The impact of social networking sites like Facebook on the world of marketing can not be overstated. Facebook is an inexpensive and efficient method that marketers can use to promote a company’s products and/or services and get people to visit their websites.

The universe of direct marketing has been taken to lengths never imagined even up to a few years ago by the social networking site Facebook. Millions of people with varied interests and backgrounds have joined Facebook for reasons that vary from keeping in touch with family and friends to networking. Facebook friends can be added or removed from individual profiles at any time. While Facebook is primarily known as a social tool that allows people to keep in touch, the social networking site can also be utilized by companies as a marketing tool that has the potential to be effective if used correctly.

A number of large companies including Toys R’ Us, Electrolux, Avon, and others have started to put fan pages up on Facebook. Facebook users who have an interest in these companies may join these company pages. The administrators of the fan pages, or groups as they are called, will update their fans on all of the latest company news, products, services, and events. Contact information, including most importantly company websites, is typically made available on such pages. This can translate into more clicks on the companies’ web pages. In order to draw attention to their spots on Facebook, it is becoming increasingly common for businesses to encourage potential customers to come and visit their pages on the social networking site. This may be done as part of ads deployed by traditional direct marketing methods such as print ads, radio spots, emails, mail pieces, or on websites, including the companies’ own websites.

While large companies have taken advantage of Facebook’s big pool of potential customers and used the site as a marketing tool that has the potential of increasing website traffic, Facebook tends to be a particularly effective method of promotion for small businesses as well. Smaller businesses tend to not have the discretionary marketing dollars that their larger counterparts have, which makes Facebook a very attractive marketing option for them. This is since it is free to join Facebook and to set up a page or more on the popular social networking site at this time.

The following is an illustration of how Facebook can be used to market a small business. An owner of a small cafe wants to promote his or her business. He or she sets up a page on Facebook which includes information about his or her company, pictures and descriptions of the different desserts offered at the cafe, testimonials about the business, and the url to the cafe’s website. Initially, the cafe owner can invite his or her friends to the page. Those friends can invite their friends, and the chain can go on to a point where the Facebook page has the potential of finding new customers for the business and increasing traffic to the cafe’s website. These actions in turn can positively enhance the cafe’s bottom line if enough people are made aware of the cafe and then decide to actually visit it. Thus, the more Facebook friends the cafe’s page has, the better.

Small businesses have always primarily relied on word-of-mouth advertising to promote their products and services. They tend to be locally based, and happy customers will tell their friends to visit the local merchants who have the best reputations. Facebook has now provided an online forum for small businesses to promote themselves; it is indeed a contemporary take on word-of-mouth advertising that more and more small firms are utilizing to their advantage.

Companies of all types and sizes are increasingly using Facebook to get the word out about their products and services. It should be noted that Facebook’s role as a marketing tool has been even more profound for small businesses, as they do not have the marketing budget that large firms do, and Facebook does not cost anything to join. Facebook can effectively promote awareness of companies’ activities and products, as well as drive traffic to companies’ websites. These aspects can in turn result in more customers for firms if they use Facebook in the correct manner.

The impact of social networking sites on the world of marketing can not be overstated. These sites are inexpensive and efficient methods that an internet marketer can use to promote a home business products and/or services.


Tweetsgiving is a project of Epic Change that seeks to demonstrate the power of twitter and the social web by spreading gratitude and raising $10,000 in 48 hours to build a classroom at the school in Tanzania. The project was inspired by the TrickorTweet campaign organized around Halloween by @TheGrok and @ChrisBrogan and by this “thank you” post.

Help build a classroom in Tanzania by clicking here


Join these IM Dream Team Superstars
IM Dream Team Superstars


Join these IM Dream Team Superstars in a stellar event that will put YOU in the limelight of the IM World and get you into the inner circles of IM

Join The IM Dream Team

The IM Dream Team giveaway event is quite different from others. This is a chance for Internet marketers to actually make a real difference in the World. Each IM Dream Team giveaway will turn over it’s profits to a small and deserving cause. We pick the kind of charity where our dollars can truly make a difference, not just get lost in a mega-charity’s red tape.

Read all about the IM Dream Team Here


Your profile may be the most critical element of a profitable Web 2.0 Marketing Campaign. I will cover a few basics that can be applied to profile creation for any social or Web 2.0 program.

In many ways e-commerce allows you to profit from behind the scenes. Your order buttons and shopping cart system, along with well-written sales copy, do all the work for you around the clock whether or not you ever make an appearance.

This is all changing with Web 2.0 marketing. Your core assets in the world of Web 2.0 marketing are, believe it or not, your winning smile and your personal first impression. ;)

We may be exaggerating slightly. But only slightly.

The fact is, when using Web 2.0 sites to promote you aren’t selling products and services, you are selling yourself! Setting up a great profile is crucial for your success in Web 2.0 marketing.

Your prospects must instantly feel they can relate to and like you. This leads to trust and a personal connection, which of course paves the way for wonderful customer relations.

The first thing you need to accept is this: Not everyone is going to like you! :(

Everyone you meet offline doesn’t fall madly in love with you and/or want to be your best friend. Don’t expect this to be any different when using social media and Web 2.0 marketing strategies.

Your focus should be on making a real connection with people you have something in common with. No matter who you are, there are thousands of people online who will be able to relate to you so just relax and be yourself.

Here are some basics to keep in mind when setting up your highly effective profile.

Use Your Real Name

When setting up a profile always use your real, full name. Never go with a username as this is not only a bit childish, it screams “amateur” or even suggests you have something to hide.

Provide Real Personal Details Where Appropriate

Use your true age or birth date, and enter the city and country where you live. Of course you don’t want to enter bank account info and your full street address for the general public to view, but you do want to give the impression of being very open and accessible, because this is the whole point of Web 2.0 marketing in the first place.
Be Yourself At All Cost

Be sure to list your real interests, and write your entire profile in the kind of language you personally use on a daily basis. Really go to lengths to allow the real you to shine through here. The point of your profile is to resonate with other people that share your interests and personality traits so don’t hold back and don’t be shy.

With Web 2.0 marketing you won’t be blazing away with slick sales talk and hard pitches right off the bat. Instead you’ll be making a personal first impression and inviting other people to introduce themselves and essentially just strike up a friendly conversation.

Think of your profile like your personal representative at a local chamber of commerce meeting. It’s imperative that your profile reflects who you really are and all the great value you can offer.

Be sure to put your best foot forward. But above all, as stated previously, just be yourself.
To Your Web 2.0 Marketing Success!


Marcus Schroefel


Now Google officialy goes social as they add Friend Listing, many social features like bookmarking, RSS feed sharing, Blog commenting and a Blog recommendation engine based on your friends feeds to Google Reader. Get all the details at this eye opening blog post by Chris Lang:

Google Reader Adds Friends List, Sharing, Bookmarking and Blog Recommendation Engine

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