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Jumat, 16 Desember 2016
Minggu, 27 November 2016
Facebook Promotion Tricks on How to Get More Facebook Likes On Your Fan Page with Facebook Ads
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in the world, but how do you gather the people that are relevant to you, to your business
via your page? Facebook promote page, that's your answer. We go through it in this video.
Lord Barnabas here, my duckling friends, and today we're going to investigate something
called social media using a website called Facebook. None of this makes any sense to
me but it appears to makes sense to my boffin friend Tim, who's telling me you can gather
tens of thousands of people to your cause without seeing any of the faces at all. Simply
by using your little thumbs to text and your little fingers to type you'll be able to do
this for yourself.
Here it is in video form! Take it away boffin friend, Tim. Today I want
to talk about Facebook and in particular how to do a Facebook promote page. The idea here
is to gather lots of people, thousands of people, who are fans of your business and
interested in the products and services that you sell. It's sort of about gathering your
friends, gathering your tribe, gathering your clients.
So how do you do this inexpensively?
You do something called Facebook promote page. But it's not necessarily immediately obvious.
Here we are at my page and you see I've got about ten thousand eight hundred people here.
But until recently I only had about six and a half thousand and that changed in the course
of around about two weeks. So specifically how did I do that? So let's go here to insights
and see what's happening behind the scenes. And I'm going to click this button here that
says likes that really shows you this story.
What you can see here is the number of new
clients, I should say new likes, that I was gathering over the course of time. We'll scroll
down and see some more detail. So you can see here from June until July which is where
we are now, I was gathering this huge mountain of people. Round about 200 people a day for
a two week period.
You can see here I went from six and a half thousand to about ten
thous and eight hundred which is where I'm at right about now. So what exactly did I
do? Well I ran something called a Facebook promote page. So to do that we go back to
the page and we look for this button here that says "promote your page." Now when I
click on that it brings up this advertising options box. And you can see that it's split
into desktop, news feed, mobile, and right column.
Basically what that means is it will
show the ad this way on a desktop, and you can see it makes use of my big header. You
can see it'll show it this way on a cell phone and it'll show it this way as a teensy weensy
little one on the right hand side column. So I left it as doing all of those three things.
No problem. Over here I start to set the features.
What location? Well I left this worldwide
and the reason is that as soon as you change that it becomes a way smaller number of people
and since I have a worldwide audience that's fine. So for example you can see here that
it wants to start off at 20 dollars per day and that'll get me between 133 and 533 likes
on that day. But if we put in here, for example, the United States and it's order completing
for me - Bam! That goes down to 17 to 66. Wow, that's lots less.
So I left that as worldwide
audience. In fact I wonder if I can write worldwide... No, it doesn't let me do that.
So it's- I'll leave it there. The next thing is interests and it asks me to put in four
or ten interest of the sorts of clients that I'm looking for.
So for example I would naturally
type in CEO, I like CEO founder, CEO presidents because I work a lot o with CEO's. How about
entrepreneurs, entrepreneurship is good, social entrepreneurship is good. I work a lot of
with authors. I work a lot with writers, I.
Work a lot with creatives and artists and
you can see you could sort of keep adding. And what's happened down h;ere now is this
has responded by telling me that it's down to 120 to 489 likes per day. And so it's going
to go and find specific people who have an interest in those particular topics and those
are the sort of people who should be involved in my business. Down here you can see do I
run this continuously, do I run it for seven days, so I'm pretty much setting my budget
there as I do this.
I'd hit "promote page" and bam, this ad would be live. And all I
can say is that the results really speak for themselves as you see I went from six and
a half thousand to over ten thousand in the course of two weeks. Now there is another
website that I just want to mention that does this kind of work and that website is Fiverr.Com.
You can see I've got a lot of videos on this particular one. And if you type in here, for
example, Facebook likes or even Facebook fans it'll come up with a lot of gigs that show
you how to get fans.
You an see quite a lot of fans for only five dollars. You can see
here I will deliver two thousand plus Facebook page likes. But I just want to caution you
here because if something looks a little bit too good to be true, it probably is too good
to be true. And while I've experimented with this years ago I found that those fans don't
appear to be very engaging.
They appear to be just sort of random humans. Whereas when
I work within the Casebook system, Facebook's algorithm is finding people who are matched
to the particular interests so that's really the way I highly recommend. And that is what
you need to do to do a Facebook promote page. I highly recommend it.
Get stuck in, and as
always let me know how it goes. And so we are done for one more video. They make absolutely
no sense to me but hopefully you've learned something useful. And if you'd like to learn
something else that's useful every two, perhaps four weeks, please go to timlevy.Net where
you'll be able to join and use later that send such juicy morsels as this video to your
inbox every two to four weeks.
Of course you can always tray and wander while there and
look for books and online programs and other useful things that my boffin friend Tim has
bought online. Of course you can just hit the subscribe now button for a subscription
to this YouTube channel. Either way, we're done for today. Trala, hip hip, toodlepops..
Selasa, 08 November 2016
Facebook Graph Search How to Find People Who Like a Page
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going to be taking a look at the Bellingham hashtag
No DAPL Coalition. And the reason for that
is, a few days ago, I read an article from Ars Technica that the Whatcom County
Sheriff's Department was seeking data
surrounding the Bellingham hashtag No DAPL Coalition Facebook page, a page with more than a thousand followers provides information about
Pipeline environmental issues, and is used to organize political protests and connect political activists. In addition to demanding
account information about those who have interacted with the group's page, the
warrant seeks messages, photos, videos, wall posts, and
location information dating from February 4th to February 15th.
Now, whether you are for or against this protest I'm not here to argue. What I do want to show you is how you can find similar data that the sheriff's department is looking for using the Facebook open graph search, namely how to find who likes the Bellingham hashtag No DAPL Coalition. So let's get started. So, to start off with,
we're over on the Bellingham hashtag No DAPL Coalition Facebook page.
And, as you can see here,
there are 1401 people like this and 1476 people are following this. Now, if you click on that link there, it will show you a graph,
but it won't show you who actually likes it. So, what you could do is you could go into Facebook open graph and basically,
that is the search tool, the search field up here
at the top of Facebook. It says people who like Bellingham hashtag No DAPL Coalition, so basically, it's a very basic open search, open graph search and I'm just looking for people who like the page.
And Facebook says:
couldn't find any people. And I thought that was kind of strange. So I started digging
around, and I came across this web site where he talks about Facebook open graph
now uses a STR command. So then I did a little bit more digging and found, that in order to do a search like this, you have to use the Facebook ID.
So then I went on a search to find how do you find the Facebook ID? And, basically, you have to go into View Source on any browser. So while you're on the page, right-click, go to View Source, you do Control F or Command F. If you're on a Mac, you type in Page, underscore, ID. And then, where you find that result, the number right next to
it, that is the page ID.
So once you have your page ID, then you can use this STR boolean search to use the proper search to actually find the people who like this Facebook page. With me so far? Okay. So, what I did was I
came up with this search. So it is search, slash, STR, so that's the string command I was talking about.
And then this is the Facebook page ID. And then we're going to do slash likers, and I'm not going to talk
about all what that means but I'll leave the link to
a couple of sources that you can take a look at and find
out more information about. So I copy this, I'm gonna
paste it in the browser, and I'm gonna come up with this result. Now, the interesting thing is that I'm asking the same thing
in open graph search, people who like Billingham
No DAPL Coalition, but I'm finding the actual
result as opposed to this one.
So I thought that was very interesting. So that the Facebook is understanding the STR command, but
it's not understanding the one that you would actually search for if you were in Facebook looking for this. So now that we know the
actual people who like Bellingham No DAPL Coalition,
we can dig a little deeper from an osint or social media
intelligence perspective, protective intelligence, we
could look at a little deeper and see what people are posting what are they talking
about, that type of thing. But I'm not going to go into that here.
This was just simply how to use Facebook open graph
search using the page ID. To search for people who
like a particular page. Hope you found this video useful. If you did, give it a like.
Be sure to share with
colleagues and friends and I'll see you in the next video..
Jumat, 21 Oktober 2016
Facebook Fraud

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page has over 4,000 likes. They use the page to promote their brilliant
business model 'we send you bagels via the Internet -- just download and enjoy.' It sounds like a joke, and it is, sort of.
This page was set up by BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones in 2012. He wanted to find out what is the worth of
a like on a Facebook page, so he bought some likes for Virtual Bagel. Now there are two
ways to buy 'likes', the legitimate way and the illegitimate way.
The illegitimate way is to go to a website
like BoostLikes.Com purchase some likes. You can get 1000 for $70. Sites like these use clickfarms in developing
countries like India, the Philippines, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Egypt, Indonesia and Bangladesh. Here employees are routinely paid just 1 dollar
per thousand clicks of the like button.
So Facebook explicitly forbids buying likes
this way. Instead they offer the 'legitimate' way to
pay for likes by advertising your page. Prominently displayed is a link to "Get more likes" with
the promise: "Connect with more of the people who matter to you." And this is how Virtual Bagel got its 4000
likes. Rory Cellan-Jones paid 100 dollars to Facebook and the likes rolled in.
He targeted
his ad to the UK and the United States, but also to countries like Egypt, Indonesia and
the Philippines. Now where do you think Virtual Bagel was most popular? I'll give you a hint,
it wasn't the US or the UK. But within a day he had over 1600 likes mostly from developing
countries. Now what was more problematic was the people
who followed Virtual Bagel looked suspicious.
For example there was one Cairo-based follower
whose name was Ahmed Ronaldo. His profile consisted almost exclusively of
pictures of Cristiano Ronaldo and he liked 3,000 pages. Cellan-Jones also observed that his new throng
of fans was particularly disengaged, just as you'd imagine those from a click-farm would
be. But he hadn't hired a click-farm, he had paid for Facebook ads.
This story was reported in July 2012. In August,
Facebook reported it had identified and deleted 83 million fake accounts (that was 9% of the
total at the time). This resulted in noticeable drops for popular singers and celebrities. So did they delete all of the fake likes?
Nope, not even close.
I know because most of the likes on my Facebook page are not genuine. In May 2012, I received a number of emails
from Facebook offering me $50 worth of free promotion of my page, which at the time had
only 2,000 likes. My YouTube channel had twenty times that following
so I thought surely this free 'paid' promotion could help me reach more of the people who
mattered to me. And immediately I could see results.
Within just a few days my likes had
tripled, and they kept on growing, thousands per day. And after a few months I had about 70,000
Facebook likes, which matched my YouTube subscribers at the time. Now what was weird was my posts
on Facebook didn't seem to be getting any more engagement than when I had 2,000. If
anything, they were getting less engagement.
I didn't understand why at the time, but I
have since realized it's because most of those likes I was gaining through Facebook ads were
not from people who were genuinely interested in Veritasium. How do I know? Well because
fake likes behave very differently from real followers. Have a look at this graph of the engagement
of my Facebook followers. Here I'm plotting countries as bubbles, so this is Canada and
the size represents the number of likes I've received from that country.
So this is the
United States, it's a nice big bubble. Now I'm ranking these countries on the horizontal
axis based on what percentage of those likes have engaged with my page this month. So as
you can see roughly 30% Canadians and Americans have engaged with my page, but they're not
as active as the Germans where over 40% of my likes have engaged, and they are not as
active as the Austrians a small but passionate group of Veritasium fans at nearly 60% These are all of the other Western countries.
So you can see that it's common for between 25% and 35% of my page likes to engage with
my page every month. Now here is Egypt, where less than 1% of my
likes have engaged with my page.
Now this is India, the Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Indonesia, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. That's a big followings, but no engagement.
Together all of these countries make up 80,000 likes, that's roughly 75% of the total likes
I had before the last video. And these are the profiles that followed me when I used
Facebook advertising. And they are worse than useless.
Here's why: When you make a post, Facebook distributes
it to a small fraction of the people who like your page just to gauge their reaction.
If they engage with it by liking, commenting, and sharing then Facebook distributes the
post to more of your likes and even their friends.
Now if you somehow accumulate fake likes, Facebook's initial distribution goes out to
fewer real fans, and therefore it receives less engagement, and so consequently you reach
a smaller number of people. That's how a rising number of fans can result in a drop in engagement. And from this Facebook makes money twice over
-- once to help you acquire new fans, and then again when you try to reach them. I mean
your organic reach may be so restricted by the lack of engagement, that your only option
is to pay to promote the post.
What's worse, there is no way to delete fake
likes in bulk -- all you can do is target posts around them. And I should re-iterate I never bought fake
likes. I used Facebook's legitimate advertising, but the results are as if I had paid for fake
likes from a clickfarm. Now you might think the solution to all this
is just to exclude countries with click-farms from your ad campaigns.
But unfortunately
the problem goes much deeper. Meet Virtual Cat, a virtual pet like none
other. Its page is committed to supplying only the
worst, most annoying drivel you can imagine. Only an idiot would like this page.
And that's
not just my opinion, that's actually what it says in the page description. And I should know because I wrote it. I created
this page yesterday and I then paid $10 to advertise the page through Facebook targeted
only to cat-lovers in the United States, Canada, Australia and the UK. Now I expected that
because I had excluded all of the big click-farm countries and because the page is so terrible
that I basically wouldn't get any likes.
But within 20 minutes I had blown through my whole
budget and I got 39 likes. So who are these people liking a blank page and costing me
25 cents a piece? All of the profiles were all from the places
I had targeted, mostly the US, but there was something strange about them. All of these
people liked a LOT of things, like hundreds and thousands things. And a lot of the things they liked were odd
too.
Like in one account this person liked T-mobile, AT&T and Verizon. They liked Jeep
and Lexus and Mercedes and Volvo and Volkswagon. They like everything. Other accounts I saw,
they liked kitchen scrubbers and they liked mouthwash.
Who reports that on their Facebook
page? It just baffles me. So the real mystery to me is why someone,
somewhere would click on ads they didn't care about without making money from them. I mean
I don't think these likes came from bots - they are too easy to identify and eliminate. And
I also don't think for a second Facebook would pay click-farms to click on those ads to generate
revenue for them, so it really seems like a mystery.
And then, in this article I found what I think
is the most reasonable hypothesis. Click-farms click the ads for free. In order
to avoid detection by Facebook's fraud algorithms, they like pages other than the ones they've
been paid for to seem more genuine. I mean you can imagine 1000 likes on a particular
page coming from one geographic area in a short period of time would seem suspicious.
But buried in a torrent of other 'like' activity? They would be impossible to identify.
So workers at these click-farms will literally
click anything. I mean where do you think Facebook's Security page is most popular?
Dhaka, Bangladesh. What about Google? Dhaka. What about soccer star David Beckham? It's
actually Cairo, but you take my point.
So wherever you're targeting, advertising
your page on Facebook is a waste of money. I wish Facebook would remove the fake likes
from my page and all the others. But that would mean admitting that they have generated
significant ad revenue from clicks that weren't genuine, which then suppressed the reach of
pages who had low engagement, forcing those pages to pay again to reach inauthentic fans.
So the truth is Facebook benefits by maintaining this status quo because the reality is nobody
likes this many things..
Minggu, 10 Januari 2016
Why You Shouldn't Boost Your Facebook Posts
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advertising. You can buy fans, you can send traffic to
your website and you can even boost your own posts. Hey everyone, I'm Neil Patel and today I'm
going to explain why you should never boost your posts on Facebook. Now if you're an amazing marketer, and you're
great at copywriting, sure you can boost your posts.
But for the 99% of the people out there who
aren't amazing copywriters, don't boost your posts. Here's a few reasons. Number one. You boost your posts, you get traffic, but
after you're done paying, what happens? You don't get any more traffic.
That's the first reason. The second reason that you should never boost
your Facebook posts, is because when you send people to a blog post, it's very unlikely
that they're going to convert into a customer. Blog posts are meant to be funny, humorous,
story telling, to be educational. They're not really built to drive people onto
a page and convert them into a customer.
Sure if your blog posts do that, then by all
means boost your posts. But for most people, they're not going to
see a ROI from it. And yeah, you can collect emails and you may
say that, "Hey I can convert revenue from my email list." But you know what? That's a really hard funnel to end up working
out, and I don't even know one out of 100 marketers that are able to do it correctly. Last but not least, when you boost a Facebook
post, it's costing you money.
Why not just use that money to drive traffic
to your paid product or service? Yeah people aren't going to be coming back
but you know what? At least you'll have a higher chance of generating
revenue right then and there. So am I telling you, should I spend money
on Facebook advertising? No. I don't want you to take this video as that
tip. More so I'm trying to tell you that there
is advertising out there on Facebook that works.
It tends to be driving people to a product,
or to your service, or to a landing page where you can convert people. But it's not about boosting posts. You want to spend money there? Go do it. It's usually just going to get flushed right
down the drain..
Sabtu, 02 Januari 2016
I Spent $500 On Facebook Promotion (And This is What Happened)

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for a year really showed me the fight. People will really do whatever it takes to reach the top. And by whatever I mean: Spending money.
Yes you heard me correctly. Apparently there are dozens of ways to spend your money to achieve fame And there are dozens of people who actually do it. Here's my experiment What if I introduce a brand new face into the atmosphere of the internet and spend 500$ to promote, advertise, and to use services that promise followers for one week will this be enough to achieve fame? Let's find out! Alright guys meet Alonso, the official
Guinea pig for this experiment He is 100% peruvian; he's got pretty sick style He has no real interest in fame and is completely new to the internet. Infact this guy doesn't even have a facebook This guy is in for quiet the surprise.
I think he's the perfect fit Instagram is by far the most popular social network to boost with instagram being so tightly wound with the modeling industry It's really no wonder. Think about this: if brand x has two models to pick one and model A has 200 followers and model B has 30000 followers who are they going to choose logically? Anyways Instagram promotions tends to run pretty expensive, and Alonso isn't a model so our best bag for our bug? Facebook! Alonso "You are about to enter the world of the internet, how do you feel?" "Wow, I really can't believe it" "I don't know how it all works" Well it is pretty easy Alonso Step one, open up Facebook Step two, open up Facebook page creator Figure our if you are are local business, a company, a brand, a product, or public figure, write your name "Alonso, what is your name?" And then create the page! "Alonso, are you ready?" "Were going to do it in 3, 2, 1 ..." So far everything looks pretty good, except one small thing. "But... What's your talent?" MUSIC Welcome to the official photoshoot of Alonso Barrera We are going to take some pretty interesting photos and use those to upload to the page "Have you ever done a photoshoot like this?" "No, never in my life, it's too crazy" Ok, I know what you are thinking guys Photos really? Thats your content? There is actually quite a wide variety of Facebook famous people that are solely famous of of their photos.
It is going to work! So we did the photo shoots, and now we officially have content "content" this photo right here, will be the very first picture on his page " ... " Ready to be published and shared with the one like that is me on the page and a ... 3, 2, 1 The first picture is up! Guys I am so excited, it's like my baby finally being birthed now that we have content I think I can start promoting the page MUSIC all these pages have something in common that this isn't going against the Facebook terms an conditions likes are promised in under a few days and all these likes are real human Facebook accounts I am going to opt for this eBay listing 2000 followers for seven dollars it really sounds like a scam but I guess we have to find out good morning, I just woke up and I immediately went to the computer to check the page, and sure enough, it worked !!! 1815 Likes Carmen Robinson, Alaa Khorchani, Preehya Gasprelle I am sorry, I have no idea who these people are that are liking the page, it is baffling to me I am very confused, who are these people? Despited almost 2000 likes on my Facebook page, the photo that I uploaded last night still has zero likes zero comments, and zero shares Alonso "You officially have almost 2000 likes on your page!" "Well, they're all fake..." "But 2000 likes!" MUSIC All right, let's try this thing again! But this time with real people, no more third party companies, it's time to go straight to the source. Facebook boost Facebooks own service that offers paid promotions.
You can be extremely selective with this service, you can select age range, gender, country, budged and even down to the city and using my vast experience on YouTube demographics I think I know the perfect settings... MUSIC So... The promotion has been going on for about an hour and no likes, no comments, no nothing, we are kind of just waiting for some sign of live "look" "a like" MUSIC you guys look ... We have a like !!! Thank you to Yamileth Puntillo !!! Ok, maybe I am overreacting a tiny bit.
But this is a real like, a real human, this is cause for celebration and now there is 11 it just keeps going up and up and up so the 24 hours campaign that I setup for the photo yesterday is about to come to a close and with $50 spend on the photo, brace yourselves for this ... We go ourselves 1423 interactions 1423 interactions !!! So we are going to try it again but we are going to use a better photo this time I am going to do the same thing, $50, 24 hours, and we'll see... We'll see... How this one does MUSIC We have been trying a lot of different methods of promotion lot's of websites, lot's of different forums but nothing seems to be working quite like Facebook promotion every photo so far on the page has had a $50 spending budget which in turn translates to sometimes over 3000 interactions These campaigns are actually insanely responsive, and the likes on the page are climbing up I really think that this might end decently So it has been five days, managing this Facebook page poopy poop face and after a week I guess I could say that this has been successful the page itself has over 6000 likes there is lots of comments, messages, interaction this is legit, these are real people interacting with Alonso these people had no idea who he was before this week we have made an empire, a small empire, but an empire just from buying followers and tomorrow we are going to see if we can find any of these followers in person MUSIC So Alonso and I are now in the center of Lima for one sole purpose the purpose is we are going to walk around until somebody recognises Alonso this will prove to us, and to you guys, that the people we have on our Facebook page, that we bought that we used the budget for, are indeed real people so we have been walking around for almost an hour and...
Not a single person has even glanced at Alonso, so... MUSIC It's really difficult concluding this experiment. Look, I am not sure if Alonso is famous or not. But the fact that 6000 people followed a complete stranger for no reason it's a strange concept.
Why is the internet world like this? Why do we follow others specifically because others have? I guess it's true, I guess fame has a price, and why dose it? So we did it guys, a group of two girls just took a picture with Alonso they knew who he was, they followed his page they where real people, they where breathing they weren't robots it worked !!! The experiment worked, we have proof !!! WoW.....
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