Last week I talked about setting up your Personal Home Page/Profile, and Friday I mentioned that this page should be about you; it shouldn’t be your winery’s presence on Facebook. So, of course, now things can get tricky, and you’ll have to make a few decisions.
Unless someone happens to look for you on Facebook, you won’t get any Friends unless you go looking. The easiest way to look, and something that Facebook will prompt you on as you got through the setup process, is to have the site match your e-mail list against current Facebook users. Just go to the top of the page and click on “Friends”; the page will open and prompt you to put in the password for your e-mail account so it can get to work. You can also click on “Upload Contact File” (to the right), and that screen will let you either upload a list or go to Outlook (if that’s your mail client) to match up against Facebook users. Understand that matches (potential Friends) will get a Friend Request, and will choose to “Accept” or “Ignore” the request – there are no “automatic ins”. Bummer if your significant other hits the “Ignore” button…
So here’s a decision: do you use your personal e-mail list, or do you upload the winery’s e-mail list. Hard to say. Whichever you choose, you’ll be inviting people to become your “Facebook Friend”; if you want folks on the winery’s e-mail list to be your Friend, that’s fine, but it could be a little confusing when you launch the winery’s Fan Page (“Heck, I’m already her Friend, so why to I need to be her winery’s Fan?”). So just give it some thought, because your goal will be Fans.
Not everybody in your e-mail contact list will be on Facebook, but Facebook gives you the opportunity to send the non-Facebookers an e-mail inviting them to join up. Just go to the left column of the Friends page and click on the “Invite Friends…” link; Facebook gives you several options for processing these invitations. If you don’t use one of the supported e-mail clients, you can load addresses in manually. So, go out and find some Friends.
Once you get some Friends, you’ll find that Friend “Recommendations” start to pop up in the right column of your Facebook Home Page, as well as on the Friend page. I’m not sure how the selection algorithm works, but these are Friends of your Friends. Could be people you know, so you might take a bit of time to review the Suggestions (I do occasionally).
Friends are important for a number of reasons, besides just keeping up with their status updates, kid photos, and the like. You see, Friends (and later, Fans) are the key to the viral action of Facebook. Go to the top any page, click on “Profile”, and you’ll be whisked to your FB Profile Page; this, specifically the Wall, is where people land when they come to see you. If you and I are FB Friends, and I click on your name, I am taken to your Wall. The Wall is where all the stuff that you originate, and that Friends and such send directly to you, shows up. “Home” is where all of the posts and similar originated by your Friends (and Fan/Group Pages) for general distribution go. So you go Home to see what people are saying to everybody, and to the Wall to see what they are saying to you. Explaining this is trickier than I thought it would be.
The box at the top of your Wall, and your Home page, is known as the “Publisher”. Type something interesting in it, click “share”, and whatever you wrote pops up immediately below; these are known as “Status Updates”. AND it pops up on the newsfeed of all of your Friends’ FB Home pages, so all your
Friends know what you are up to. Say you entered “Went to In-N-Out for lunch, had Animal-style Burger and chocolate shake”. I see it, and comment “I love In-N-Out”; when I click my comment, your original post and my comment shows up on all my Friends’ newsfeeds. If one of my Friends comments “Double-Doubles are my faves”, the whole thing goes to their Friends’ newsfeeds, too. And so on. It certainly doesn’t always get this crazy, but when you post interesting stuff, it can (Yes, In-N-Out is interesting!).
Think about what you post. Critics of social media, particularly Twitter, complain that all they see is minutia, and who wants to see minutia. I agree. I post when I have something to say, because I don’t like posts about nothing in particular. With all that’s going on in SocMed, people are going to be selective, but this goes back to which groups of people you decide to Friend. Your personal friends will likely be interested in different things than winery-related folks, but feel free to tinker around, maybe some mix and match; as long as it works for you, you’ll be in good shape. Do note that if someone decides to “unFriend” you, you’ll not get a notice of that action.
Some of the actions I’ve discussed are explained in the Facebook Help Center; the link is at the bottom right of any page that you’re on. Sometimes the explanations are helpful, sometimes not, and occasionally it seems that FB feels that some actions are self-explanatory. I’ll do the best I can to keep things clear…hopefully in the next post, with more about the Profile Page (and Notes…Notes rock).












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