Friday, July 4, 2025

Social Media Resolutions For YOUR Success?


Yes, this is another column about New Year's resolutions. But this is the one you should read all the way through, because unlike those others, these suggestions are easy to do and the resulting habits are easy to keep..

And who doesn't like to cross something off their list right away? So without further ado, here are five simple social media resolutions for 2018.



Stop Broadcasting And Start Engaging

Broadcasters post nothing but links to their content, yet somehow expect the entire internet to share them with a smile. In social media, there are no successful broadcasters. When you start to engage with your audience and really take the time to know them and what they like to share, your stock really starts to rise. (See what I did there?)

Try Something New

Maybe your something new is something small, like engaging more. Or maybe it's something that requires time and effort, such as trying out a new platform. Do you need to be on Instagram? Of course. Is being on Instagram fun? You bet it is. Do you have time for a little bit of fun? Yeah, I think you do. And if you don't, that can be a resolution within a resolution.



Terrible Passwords Are So 2017

And 2016. And 2015. Hacking and phishing scams are already a problem, so please don't exasperate the problem with easy-to-guess passwords. One of the most popular bad passwords of 2017 was 12345, a password equally unsuitable for Twitter and your luggage. Lucky for you, most up-to-date browsers will suggest a secure password and even save them for you. Take advantage of these features and don't leave yourself vulnerable. The 10 seconds you spend doing that could save you a lifetime of heartache if someone gets into your accounts.

Update Your Settings Four Times This Year

That's every three months, 10 minutes each time for a total of 40 minutes. Make it easy by setting an Outlook reminder on their first day of each season. During this time, change your passwords if they resemble anything mentioned in the previous paragraph. Make sure you aren't granting access to a service you no longer use. Make sure you are sharing with the right audiences on LinkedIn, which will likely differ from the right audiences on Facebook or Twitter.



Follow Back Like A Pro

This goes back to engaging and broadcasting. Never follow someone back just because they follow you. What seems like a nice gesture makes your social media weak because you know nothing about this person. And when you do it a few thousand times, you end up with a feed that has nothing to do with you and your interests.

Easy, right? And it only takes a few minutes of your time. Turn these social media resolutions into good social media habits now and you'll be all set for 2019 and beyond.

The treadmill? Well, that's a different story.

Guest Authored By Scott Kleinberg. Scott's director of social media and digital engagement @NYCMayorsOffice. Former @ChicagoTribune social media manager. Journalist. Apple Pro. Photographer and 80's fanatic. Follow Scott on X.

Related Article: Social Media Secrets To Going Viral?


Easy, right?

And it only takes a few minutes of your time.

Turn these social media resolutions into good social media habits now and you'll be all set for 2019 and beyond.

  • Authored by:
    Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBr@nd.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, AZ,  where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

Thursday, July 3, 2025

YOUR Social Media Plastic Surgeon?


New research has revealed that Instagram has become the leading destination for people looking for information about plastic surgery, however the vast majority of the posts don’t come from certified doctors.

Less than 18% of plastic surgery-related Instagram posts in the United States and Canada come from board-certified plastic surgeons.



The study analysed a sample of more than 1.7 million Instagram posts that were uploaded on January 9 this year.


Each post contained at least one of 21 plastic surgery-related hashtags such as #plasticsurgery, #plasticsurgeon, #breastlift or #nosejob.



“The confusing marketing on social media is putting people at risk,” said senior study author Dr. Clark Schierle.
"There have been many recent reports of patient harm and deaths resulting from inexperienced providers offering services outside of their area of expertise."
The research notes that the ads particularly affect young people, who increasingly want to improve their appearance for social media, but often do not understand who is qualified to perform procedures.

The phenomenon isn’t confined to plastic surgeons. In an even more concerning development hair salons, dentists, barbers and spas with no associated physician are also marketing plastic surgery procedures on Instagram.



“This is a very scary finding,” said one of the research team, Robert Dorfman.
"Providers are doing procedures for which they do not have formal or extensive training. That’s extremely dangerous for the patient."
“A cosmetic surgeon is not necessarily the same thing as a board certified plastic surgeon, and patients need to be made aware of this,” Dorfman added.

 A board-certified plastic surgeon is a doctor with more than six years of surgical training and experience and at least three years specifically in plastic surgery.

The paper was published in the Aesthetic Surgery Journal.

Guest Authored By Ceimin Burke. Ceimin is a Journalist with many interests, particularly sports, GAA NBA, Football, Rugby etc. Follow Ceimin on X.




The phenomenon isn’t confined to plastic surgeons.

In an even more concerning development hair salons, dentists, barbers and spas with no associated physician are also marketing plastic surgery procedures on Instagram..


    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, AZ. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Tuesday, July 1, 2025

    Getting Your Social Media Content Shared?


    Your branded social media presences have a lot of potential to drive engagement with relevant audience members, but that’s just a drop in the bucket compared to the potential for engagement impact via peer-to-peer social shares..



    There are a few key reasons why making sure people share your content is to your advantage as a marketer.

    Prospective customers trust peer shares more than brand shares, with research showing that 92% of consumers trust influencers more than advertisements or celebrity endorsements. What’s more, social media newsfeed algorithms favor posts from people over posts from brands, and fast-rising share counts have been known to trigger Google bots to index items more rapidly.

    The reach implications are also huge. The more diverse your sharers are, the more diverse and wider your audience potential is. When you consider that 69% of the American population uses at least some type of social media, there are plenty of people out there to reach.

    The more your message is shared, the more opportunities there will be for interested people to see it. Let’s take a look at six of the most powerful tools that can help maximize the peer-to-peer social share rates for your content.



    1. Smarp

    Your employees are often your most valuable secret weapon when it comes to building traction with social media. People trust employees twice as much as they do your CEO, a senior executive, or an activist consumer. And, on average, brand messages are shared 24 times more frequently when they're distributed by employees.

    An app designed for employee communication and advocacy, Smarp presents users with a familiar-looking social feed interface of branded and otherwise relevant content items that they can easily schedule for posting across their networks.

    You can use the app to keep your team up to date with everything that's going on within your company, and make it easier for them share their knowledge, to help build their personal brands and assist with your company’s social selling efforts. Modules for gamified rewards and tracking ROI help marketers to double down on what’s working.



    2. Social Locker

    What’s more valuable to your nurture funnel, access to a few people’s inboxes or an army of social media advocates? It might be worth finding out. Social Locker is a WordPress plugin that provides a bit of a spin on the “gated content” concept.

    Most website visitors aren't going to be motivated on their own to share your content, so they’ll often ignore social share buttons. Even when people like your content, they may forget to share it, or may not do so simply because they don't know how important it is to you.

    Here, instead of asking people to consent to email follow up messages in exchange for accessing a premium resource, you’re asking them to share it. Essentially, this tool makes it easy for you to hide your most valuable content behind a set of social media buttons. Audience members won't see the content until they tweet, share, like or +1 the landing page.



    3. Quuu Promote

    People who want to position themselves as niche experts can automate the sharing of topic-specific content items with their social circles. Posting curated, relevant, third-party articles are a key activity for aspiring influencers, and Quuu makes it easy for free. But where does all that great content come from?

    Here’s the true brilliance of their model. Its sister platform, Quuu Promote, is where anyone can open an account and submit a URL for paid promotion. Once human quality control moderators approve your item, it’ll be added to the pool of suggested topic-specific posts for other users to approve and dispatch over the course of two months.

    Items on rotation in this tool generally see several hundred shares and clickthroughs (CTR), and the platform’s new monthly subscription plans make it easy to justify posting regularly.



    4. Blog Pros

    Another paid content amplification platform, Blog Pros connects your posts to real people across social media to increase the number of shares your content receives. This system checks your blog RSS feed for new content, and when it finds the new content, your post is assigned to people for promotion. No submission necessary – just new people sharing your latest items with their interested followers, within 12 hours of it going live.

    When people share your content with their audience, you're not only getting more traffic to your website, but you're also getting a chance to earn new fans and followers. Let's say Jane finds your content, and she loves it so much she decides to look at some of your other pieces. She decides she wants to be kept updated when you have new posts, so she subscribes to your email alerts and likes your Facebook Page. She shares your content, and some of her friends find the same value.

    Moving forward, these engaged advocates may interact with you and share content for you, without needing to be connected through Blog Pros.



    5. Triberr

    Content shares can be a type of currency in the social media influence game, which is what makes Triberr such an effective content discovery and amplification platform. Here is where people can connect with one another based on their levels of influence in specific niches, building out “tribes” of like-minded peers who share each other’s published assets.

    When you join for free, this tool gives you the option of auto-importing your blog posts, to make it easier for you to share the content with people in your tribes.

    You can search for existing tribes, or build your own, based on your interests – so you can find people who are interested in the content you're sharing. Share content from tribe members, and they'll do the same for you. Actively participating in tribes can help you build relationships and connections, which can help you with far more than building your social shares.



    6. Flipboard

    Flipboard is best known as a mobile news reader app that offers a beautiful content consumption experience. But it’s also a great social media content distribution channel, especially since the company started aggressively rolling out new features about two years ago. It now gives you a better way to organize your content, and allows you to highlight content you've already shared on social to keep it fresh for people who may have missed the original posting.

    It’s also easier than ever to build out and automate the refreshment of themed “magazines,” any publisher can join as a content source for readers and magazine curators to subscribe to, and the relatively recently re-launched web app is now a full-featured platform. You can connect any RSS feed and a variety of social networks – including Google+, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, SoundCloud, Flickr and Tumblr – to aggregate content from there into your brand’s Flipboard magazine.

    Whereas most social platforms are all about peer network-based content discovery, on Flipboard, it’s all about the topics, which means that as long as your content is relevant and engaging, it’ll be easily found. Follow and share buttons are all over the place in the super clean interface, and content providers are feeling the impact, with some seeing more mobile traffic referred from Flipboard than even LinkedIn and Pinterest.



    Real People for Real Results

    Using any combination of these platforms will help you promote your content across social media.

    Sure, you can always ask your friends and family to share your content, but when you have the same people sharing it all the time, it doesn't necessarily yield the diverse, growing reach you need.

    The more your content gets shared, the greater the chance for increased engagement. And increased engagement tells the social media newsfeed algorithms more of your fans and followers need to see your content in their feeds – which helps build more organic reach.

    Guest Authored By Hurera Sheikh. Hurera is a Copywriter and Sales Strategist at Webee Inc, and Contributor at Huffington Post. Follow Hurera on Twitter.





    The more your content gets shared, the greater the chance for increased engagement.

    And increased engagement tells the social media newsfeed algorithms more of your fans and followers need to see your content in their feeds – which helps build more organic reach..

      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, AZ. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

      Monday, June 30, 2025

      Building YOUR Personal Real Estate Brand?


      Social media has become a key branding tool for professionals across all fields, including real estate..



      Brokers and agents can connect with fellow industry players, push out information about listings or open houses and use social listening tools to identify potential clients who may be looking to buy.

      But as with any brand, no one will want to follow you if all you post about is business.

      Your social media audience wants to know that there's a human being behind your accounts, and it's important to have a healthy mix of personal and professional content to keep people engaged.

      Members of Forbes Real Estate Council offered 10 key ways to use social media as an effective brand-building tool without alienating your followers.



      1. Show Your Personality And Charm

      You may be focused on selling your product and service, but it is paramount that you incorporate the importance of intangible factors like personality and charm. You've been in sales your whole life because every day you are selling your most important asset: yourself. It may sound clich, but people do business with people they like. So sell yourself; the business will come later. -Alex Chieng A & L Real Estate Team

      2. Be Yourself And Let People Into Your Daily Life

      Don't be afraid to let people in on your daily life. If you post little snippets of your life, people will love following you. Keep your social media positive — happy pictures of your friends and family, and then sprinkle in a little bit of work-related subjects. Be real! When you make people laugh, they will be glued to your reality. -Angela Yaun Day Realty Group



      3. Find A Balance

      It’s important for your social media to be a reflection of yourself, personality and all. But at the same time, remember who your audience is. Your followers are likely interested in your real estate knowledge, not necessarily how you feel about the current political climate. Make sure to find a balance or people might not take you seriously in the real estate industry. -Joshua Hunt TRELORA

      4. Have Your Clients Blow Your Trumpet

      I have seen some younger brokers/agents use social media to engage with their customers and use that as a brand building tool. It adds more validity to your skills when praise comes from your clients rather than yourself. Tagging your clients in a post mentioning a successful closing might be the first step to brand building on social media. -Nikhil Choudhary Zenith Engineers Inc



      5. Focus On Facebook

      The biggest mistake most good agents make with social media is they try to do it all. The vast majority can't; they are too busy. The best one for agents is hyperlocal: Facebook. You can connect with your sphere and your neighbors. There is no better way to reach your audiences to build your brand. Use Facebook in the course of your daily routine and post as you go. -Kevin Hawkins WAV Group, Inc.

      6. Be Consistent

      To build brand awareness you need to stay consistent with your message, whatever it may be. Make sure to be active across your social media platforms on a daily basis and find a way to differentiate yourself and stand out from the herd. -Engelo Rumor List'n Sell Realty



      7. Don't Try To Sell

      Use social media to build your personal brand, not to sell your product or service. Post items that help people understand who you are, what you think and what you stand for. Be very careful never to criticize others: Whatever you say on social media is out there forever, in writing, for anyone to see. -Lee Kiser Kiser Group

      8. Add Value To The Conversation

      Whether you currently use social media or not, it is critical to understand that your brand is already being talked about online. By using social media, you can steer the conversation in the direction you desire. The No. 1 rule of social media is to provide value. Always make sure you're adding value to the conversation while keeping the goals of your audience in mind. -Sarnen Steinbarth TurboTenant



      9. Be Where Your Clients Are

      When developing and managing your social media brand, it's important to focus on those channels where you'll have the most impact. The greatest content in the world is useless if no one is seeing it. Survey your clients and prospects to find out what social media channels they're using and what type of posts they like to read. -Lisa Fettner ReferralExchange

      10. Go Behind The Scenes

      Use social updates, videos, live streams and other tools to show off your listings, but your life. And I'm not talking about a video of you standing in front of a Bentley — I'm talking about the real grunt work that goes on behind the scenes whether you're staging, flipping or listing a home. -Kent Clothier Real Estate Worldwide 

      Guest Authored By Forbes Real Estate Counsil. Forbes Real Estate Counsil is an invitation only organization for executives in the Real Estate industry. Follow Forbes Real Estate Council on X.




      As with any brand, no one will want to follow you if all you post about is business.

      Your social media audience wants to know that there's a human being behind your accounts, and it's important to have a healthy mix of personal and professional content to keep people engaged..

        • Authored by:
          Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Scottsdale, AZ. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)