Thoughtpick: A unique perspective of the Web and social media...
A unique perspective of the Web and social media...

February 20, 2010

10 Ways to Lose Your Facebook Friends in 10 Days!

“The friendship that can cease has never been real.”- Saint Jerome

By now, I would assume that most social media users realize the positive and negative effects that social media reflects on us and our current and future environment. Whether how social media can help parents raise their children better, or how it can hinder friendships or relationships, social media’s consequences are becoming more and clearer to its users!

As one of Thoughtpick’s content chefs, I am always seeking to research, create and write about controversial and intriguing ideas which have the ability to get you to think about different things in a new light! Therefore, for my special dish of the day, I decided to present you with 10 easy and time efficient ways to lose your Facebook “friends” in ten days!

Remember, if you lose them, then they were never really your friends :)

Are you ready for it? Here I go!

1. Make sure you BOMBARD them with meaningless video and audio shares!

I promise you, if you are a regular Facebook user focusing your use for business or just to staying connected with friends and their lives, you will just hate being bombarded with more than 2 video or audio shares per day. I personally removed friends from my account due to the fact that they seem to have too much time on their hands and they share meaningless and useless audio and video clips on my profile!

Bombard them with videos!

Bombard them with videos!

2. Limit their access to your profile!

Are you shocked? Well, don’t be! I had friends remove me from their Facebook account simply because I placed them on my Limited Profile list due to privacy concerns! Sometimes, I even got calls r messages complaining about it to the point where we almost lost our friendship! [read full article >>]

September 17, 2009

TechCrunch50’s Udorse Takes Facebook Photo Tagging to a Whole New Level

Udorse's earnings

Udorse's earnings

Well well well, we have reached the end of the Pop Idol of Silicon Valley, and despite all the innovation, one winner had to be selected, this year the prize went to RedBeacon. RedBeacon is a new platform that allows you to hire local service providers online without any phone calls. While it is kind of an interesting service, it didn’t get me excited about its offering and potential as Udorse did. RedBeacon does facilitate people’s search for service providers but doesn’t really bring anything new to the table – in my opinion at least -. On the other hand, Udorse manages to take photos tagging to a whole new level.

Facebook Photos Tagging:

One of the features that made Facebook photo sharing so popular is enabling you to tag your friends and give names to the people in your photos. Today, instead of calling your friend and ask him about the girl with him in the photo he posted to his Facebook account, you can simply figure out her name – and potentially other information if her profile is public – through the simple tag in the photo.

[read full article >>]

March 18, 2009

Digg is bloggers’ Hollywood

Real life celebrity glamor is not that different from that over the Internet. As a Web marketer, you are probably continuously looking for ways to promote your blog to a celebrity-like status. Once it becomes a star, your website rank would spike. But making celebrities is a tough job, isn’t it? You definitely won’t be taking it to Hollywood, of course! It doesn’t work like this in the Web’s universe; we have other dream-come-true medium. Social bookmarking has created new platforms for stars-type posts to shine. Show up at Digg, and you will get a chance.

It is not really as simple as that. Not every submitted article at Digg make it to the first page. Although as Dave Naffziger, CEO of Brand Verity, points out in his analysis of Digg’s submissions that certain criteria make your article more likely to be dugg. Like, for instance, submitting your article on the weekends rather than on a weekday, or talking about Nintendo Wii rather than talking about golf. Putting that aside, we all know that the most essential part of any article remains in its content. The same classical story, you should be model material to make it in Hollywood. In other words, people would not bookmark or share your post if you don’t provide them with an adequate personal value.

After coming up with a decent content, a simple strategy of using a combination of different social bookmarking services would help. Try submitting your post to StumbleUpon and Digg, Twittering about it to spread the word, and then add the ‘Digg it’ button to your post. People would then start to show up and naturally click the ‘digg it’ if they found it interesting enough. The more diggs you get, the more people would want to take shots (add it to their own bookmarks over del.icio.us). Soon, your post would gain a celebrity status. Darren Rowse, a full time professional blogger, attracted 250k visitors over a single night using the same steps.

Then again, one shouldn’t ignore the importance of tags. Tagging has been at the core of social bookmarking. It offers a personal value in helping people to better manage, organise and retrieve their bookmarks when needed. This is the model Del.icio.us was built on in the first place, where personal value precedes network value. Tagging has become equally essential for other people in the network to find relevant information as well. Del.icio.us managed to aggregate the tags generated by the users and create a folksonomy framework. That’s the briliance of their approach and why they deserve the market share they currently hold.

The figure below (taken from Dave Naffziger’s article), illustrates some interesting trend data showing how his NWF Daily News website have gone from nothing to the top 20,000 websites according to Alexa through his impressive use of Digg. Notice the spikes Digg inflicted on their traffic!


To sum up, social bookmarking has changed the face of the Web for regular users, let alone Web marketers. Search engines are no longer the most single source of traffic. I , like many other people, tend to trust people’s verdicts. If you are a celebrity, then there is something worthy about you. Google would be my choice if I know exactly what I am looking for, but I would pick up Del.icio.us to find more relevant information through the connection of its tagging system. The internet navigation nature is changing, I wonder what is coming next?