Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 6:36:48 GMT
Who hasn't done things in life that, at a distance, turned out to be foolish things? We have all made errors of evaluation due to lack of awareness of the tools. It happens to everyone to swipe the car as soon as they get their license. This is because we don't know the tool well and we make evaluation errors. I admit that I have never loved my Facebook page . I used it as a paid promotional tool for the contents of the profile, rather than as a parallel means of communication. For years I have been aware of the great opportunities of the pages, but as we know, the shoemaker is always the one who walks around with broken shoes. The page, being mistreated and kept on the periphery of my main communication, suffered from a drop in affinity with those who had liked it. Pages are algorithmically living organisms .
If, once created, you do not sustain a link of visibility with their audience on a India Mobile Number Data daily basis, they are destined to be forgotten, to go unnoticed by the same people who followed them. The confession What are the classic mistakes we make, or did we all make as soon as we opened a page? Invite friends, colleagues and relatives to like. In the worst cases, we went begging people everywhere to like our page. In MUCH worse cases we have bought likes with more or less orthodox methods. Well, I confess, I have done all three of these things in the past. The year was 2011, my blog was a failed experiment and I hadn't yet founded my company, I didn't know Facebook and, above all, at the time it was quite common to buy "fans".
At that time the pages lived on staff and it was not possible to pay for visibility (the possibility of sponsoring was introduced at the end of 2012). So it was that at the beginning of 2011 I acquired 5000 likes from unaware users (at the time it was possible to do it with a technique that now, fortunately, no longer works). With a debut like this, the visibility of my page could only be algorithmically poor. In theory, people like a page because they are interested in the content. If these people like for different reasons (by mistake, to do you a favor or by deception) they don't give a damn about the contents.
If, once created, you do not sustain a link of visibility with their audience on a India Mobile Number Data daily basis, they are destined to be forgotten, to go unnoticed by the same people who followed them. The confession What are the classic mistakes we make, or did we all make as soon as we opened a page? Invite friends, colleagues and relatives to like. In the worst cases, we went begging people everywhere to like our page. In MUCH worse cases we have bought likes with more or less orthodox methods. Well, I confess, I have done all three of these things in the past. The year was 2011, my blog was a failed experiment and I hadn't yet founded my company, I didn't know Facebook and, above all, at the time it was quite common to buy "fans".
At that time the pages lived on staff and it was not possible to pay for visibility (the possibility of sponsoring was introduced at the end of 2012). So it was that at the beginning of 2011 I acquired 5000 likes from unaware users (at the time it was possible to do it with a technique that now, fortunately, no longer works). With a debut like this, the visibility of my page could only be algorithmically poor. In theory, people like a page because they are interested in the content. If these people like for different reasons (by mistake, to do you a favor or by deception) they don't give a damn about the contents.