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4 Fast Growing Social Media and Shopping Websites

July 6, 2012 by Guest Author

by
Richard Franklin

cooltext443809602_strategy

4 Fast Growing Social Media and Shopping Websites

There are so many social media and shopping websites nowadays available on the web, some of them are growing rapidly because of their services, how they are managed and updated, and how the features or how user friendly they are. These websites have been increasing because of the increase of the growing interest of people on social networking platforms and people are also getting bored of the existing social websites. It has increased this year because of the social awareness of the individuals, sharing their thoughts, experiences, photos, and products daily are the things that people could do with the social and shopping websites.

Here are some of the fast growing social media and shopping websites that are grabbing the attention of more users day by day:

Pinterest.com

Basically, Pinterest is a pinboard -style social photo or an image sharing website that permits users to make and achieve theme-based image groups such as interests, events, likes or hobbies, and many more. Users can surf or browse other Pinboards or inspiration,’re-pin’ images to their own collections and/or ‘like’ photos. It permits its users to share ‘pins’ on both Facebook and Twitter, which permits users to share their interests, photos, events, hobbies and interact with the community.

A social media agency should post their client’s business in Pinterest to drive more traffic. It is an advantage for the business to have major products for women because most of its visitors are women.

Pinterest can help a social media company to have the advantage of driving traffic to their clients’ websites. It is really a big help for the social media companies on their Internet marketing strategies.

Svpply.com

This is a new shopping website that made a big splash in the online community. Svpply is pronounced as “supply”, it is the online form of window shopping that permits users to browse products extending from clothing to home decorations and easily bookmark items when you shop.

Before you can post or shop on the website, you have to register first on Svpply.com, create your free account, search for the products or things that you want in the online store, and upload them to your account. You can also share what you have found with your friends thru social media sites like Twitter, Google+ and Facebook.

There is more! You can complete your online shopping using Svpply, just click on the BUY button and be directed to the “Checkout Page. Svpply also offers specialty features like monthly Editor’s picks and gift guides that are giving you the advantage of having all of your shopping needs addressed on one website.

Wanelo.com

One of today’s trends which social media is focusing is online Pin boarding. Users “pin” their items and images what they like on the virtual boards and sharing it with their friends that have similar interests and can give and take ideas. Pinterest maybe the most popular of these websites because of its unique features that permits users to interact, engage, and connect with the imaginative process with people who have shared their interests. Furthermore, socializing and connecting with friends through online is the major factor in current’s Social Media part.

Online shoppers or users used to find themselves shopping for toys for their loved-ones, gifts, clothes, supplements, and other items that could give them convenience in shopping. Online shopping gives them convenience because it doesn’t need to be in the physical store to purchase or look for the items they want. Wanelo has covered the way for businesses to seize more market share by attracting in online marketing and makes easy for the shoppers.

Polyvore.com

Polyvore focuses on fashion, it is for the fashion enthusiasts and advocates. It is devoted to style and giving a platform for fashion enthusiasts for showing or demonstrating their works in the entire world. It is one of the largest online communities with members from across the globe and helps to unite online shoppers and trendsetters / trend starters by showing the latest trends, the hottest brands, and trend forecasting.

It allows users to create different outfits by culling various products from online stores and online fashion collections, publishing and sharing their works with friends and other Polyvore users.

Polyvore is now becoming another trustworthy social media network for online businesses who aim to create more connection and interaction with their online prospect buyers and online buyers. Some Big Fashion companies are having relationship or connecting Polyvore for promoting and exhibiting their designs, products, and for showcase.

Author’s Bio:
Richard Franklin is a social media strategist and wants to share his knowledge with people who are about to hire a social media agency for their businesses. He writes about latest trends used in social media companies. You can find Richard on Twitter as @AgencySEO.

Thank you, Richard!

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: Successful Blog, Tools, Trends Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, small business, social shopping, social-media

Ask someone to dance

June 28, 2012 by Rosemary

by
Rosemary O’Neill

Ask Someone to Dance

There are so many small business owners and entrepreneurs out there, just plugging away, waiting for someone to reach out and invite them into the social media party. They’re excited, intrigued, and all dressed up, just waiting for someone to notice them.

The Gym is Crowded

The high school gym is sweaty, packed with breathless teenagers of all types. There is a gaggle of jock types over near the punch bowl, a gaggle of cool girls dancing as a group to Rock Lobster, and a slew of hopeful, terrified boys strung along the outer wall of bleachers. On the other side of the gym, against the wall, are clusters of shy girls, furtively glancing toward the other side.

Burning down the House


I have an idea. Let’s light this sucker on fire. Let’s run across the gym, grab one of those shy kids by the hand, and drag them out into the Soul Train line.

  • Pick one of your Twitter followers who has very few followers themselves and give them a FollowFriday this week.
  • Search for one of your customer’s blogs and comment on a post that had zero comments.
  • Know someone who’d be a great speaker? Email them the panel submission form for SXSW or another conference.
  • Ask to do a video interview with one of your colleagues who’s never done it before.
  • Find a way to shine a spotlight on someone who’s working behind the scenes (an IT person, a administrator, a great community manager).
  • Do you know a blogger who’s awesome, but just needs a little attention? Round up your Twitter friends and do a surprise “blog bomb” one day.

Report back, please…who did you ask to dance this week? Was it fun?

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

_____

Thank you, Rosemary!

You’re irresistible!

ME “Liz” Strauss

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: Community, management, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, relationships, small business, social-media

Is Social Noise Unraveling Your Quest?

June 18, 2012 by Liz

Social Noise Steals the Fuel to Do Extraordinary Stuff

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When I was a kid, I wasn’t looking for my direction. No one said to follow my passion. I was a kid. I was on a quest to be extraordinary.

When I was a kid, I wasn’t bombarded with information from every dimension. My social circle was small. Now I have more social network passwords than the number of connections I had when I was kid.

Everyone seems to doing more than I am. Everything seems to be growing faster than anyone could manage to follow. Conversations bifurcate, trifurcate, and splinter off in bit and pieces. Sorting value from spam isn’t always a case of checking whether it came from a friend.

Ideas get kicked around like a soccer ball on the field where I hang out. I’m following echoes down trap of social media noise and deafening conversation straining to hear what my friends are saying.

In the process, I’m losing my own voice.
And the social noise is unraveling my passion one thread at time.
Sheer exhaustion steals the inspiration and the direction that I had when the day began.

Is Social Noise Unraveling Your Quest?

It’s a challenge to stay calm when the screen is always updating and we’re always chasing the next link or headline that shows up. Curiosity takes fuel to run. And every generous spirit who does a good turn or sends a good wish seems to be calling us to return a good one now then. Do you find that after some time on Twitter or Facebook, your head needs a long, cool transition? It only makes sense that all of that fragmented data makes a brain want some time to sort.

The social interaction can undermine the strongest determination we have to move forward by using it all just to keep up with what’s going on. Is social noise unraveling your quest?

Do you lose track of the kid in you who wants to do extraordinary stuff?

Here’s my recipe for getting past the noise and distraction and back to doing extraordinary stuff.

I turn it off.

In a minute of silence, I remember my quest.
When I look out the window or stand and stretch, it gets easier to tune into my resolve.
Knowing where you’re going is irresistibly attractive.
It also fuels the noble cause.

Passion needs direction, or it gets lost.

How do you keep the social noise from unraveling your quest?

Be irresistible.
–Me “Liz” Strauss

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Productivity, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, determination, focus, irresistible, LinkedIn, Liz, small business, social noise, social-media

Admire, Admire, Admire

June 6, 2012 by Guest Author

by
Ric Dragon

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A Well-Rounded View

At first, when people are studying to become visual artists they work very hard at getting their hands to respond accurately to what they see. Over time there is a shift as the artist chooses to emphasize, edit, and curate – they tend to bring focus to what they love and admire and tend to gloss over that which they do not like.

They might admire the horrible and the ugly. A steady diet of prettiness and even beauty can be tedious. Sometimes a scar, a blemish, an imperfection enhances what we love. Sometimes we are more interested in what shocks us out of our stupor, and makes us feel more alive.

Even photographers choose to click the camera at some moments, pointing in some directions, while not doing so at other moments, and in other directions. They choose what to photograph.

Van Gogh wrote to his brother, Theo, “Admire, Admire, Admire – the only path to growth.” When he wrote that, Vincent was living with destitute coal miners in an extreme wretched state of poverty. Yet in that environment, that which he chose to sing from the mountaintops was “admire.”

In admiring, we forgive what we don’t like.

To be forgiving is to be flexible. You give way. You are charitable. Otherwise, you are rigid, and unforgiving. Uncharitable.

Being charitable doesn’t just mean giving money to your favorite cause. It means that you don’t assume that what motivates others isn’t opposed to you.
These are some of the big words of morality: charity, mercy, forgiveness, admiration, love. The German philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, exhorted us to re-evaluate our morals – to not simply accept the morals handed down to us by our families, churches, governments, and pop songs. When we really examine the idea that we should focus on what we admire, and in the process, practice these big morals, we do ourselves a great service.

BigStock: Door handle and knocker in Spain
BigStock: Door Handle & Knocker

Choose Your Focus

Imagine walking down a street. You see a beautiful 19th century doorway, a knocker, perhaps a door knob. You see a beautiful chimney. Meanwhile, you might pass by some piles of dog crap. You can choose to focus on the crap, or you can focus on what you admire. There is choice there.

There is ugliness all around us. You can search it out, and you will certainly find it. Isn’t it more gratifying to search out and take note of what you admire?

There is a time to stand up against something that isn’t right. I’m not saying that we should always smile and nod our heads. Great evils have been perpetrated in this world simply because no one spoke out when needed. But there is a difference between speaking up when something really wrong is happening, and making a habit of taking note of what we don’t love.

There is a time to be critical. We don’t want a world where everything is unicorn sparkles and Kumbaya. Not being critical doesn’t mean that everything should be saccharine. But when an editor works through a manuscript, it is finite – it has boundaries. Our lives, on the other hand, are only delimited by the limits of our perception. There is a time to search out what is wrong or faulty in something – but if that is the way of our everyday life, we communicate wrongness in everything we do.

In dealing with employees or our families, if we focus on what is wrong, and what needs to be fixed, we are communicating the assumption of being broken. When people receive that message all of the time, they assume it as their story, and as the truth. We are all in the business of telling stories – and in telling our stories, we will not help our heroes fulfill their destinies by teaching them that they are fundamentally broken and need to be fixed.

Spread the Behavior

I’ve recently taken a lot of plane trips. Each time I’m in a plane taking off, first, I’m still amazed that a huge container made out of metal can fly us at amazing speeds and heights to our destinations. Then, I am usually amazed at the sheer quantity of people down there: all of those little houses, and cars – such an incredible density of people all across the country.

It’s easy to imagine that within all of this density that the behaviors of one individual could easily spread out to others.

My friend Liz Strauss says that we don’t see the most important thing about Twitter – that it’s the LARGEST NETWORKING GROUP in the WORLD. We exist, in social media, in a density that is even greater than that of people living in New York City or Tokyo.

There has been a tendency in social media for people to get snarky, and critical. Someone says something stupid, we get angry or critical, and we spread that anger and criticality. It’s as though we were walking down that street and making note of all the garbage and dog crap in our path. We’re not seeing the beautiful door knobs.

Sometimes, you tell a child something, and you don’t think they’ve heard you – then, a few days later, you hear them telling another child just what you were telling them. We never really know just how influential we are. Sometimes, we learn from people many years later that we were a powerful force in their life.

It is in your power to, like a painter, focus on what you admire, and share that admiring viewpoint. It is in your power to focus on what you love, and change the narrative that others are telling themselves. It’s in your power to be forgiving of that which you dislike, and help the heroes around you in their journeys.

Admire, admire, admire!

—-

Author’s Bio: Ric Dragon is the founder and CEO of DragonSearch, a digital marketing agency with offices in Manhattan and Kingston, NY. Dragon is the author of the “DragonSearch Online Marketing Manual” and “Social Marketology” (McGraw Hill; June 2012), and has been a featured speaker at SMX East, Conversion Conf, CMS Expo, and BlogWorld, on the convergence of process, information architecture, SEO, and Social Media. You can find Ric on Twitter as @RicDragon.

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: management, Successful Blog Tagged With: admire, bc, LinkedIn, small business, social-media

You Are an Investor

May 31, 2012 by Rosemary

by
Rosemary O’Neill

Yes, you are a big-time investor. Like, Warren Buffet big. What? You don’t see it?

Every morning you wake up with 24 hours to invest. You’re rich beyond compare.

That 24 hours has a value that can’t even be measured. When you stack up a whole week of those, you’re talking about 168 hours!

Will you invest in Facebook? (No, not the stock shares, the status checking). Will you invest in your children? Your business? Will you choose to invest in yourself?

There’s a reason it’s called “spending time.” It feels like an unlimited resource, but it’s truly not. We all have an unknowable limit.

Sometimes people get caught up in believing that social media is “free” because Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ don’t charge our credit cards. But in fact, you are investing a far more precious resource when you use social media—your own time or that of your staff.

Furthermore, by choosing to invest your limited resource in social media, you are de facto choosing not to spend it elsewhere. Should you ignore your customer newsletter to post pictures on Pinterest? Only if it’s getting you an outcome you want. Should you cancel your sponsorship of the local 4th of July fireworks display so that you can record a YouTube video?

When you manage your time, whether it’s putting together a life plan or a business plan, remember that it’s all about where you choose to invest.

If you invest wisely, you’ll see dividends!

_____

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

_____

Thank you, Rosemary!

You’re irresistible!

ME “Liz” Strauss

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: Business Life, Productivity, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, Productivity, Rosemary O'Neill, social-media

What to do when you have Twitter block

May 24, 2012 by Rosemary

by
Rosemary O’Neill

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So you’ve decided to use Twitter as one of your content marketing tools. You’ve built up a respectable following, you engage with people, send out a steady stream of diverse original content and RTs, and you occasionally attend a Twitter chat. Everything is good, until….Twitter block!

It’s similar to writers’ block, except in 140 characters. You see, if you aren’t contributing a reasonable number of Tweets throughout the day, you won’t be seen in your followers’ streams.

The average lifespan of a Tweet is supposedly only one hour, according to ReadWriteWeb. That means you need to space out your Tweets in order to keep your voice “in the stream.” I believe that the optimum number of Tweets per day is somewhere around 5-10 for the normal user.

Here are 10 solid tips on how to stay visible without driving yourself insane.

  • It’s OK to tweet an important piece of content 2-3 times in one day, at different times; just change your Tweet wording up a bit to keep it fresh.
  • It’s OK to use a scheduling app like Buffer or Crowdbooster to space out your Tweets, as long as you are actually available to reply to people who respond to your content.
  • Look for 5 people who recently RTd you, and RT something of theirs that you think will resonate with your followers.
  • Take a pretty picture and add a relevant comment to it.
  • Find 5 people who follow you who you haven’t directly engaged with yet, read their bio and/or website, and mention them with a comment or compliment.
  • Use the “OH” tag to tweet something interesting you heard someone else say IRL.
  • Don’t resort to quotes all the time! But if you’re reading something interesting on your Kindle app, highlight a great phrase and Tweet it out using the integrated share tool.
  • Ask a question. It could be something industry specific, or as minimal as “what should I watch on Netflix next?”
  • What big project are you working on? Can you “leak” out a little tidbit of it as a teaser? People love to be on the inside, behind the scenes.
  • Do a series of Tweets that are related…Christopher Penn does “#the5” which is the five things you need to know that day. Could you do 3 tips for starting your day happy? Perhaps a series of 10 great blog links?

Where do you find great stuff to share with your connections? Have you ever felt Twitter block?

_____

Author’s Bio: Rosemary O’Neill is an insightful spirit who works for social strata — a top ten company to work for on the Internet . Check out the Social Strata blog. You can find Rosemary on Google+ and on Twitter as @rhogroupee

_____

Thank you, Rosemary!

You’re irresistible!

ME “Liz” Strauss

Buy the Insider’s Guide to Online Conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, LinkedIn, small business, social-media, Twitter

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