real Time view, where you can watch who is there, what pages they are looking at and from what country.  I started to notice a lot of views coming from Pinterest.  We have a closed group on facebook for members, so I asked if anybody had been pinning us on pinterest.  Virtual hands waved, "Me!  I am!  I am!"

Well....  that sure opened a can of worms!  Pinterest has been generating heated discussions all over the web due to its user policies.  I'm not sure that I understand all of it, but there are weird contradictions like, "all content belongs to Pinterest", then, "Make sure you only pin your copyrighted material", then, "Don't post just your images."  Huh?  How can you pin only your copyrighted stuff, but then not make your boards all of your own products?  More sinister, "If there is a lawsuit, the pinner pays ALL legal fees" and "Pinterest may sell any image on the site".........  I'm not quoting here, just interpreting phrases that I have seen over and over in articles posted around the web.  And, there's more, much more.  Serious stuff!

For those of who don't know what Pinterest is, it's what we call a "curating" site.  You can create boards of things you are interested in: travel, hobbies, health, fashion, etc.  The layout is beautiful, visually entrancing.  You can go on any website and instead of bookmarking something that you like, you pin it and it links back to that page (supposedly).  So, it's a handy way of keeping track of things you see and want to re-visit in the future.  Everything you pin gets sent to the front page and other people see it.  If they like it, they can re-pin it to their boards.  What that means for those of us who have something to sell is that the viral potential is immense.

To give you an idea, I made some boards on my page for TAFA products:


If someone likes the content of your board, they can follow the whole theme and see new items in their feed.

Well!  Sounds good, right?  Fun!?  Pinterest has been around for awhile now and is still by invitation only.  You can request one....  But, it's taken off like wild cakes in the last few months.  Millions are using it and if I remember correctly, it has passed Google+ in users.  Wowzers!

Not so quick.  Not all is well in Pinterland...  Those issues that I mentioned above have made artists really angry.  Why?  Because Pinterest can strip their images of copyrights, other users are taking the images and setting up sites inspired by Pinterest but not giving credit to the person who owns the image, and money is being made without consent and without compensation to that owner.  We had a wild flurry of articles being posted on our group with many, many arguments against using Pinterest.

The problem is that many of us long for that traffic.  Although we may not like the notion of our images being stolen, some of us would rather have a potential sale and the visibility than to be left out of the loop.  So, I struggled with this and decided that we needed to have a strategy.

TAFA has made use of social media from day one.  We have hubs on facebook, linkedin, google+, flickr and Etsy.  My approach has always been that if a large number of the members are there, we should have a presence there, too.  I went and checked my account that I had created months ago and poked around.  There was a significant number of  TAFA members on the site who were active AND I had almost 600 followers for my almost empty boards.  Well!  That told me that we needed to be there.

I sent out an email and told the members that if they wanted to be there, I would create a SAFE Board with one pin from each member who wants to be pinned.  From there, members and TAFA supporters can start with that board and know that it is OK to pin that person's stuff.  The pins link to the member profile and users can go from there to the blogs, shops, websites, etc.  The member does not have to have a pinterest account, although many do.  Here is our SAFE Board:


If you are an avid pinner and you love TAFA, this is where you start.  Do NOT pin any members who are not on this list!  We must all be respectful of the complex issues that surround this site.  

From there, I created several theme boards of TAFA products (pictured above) with other items from these members.  I will continue to build those boards and they are all SAFE to re-pin.  We really appreciate your support with this!

I also had an idea which I thought was pretty cool.  Why not do a board with TAFA members who have been supporting the site with ads?  This could potentially give more bang for their buck and serve as an inspiration for people who want to advertise on TAFA.  I set that board up, too, and really like how it looks:


The ads all link to their member profiles, but these are not necessarily sanctioned for pinning.  As the images have their business names on them, it is unlikely that anyone would steal them.  But, you are welcome to explore these profiles and visit their sites.

I also created a board for the TAFA members who sell on Etsy.  I made this one into a group one so that members can pin their own product.  It's an iffy proposition as already one of the members pinned other people's stuff.....  But, intentions are good and there is a learning curve with everything.


As you can see, there are many creative things that can be done with these boards to promote a business or feed an interest.  But, do not underestimate how serious the concerns are around Pinterest's policies.  I received an email this morning saying that the word was out on the web that the owner was meeting with lawyers to change the policies.  I don't know whether this is true or not, or even if the changes would be significant enough to put out the fire.  But, it was a piece of hopeful news.  The concept is wonderful, but when you build your business on underhanded practices, it will fall.

Interested in learning more about this issue?  
Here are some of the articles our members posted:
That is probably enough to educate anyone on the issues behind the uproar.  

What should you do?

Each person has to decide what is best for him or her.  But, if you are a pinner, educate yourself and respect people's wishes on this.  Do not pin anything that does not link back to the owner of the image.  Have a doubt about it?  Ask them.  In fact, this is good practice for anything done on the web.  Do you see an image you would like to use on your blog?  Ask the owner.  

My belief is that if you have a web presence you automatically put your images at risk with anything you post.  If it's out there, even if you have code on your site protecting downloads, anybody can copy it.  All they need to do is do a screen print and they have it.  It's unfortunate, but it does not mean that we need to condone this behavior.  Do the best YOU can to be a good web citizen.

The one solution I see is to use discreet watermarks embedded into the images.  That is probably what I will do with mine in the future (IF I can figure out how to do it quickly...).  And, I believe that for every scoundrel that is out there, 99% of the others are good people who would like to do the right thing.

Pin Responsibly!

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Thursday, January 27, 2011

TAFA Members on the Map!

"All the Time in the World" by TAFA Member Marcia H. Eygabroat



TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List was launched a year ago on January 31st.  Those of you who follow this blog will have seen many other posts that I have done about TAFA and its members.  (Click TAFA for past posts) Now at 229 members, we have grown into a vibrant, international organization with an active core group of members.  I wanted to see what we looked like on a map to get a physical idea of our growth and location, so I spent the last several days entering all of us on to a google map.  It's quite fascinating to see us this way!


 

One of the things that struck me is how remote some of our members are, far away even from a small town.  And, this is where the internet clearly allows us to live anywhere and still be connected to a global community.  This has really changed our ability to do business with something that we love even if we do not have ready access into a local market.  It's also such an incredible tool for developing relationships and friendships with people who live so far away.  The other side of the coin is that I think that many of our members will be surprised that they have TAFA members living very close to them.  People they met online are actually neighbors!

Jump in and take a look around!  You might find some TAFA neighbors yourself.  The pins are not on exact locations, but close.  Zoom into the places where there are clusters so that you can see the individual pins.  When you click on them, a photo pops up along with a link to their TAFA member profile.

Share this map with your people.  Remember that all of our members are looking for customers.  There are many reasons people buy something: because it matches something, it's a must-have, it supports a cause, or it comes from somewhere meaningful.  You will find each member's contact info in their member profile.  Support them with their online shops, their galleries, and their projects.  TAFA members are talented and excel at what they do.

Enjoy!
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Sunday, March 28, 2010

Happy Birthday to Rayela's Fiber Focus!

Rachel Biel, 2nd Birthday, Londrina, Brazil

Two years ago today, this blog, Rayela's Fiber Focus, went live and I entered the blogging world.  I thought it was appropriate to have my own birthday photo start this post as a reminder that this blog is still a baby, full of hopes and aspirations.  Yet, life in cyberspace speeds by much more quickly than it does in our human years.  At the age of five, we are just figuring out how the world ticks, whereas five years on the internet might mean something is long gone, outdated, transformed or upgraded.  What does that mean for us bloggers?  Where do I see myself going forward with this blog?  Let's take a look at the big picture and focus on the art world as a theme.


Why blog?
Blogs have made it possible for the average person to establish a presence on the internet without having to invest much money.  It does take a learning curve to figure out the tools, design potential, and how it can be integrated with other social media sites.  Traditional websites showcase an artist's portfolio, tools for the prospective customer or gallery to view the work and gauge how the work and the story might fit into a purchase or show.  Blogs differ greatly from traditional websites in that there is an inbuilt expectation that there will be interaction with the community at large through the comments and other networking apps that are available.  I believe that blogs have become so popular because they offer the sense of community one had in mom and pop stores that have disappeared in so many places as super giants like Walmart have driven them out of business.  Now, I see more and more artists giving up their websites and using platforms that are user friendly, have tweakable templates and a blog incorporated into the site.

I started blogging because I wanted to promote my Etsy store.  At the time, I was quite active on the Etsy forums and everyone said, "You just have to have a blog!"  I decided that I would use it to tell the stories behind the textiles that I sell.  Where they come from, who made them, what kinds of issues they face in their communities and so on.  I knew that it would be a huge time commitment, which in fact, it was.  Intent on building content, I spent a lot of time on posts for Fiber Focus.  I also wanted to offer it as a platform where others could talk about their work and the communities that they live in.  My special interests focus on economic development issues around the arts and on the environmental impact that our work has on the world.  Are we making garbage?  Can traditional skills survive in these communities that face so many devastating effects of encroaching "modernity"?  As I look back, I believe that Fiber Focus offers a plethora of meaty content for others who are also interested in these topics.  It is an intellectual exercise for me that allows me to research an issue and put it out there for others.


Types of blogs.
I have visited hundreds, if not thousands of blogs in these last two years.  Most art blogs seem to be divided into three camps:
  1. Product reviews:  Bloggers who write about other artists, work or  resources that they see out there in cyberspace.
  2. Artist's process:  These blogs document the process of a piece, from concept to the end product.  Many give tutorials on how to accomplish the same effect.
  3. Blither diary:  The voice of the lonely blogger who blabs on about all the minutiae of their daily lives.  When well done, these blogs can be wonderful.  But, unfortunately, most are really boring with the same stories about flowers, grandchildren and dogs. 
The three camps often merge or blend here and there, but over time, one of the focuses becomes apparent.  I enjoy blogs that are well written, easy on the eyes, and that have fresh content.  The easiest blogs to maintain are ones that have an image and a short statement about that image.

Many of us also hope that our blogs will generate some income to compensate for the time we invest in the blogs.  I have tried a bunch of things: a donation button ($20 total over two years!), Project Wonderful (does not generate enough to cover the ads I place there), affiliate programs (absolute dud!), google ads (I removed them when inappropriate content popped up and just don't have the energy to control the kinds of ads that would be good for the blog), and offering advertising space.  Conclusion:  Fiber Focus will be a resource for a niche group of people interested in the kind of content I am willing to generate.  If it doesn't make money, fine.


Social media integration.
These past two years has seen increased integration between social media sites.  Blogs can now be integrated on to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and many other places.  That means that once you set it up, each post gets posted in a bunch of places automatically.  Increasing its reach ability, the content has potential community impact in each of these places.  Comments may happen on or off the blog and actual traffic and readership is actually a lot larger than reflected on the blog's physical statistics. 

And, there are all kinds of apps that can be added on to the blog to direct traffic somewhere else and also bring new traffic back to the blog.  So, you can advertise your facebook fan page on your blog and have your blog networked on to your fan page.  All a bit of a headache to figure out, but once it's set up, it's easy peasy.  I also really like the blog roll app that Blogger has on its blogs.  If I land on a blog that I like, it's highly likely that I will also like the blogs they have listed on their blog roll.  It's worth a gander, IF there is time....  Time is always the question for me, both in writing and in exploring.

Blog Mania
Once you figure out how to effectively use blogs as a tool, you just may find that your blog is giving birth to new ones.  I now have several, each with a different focus:

This blog.  Focuses on the cultural and economic condition of fiber artists and textile producers around the world.


Artezano Links serves as a dumping ground for cool craft resources that I see as I travel around on the internet.


Biels in Brazil documents the time my family spent as missionaries in Brazil, largely inspired by photos I had made of my Dad's old slides.


TAFA: The Textile and Fiber Art List is actually a business that uses the blog features to provide a platform for fiber artists and textile businesses.


As my knowledge has increased, so has my ability to act as a technical assistance provider to my peers.  I have also set up a couple of blogs for others and taught them how to use their blogs for their purposes.  I foresee that this will become a side business for me.  With TAFA, I spend a lot of time helping the members gather their information together so that they can present the best image of themselves possible to the public.  I find that most artists barely scrape the surface of the tools that are accessible to them through their blogs and other social media platforms.

One can get obsessed with blogging and these other tools and I find that I really don't have the time it takes to develop any one of them effectively.  But, then, if they are each worked on a bit here and there, over time, they will become a valuable resource.  One of my favorite blogs, Knitting Letters: A to Z by Union Purl, only blogs occasionally, but each post is so interesting, well researched and illustrated, that it doesn't matter.  In my book, I would rather spend time on blogs that have some meaning and intention behind them than ones that have a daily blather.

Is it worth it?
These last two years have also seen some great cyber friends disappear from the internet due to burn out.  Time is a constant challenge for me.  I have so many ideas that I would like to develop in all of my blogs, but in the end, I do need to focus on those that will generate income.  My main source of income comes through what I can generate online through my Etsy store and these side jobs.  Every now and then I get work locally, but it's not much and the pay is very low.

Has Fiber Focus fulfilled its purpose in driving buyers to my Etsy store?   I haven't seen much evidence of it.  Has it succeeded in building a cyber community?  In a limited way, yes.  I started a ning group that was inspired directly from working on this blog and it shares the same name, The Fiber Focus Group.  It's a great group, but developed in a way that I didn't really expect.  I was hoping for more people like me who are interested in the social context of fiber art and textiles, but instead, got a great group of people who like to share their work with each other.

Finally, there is TAFA, and that has only been possible because of all these other efforts coming together: learning the skills, selling on Etsy, networking on Fiber Focus, promoting the blog.  Rayela Art has a nice placement on google searches and has a recognizable name.  I would say that yes, all of these things are worth it, indeed necessary, if one wants to build an online business.  So, I'm sticking with it, plodding ahead, as I can.

Future goals.
I am not happy with how little I have been posting on Fiber Focus.  I would like to aim at two good posts a week.  I need to figure out how to achieve that goal and make it more time efficient.  For example, this post has already taken two hours to write.  When I research a theme, it can take up to eight hours.  I can't justify the time, so I need to quit blathering and shorten my content.  Perhaps one way to do this would be to work on a post an hour a day until it is ready, or to divide it into shorter posts.  I'll have to play with it and see what happens.

I still would like to have contributors post regularly here.  Donna Hussain is currently the only regular contributor that I have, faithfully submitting a new post every month.  Her quilting tutorials and stories generate a great deal of traffic for the blog, which I deeply appreciate.  In turn, she has a platform that she does not need to maintain.  I found her at a quilt show, loved her work, but she had no visible presence online, so it was hard finding her.  Now she has a presence.  Three or four more like her would be great!

Blogger recently added a new feature where we can now add pages to our blogs.  I want to clean up Fiber Focus and use those pages to make the blog more useful as a resource.

That's all I have planned for now.  What do you think?  Where would you like to see Fiber Focus go?  What have been your favorite posts?  Is the site too cluttered?  It's this baby's birthday, so what is your birthday wish?


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Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Facebook: The Virus You Want to Catch for Your Business!



A screenshot of my personal page on Facebook

Facebook?  I have lots of friends who are on it and we all enjoy the spontaneous access it gives us all to our humor, insights, links, photos and whatever else we want to share with each other.  From the ones that aren't there, I get groans, moans, disgust or misinformation.  "I don't want the whole world to know what's going on in my life!"   Facebook has definitely transformed how we communicate with each other, replacing email for many of us.  It's a household name that has millions of avid fans and as many avid enemies...


I was one of the converts who joined kicking, screaming, rolling my eyes, and foaming at the mouth.  Now I have been on there for several months and I have been completely, irrevocably brainwashed into a convert, one who stands at the airports with my flowers and invites the public to join.  Facebook is a tool that you can control and tweak to match your needs.  I think it is the best network out there and it has so permeated our social fabric that as a business or artist, it's as essential as having a phone.

The problem with Facebook is that the way it is set up assumes that the users know how to use it.  Most don't.  Most figure out how to add new friends, respond to updates, add photos and links, and that's about it.  Those are all nice tools, but they just explore the tip of the iceberg.  Learning how to use it well can really help artists and businesses get the kind of exposure they long for.  This post is for those of you who use Facebook minimally or not at all.  In the end, I hope that you will also want to join in and become part of this Facebook revolution.



Yep.  Being on facebook does mean having a public persona.  Social networking is a pretty recent phenomena, but it has become such a part of life on cyber space that it's hard to remember the days before we had all these venues where we could, for better or for worse, put ourselves out there.  Social networking falls under one of the many tools we now have under the umbrella of "Social Media".  Do you look at videos on YouTube?  Have a blog?  Tweet?  These are just a few of the more popular venues that people use to connect with each other, but there are many, many more.  Wikipedia has a good history and list.  Basically, social media has replaced the face-to-face interaction we had with our neighborhood shops and hang-outs.  As these tools developed, the mainstream marketplace was forced to adapt and include customer feedback, reviews and other interactive tools.  Unbelievably, Facebook was created by a Harvard student in his dorm room in 2003.  (see Wikipedia again)  It was one of those creations that came along at the right time and place.  The market and the people were ready.  When something catches on like this, it is said to have viral qualities and that is what artists and businesses hope for when they join facebook.  How exactly does this work then?

I've taken a bunch of screen shots to walk you through the different features Facebook offers which I think are important.  Click on the images to see a larger image, or you can go to my public page, Rayela Art, to follow along, or to your own page, if you have one.

First of all: How do you get friends?  You can have Facebook check your email address book and it will tell you who is already on there.  You can then choose who you want to invite to become your friend.  Then, once you have friends, you can check their friends and see if there is anybody you know.  The search bar also brings up names and if there are too many, you can narrow the search by location, school or job.  Somehow people start finding each other and last year was marked as a wonderful reconnecting for me with friends from that past that I had lost contact with.  Mine are grouped into family, Brazilian friends, missionary kids, high school and college, peer artists, Chicago people, and so on.  A creep from the past wants to be your friend?  Just say no!  Most of my re-connections have been treasures, but there are a couple that have raised my eyebrows.  "You were such a nice boy!  What happened to make you so bitter?" Believing in diversity, I try to find the common ground we share rather than keeping my friends limited to the same code of ethics, but I've noticed that some have "unfriended" me, which is just fine.  Not everyone wants to have a bleeding heart liberal flower child type in their midst...


Comment, Like and Share: the virus effect on Facebook.

Everybody who joins Facebook has a profile page where you can link to another website, upload a photo or video, or make a comment.  If this person has any "friends", those friends can comment, like or share, giving a reaction to what was posted.  Comment is straightforward.  You type some kind of a response.  If you like what you read, you click on that and you will be able to follow what other activity happens on this post.  You can set your settings to receive emails whenever any action like this happens on your page.  Now, the third option, Share, is the most important as far as achieving that viral effect. When a friend clicks on that, that post goes to their Home page and all their friends see it.  The hope is that those friends will also like it, click share, and on and on.  This is the viral effect of Facebook.  In theory, one post could have thousands of viewers.  However, this only happens on links or images that have public settings.  All personal comments get deleted in the sharing and the friend can say whatever he or she wants to about that link.  If you say something silly and you have private settings, the comment cannot leave your page.  Make sense?  Hopefully, this concept will become clear as we move along.

Friends, Fans and Members
There are three kinds of pages on Facebook and each has a different relationship.
  • You have your personal profile where friends are accepted or rejected.  
  • Personal pages can have sub-pages that are created for the public.  These are usually small businesses, special interest, artist, or music pages.  I have three: Rayela Art (for my business), Afghan Tribal Arts (for a friend's business that I manage) and Falamos Portugues (a just-for-fun page for Portuguese speakers).  Pages are public and anyone interested in the content can join as a fan.  An icon of that page pops up on that person's profile page and they will receive updates in their home page.
  • The third type of page is for groups.  Larger organizations, families, teams, museums and non-profits would normally select this option.  This is also a public page and whoever joins becomes a member and receives updates in their home page as well.  Groups joined are listed in the personal info page.

 

Now let's look at some of the features in each of these structures.



Personal Pages
Whenever I start using a new site or software, I click around on the tabs and links and look at what happens.  Usually, I can figure out what they mean and if I don't get it, I will ask friends or use the search or help functions.  I numbered the most important parts of a profile page:


Key spots on a Facebook profile page.

  1.  Your latest comment or post shows up here.
  2. The space where a new comment can be posted.  The small icons under it mean that you can attach a photo, video or link.  Videos have to be ones that you made.  If you post a youtube video, use the regular link option with the video's url as the address.
  3. The all-important Share button.
  4. Recent activity.  This shows up differently to different viewers depending on your privacy settings.
  5. At that bottom, left-hand corner, some little icons lead to applications and other functions.
  6. Chat function.
The top bar shows that this is the profile page.  If you click on "Home", you see all the activity that has been posted by your friends or the pages and groups you have joined.  Click on "Friends" to find one of your friends and on "Inbox" to send a private message to one or more friends.


The "Home" page on Facebook where you see all the activity of your connections.

The home page is the one you will check and your profile is what others will look at when they want to see more info about you.  I normally check my home page in the morning and at night.  I do a quick scroll down and screech to a quick stop if something interesting catches my eye and then I'll banter with a friend, watch a video, or give feedback on something that was posted.  One could spend hours and hours doing this, but I try to limit how much time I spend here, even though I do enjoy it.  Most of my friends are actual people I know, family,peer artists, and the organizations or pages that I follow are ones that I am truly interested in, so the content does interest me.



Friends who are diligent about loading photos make their page more interesting.  It's a great way to see new artwork, view the kids who are growing up, see rehab projects and just get a better mental picture of what is happening in their lives.


Those who have videos have a special page for them, too.  I'm just learning how to do this, but have a couple.  Business pages and groups also have these features.

Facebook has hit on the most interesting and vibrant way of sharing news and information.  I am terrible at making phone calls, often do this non-business stuff late at night, so I can browse and comment when the rest of the world is asleep.



Business Pages

Business pages have many of the same functions as a profile page plus a few others.  You can include photos, videos, discussions, and events.


Screenshot of Rayela Art


One of the things that I like about Facebook is the clean template and consistency among pages.  I had only seen My Space before and hated the chaotic jumble of images and glitter.  But, you can still personalize your page with photos, logo and how much information you add on.





You can set up your pages to allow fan photos, one more way to encourage networking among peer businesses and customers.  If someone posts something you think is inappropriate, you can delete it.



Screen shots of Afghan Tribal Arts.



A great tool for artists who do a lot of shows is the events page.  Your customers and fan base can keep track of you and try to attend a live performance, sale or opening.  I use it to post an occasional event that is happening locally in Paducah or a festival that I wish I could go to.



List your events on your business page on Facebook!

Many of your friends on your personal page will probably be interested in your business.  You can invite them to receive your updates.  Click on "Suggest to Friends" and a window pops up with icons of your friends.  If the image looks cloudy, they have already become a fan.  This is so much better than spamming people who don't want to receive your emails!  These people choose to follow your business, become a fan and get your news because they are interested.  Your job, then, is to come up with information that is interesting enough to make them want to share it with their friends.



Messages can also be sent through Facebook's Inbox (your messaging system on Facebook).  This should be used sparingly.  It can be really annoying to get multiple messages from one of the pages you became a fan of, especially if those messages aren't even in a language you understand.  Again, you can always leave a business page that gets on your nerve an "un-fan" yourself.

A nice feature when you become a fan of someone's page is that you can add them on as a favorite on your page.  I've added like-minded pages to Rayela Art because I think my fans will also find them interesting.  Of course, the hope is that these businesses will reciprocate and give you some floor space on their page, too.  If you click on the "See All" in the box, you can scroll down and see larger icons and names of the pages.


 

The one big complaint that I have of the business pages so far is that you cannot become a fan using your business.  So, when I fan people that have similar businesses, I show up as Rachel Biel instead of Rayela Art.  I would much rather drive people that I do not know to my Rayela Art page than to my personal one.  In the same way, I would like to know if my fans have businesses that I can interact with professionally, but if I click on their icon, it will go to their personal page.  It would be nice if Facebook would give you options of how you become a fan or how you join a group.


Groups
Groups are organized in a similar but slightly different manner from the other pages on Facebook.  I won't go much more into them, except to say that one can find any topic or theme under the sun on facebook.  When you do a search for groups, the results will show you which groups your friends have joined and what the latest activity is on the groups you belong to.  Once again, that viral potential in action. 




Group search on Facebook will come up with endless possibilities.


Applications

Applications are little independent programs that interface on facebook.  Some have to do with business, family or school connections, many with general silliness brought to life by people with too much time on their hands.  It's important to understand how to find and use applications as they can be useful tools.  The first icon at the bottom left-hand corner is where you will find them.  Click on it and a box pops up:

If one of the applications you are looking for is there, click on it.  Otherwise use "Browse More Applications" and a new page will open up.  This is where you go to create your pages that we discussed above. "Networked Blogs" is an important application for any of you who have blogs.  You join the application, are given a profile page with public snippets of your blogs and recent posts.  Every time you create a new post on your blog, it shows up in your news feed where all your friends can see it.  I have it set up so that the posts will also go to my pages.  Most applications will give you an option to create a box or tab on your profile page, too.  Interested friends can then click on that tab and see your blog posts and sign up for them.




  
Networked Blogs on Facebook, an important application.




Applications can also bring on a nightmare of games and stupid stuff.  If you do open that applications page, you will see that there are business tools, education, lifestyle, sports, and the dreaded games and just for fun.  The two top games that my friends enjoy are Farmville and Mafia Wars.  They are addictive and they go on and on and every time they do something new on it, it shows up on our personal page news feeds.  I just have no interest in knowing that so and so just bought a new pig for their farm or however it goes.  I've got a couple hundred friends right now and just imagine if 30 or more of them are playing these games!  As my group of friends got bigger, the number of games increased and my annoyance level grew.  I was about ready to quit the whole thing and get off Facebook, when one of my friends told me that if I hovered my cursor next to the application, a box pops up that gives you the option to hide that person or that application.  Ha!  Well, I still wanted the other stuff from that person, just not the games.  Once you hide the application from one person, it is hidden forever!  Good-bye farmville!  Relief!  Facebook became fun again for me.


 Farmville and Mafia Wars, application nightmares on Facebook...


Settings
One of the greatest fears many people have about Facebook is whether their privacy will be protected.  This is a legitimate concern according to the Wikipedia article I mentioned at the beginning of this post.  Hopefully, they will continue to improve this, but meanwhile, just make sure that you will not post things that might shame you later and check your settings so that they reflect the level of privacy you want to have.  I keep my updates so that only my friends can see them, but allow my photos to be seen by friends of friends.  If you have friends on your photos, you can tag them and that photo will show up in their photo page as well, so I figure that it's nice for their friends to be able to see them as well.  You might want to make an art album public to anyone.  The settings options can be accessed on the top bar, next to the search box.



Linked accounts and privacy are the two important settings to check whenever you have doubts about who is seeing what.  Many of my friends kids are on Facebook and they revel in silliness.  I think about how it will be for them, if they still have the same accounts in 10 years, where they will have mountains of records of how they behaved as teens...  Will they want to delete it or look back on these times with a smile?  Who knows where the world will be then, but never before has our private life become so public.

Pages also have settings that should be monitored.  You can decide how much fan input you want to have: whether they can submit comments, post photos, participate in discussions and so on.



Interfacing
As if all of the above is not enough to convince you that Facebook can be a powerful promotional tool for your business, there is one more feature that I really like.  Increasingly, Facebook is linking with other social media so that updates and information can be shared back and forth.  As an Etsy seller, I was thrilled when they became linked to each other.  There is an Etsy application that pulls items from your shop on an Etsy page that has its own tab in your profile page.  Click on an item and it takes you to the Etsy shop.

 



I have my Etsy shop application on both my personal profile page and on Rayela Art and Falamos Portugues.  I created one for Afghan Tribal Arts which is on the Afghan Tribal Arts page on Facebook.



When you post something on Etsy, there is a Facebook icon which you can click and send that item to your Home Page's stream.  Again, I wish this went to my business page instead of my personal one, but in time, maybe it will.

Twitter is also linked in.  I don't have the patience to post on Twitter, but know that I have to be there, too, so I was relieved to find that I could set up my Rayela Art Facebook posts to go there, too.  And, they go to my Linked In page.  All of it helps, all of it has viral potential, the sneeze we all want for our businesses!

There is much more, I am sure, but hopefully, this tutorial has helped you understand how to make use of Facebook your tool to fit your needs.  As a final tip, I would like to point to the Search box.  This is such a great tool in itself!  Once you become friends with someone or join a page or group, start typing the name and it pops up.  This is how I travel between my pages.  You can also search using any key word and all related pages and entries will pop up, giving preference to the ones your friends have created or posted.  Here is an example using the keyword "textile":




Topics show up, grouped into pages, groups, or posts and you can enter anyone of them to see more results.  You will certainly find more information than you ever imagined!  Facebook can be addictive and I even had one friend who was kicked off the site because she was accused of spamming.  She is an incredibly talented artist who was just enjoying the site and networking with other artists.  All of her information was lost and she had to start over from scratch.  There are definitely improvements that need to be made, but you can be that when things like that happen, the people start screaming and Facebook listens.

It's free and interesting.  I advertised there over the Holidays and got a couple thousand hits on my Etsy store.  It's not cheap and I don't know if it generated any extra sales, but my Google Analytics tells me that both my Etsy store and my blog are getting more and more traffic from my presence on Facebook.  As my fan base grows, it can only help my other endeavors.



Of all the social media efforts I engage in, I find Facebook to be the most valuable use of my time.  Get on there and expand your base.  You never know who will want to be your friend!

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