What Do You Do When You Goof on Social Media?

I’ve been reading Renegades Write the Rules, by Amy Martin, owner of Digital Royalty. Amy spoke of her almost accidental social media career at NMX and her point about social media is: Don’t be afraid. Jump in and do it! Yes, sometimes things will go wrong and you may fly by the seat of your pants, but don’t be afraid to fail or be humble.

This point was driven home to me recently when I goofed up on a Facebook post.  Find It In Ashburn is a website I created to list all the businesses in Ashburn, VA. I’ve developed a wonderful community on Facebook and Twitter, sharing information about news, events and the like. Well, I went to post about a company that closed, The Cone Zone, and in my rush, here was what the post looked like:

Find It In Ashburn Facebook postWhoops! I went to read the comments and here was the first one:

Comment on Find It In Ashburn post

I immediately answered, and my thought was to repost (with the correct spelling) and then delete the original post a few minutes later. I didn’t want Barbara to think I was just covering my tracks! But then, I looked at the post and more people commented:

Comments on Find It In Ashburn post

As you can see, we all had a good giggle at my expense!

So yes, you’ll make mistakes, spelling and otherwise, and believe me, your followers will be quick to point it out! But your human, and as you build and connect with your community, they will see that in you. And forgive you.

What about you? Have you had something go wrong on social media? How did you handle it?

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via FacebookTwitter and LinkedIn.

Facebook Graph: Game Changer for your Business

If you don’t have a Facebook page for your business, get one now. If you aren’t active on Facebook — posting, connecting with your customers — log on right now and get going!

What is Facebook Graph?

Facebook Graph is a search tool Facebook will roll out over the next few months. It will enable you to search across your network – your friends – to tap into their likes, reviews, and places, to get recommendations, as it were, without actually asking for them.

For example, let’s say you’re really into Star Wars and you’re thinking of throwing a Star Wars-themed party. Pull up Facebook Graph and search for “My friends who like Star Wars.” Now you know whom to invite!

Screenshot-SearchBar-MyFriendsWho-580-90

If the search for “My friends who like Star Wars” pulls up too many results, or friends who are scattered across the country, you can refine the search by “Current City,” or any number of criteria.

Screenshot-PeopleWhoLikeThingsILike

What does this mean for small business owners?

It is critically important, now more than ever, to have a presence on Facebook. When your potential customers are looking for your product or service, you want the largest number of your current customers to already like your Facebook page. To stay relevant to your current fans, and therefore in their newsfeed, you need to stay active. That means:

  • Sharing relevant content frequently
  • Inviting participation by asking questions, asking for comments, and posting polls
  • Asking for and sharing positive reviews
  • Interacting with your fans via the comments section

What does this mean for other social media networks?

That remains to be seen, and you shouldn’t ditch your other networks, if you already have a presence and your customers are there. As a cautionary tale, look at Yelp. The review site’s stock dropped almost 6 percent after Facebook announced the new search. After all, now you’ll be able to search “Ashburn Thai restaurants my friends like.” Even without reviews (although that will likely be incorporated), if you see that 50 of your friends like a particular restaurant, you will be more likely to try that restaurant.

What steps should I take?

In a nutshell, get your fans to hit the ‘like’ button on your page. Ask your fans to share your page, ask your newsletter readers to like the page, ask through your other social media channels to like the Facebook page. Now your fans are your sales force, whether or not you or they like it, so to speak, as what they ‘like’ on Facebook will be available to all.

Other steps:

  • Engage with your fans. Facebook Graph will pull to the top the searches with the most engagement and activity.
  • Build your Facebook page completely, especially the location.
  • Continue to ask your current fans to share your content. But not every time, that is a turn off! If you see people disappearing from your page, adjust.

Think of Facebook Graph as the old “6 Degrees of Kevin Bacon” game. We’re all interconnected at some point, and when someone comes looking for you, make sure enough people are out there who already like you, so you can be found.

Creators Syndicate, Inc.

Creators Syndicate, Inc.

What changes will you make? How will this impact your business? Let me know in the comments.

Oh, and please like my pages on Facebook – Nova Creative Media  and Find It In Ashburn.

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

The Three Ways to Engage Your Facebook Fans

You’ve opened for business on Facebook. And you’ve waited. But your ‘likes’ number is flat and there seems to be no movement in the ‘talking about this’ number. You need to keep something very important in mind:

Social media channels are free; using them is not!

Developing and maintaining your business’ social media outlets takes time and effort. Think about how you use Facebook for example (if you do use it). Which company pages do you like and why? Which posts do you skim over and which do you read, comment on and share?

The big three.

You can have the best content in the world, but unless you present it in an equally terrific manner, it will be skipped over.

Visual media—Use photos and video liberally! People like to see what you have to offer, see how your products work, and even see silly things that make them laugh!

Questions/opinions/recommendations—People loooooove to give their opinion, so let ‘em! Ask a question, pose a dilemma and ask their advice. Post two photos and ask, “Which one?”

Discounts—This is what your fans really want; this is why they follow you. Regularly offer Facebook-only savings, by asking for a printout of the offer or a code word.

Follow us on Facebook.

How often do you see this? It’s everywhere you look—signs in stores, email signatures, business cards, ads—you name it! Again, think like your customer. Why should they follow you? You know the content to deliver, and when to deliver it. But you need the fans to deliver it to! Change the wording to:

  • For up-to-date news, follow us on Facebook (good if your industry changes rapidly)
  • Get fan-only discounts and savings by following us on Facebook!
  • Psst! Want the inside scoop? Follow us on Facebook!
  • Get exclusive information and savings by following us on Facebook.

Then—and this is critical—follow through!

The credibility factor.

The market research company Lab42 reports 82% of their respondents say that Facebook is a good place to interact with companies, and that the top reason the respondents listed for following a company is to receive discounts! Here are some other interesting insights from the survey:

  • people feel more connected to brands on Facebook
  • people feel like brands listen to them on Facebook
  • people will like brands their friends like

Don’t clog the newsfeed! The respondents said they would unlike a page quickly if there is too much posting. How much is too much? Follow your insights carefully and adjust.

What is your strategy to draw in and engage your customers?

Are Moms Your Target Audience?

If so, you need to be on Facebook. There is a reason that teens and young adults are migrating to Twitter from Facebook—their moms are there, in overwhelming numbers. According to the 2012 Moms and Media report from Edison and Arbitron:

  • 41% of moms on Facebook follow companies and/or brands
  • Moms have an average of 255 friends
  • 72% of moms have a Facebook profile and 47% of them are on Facebook several times a day

And most importantly, moms share! Facebook has become the outlet for moms to connect, not only with friends and family, but also with other moms. What are they looking for? Advice on parenting, life and home, and recommendations for just about everything!

If your target audience is women with children, it is critical for you to have a Facebook presence!

Keep in mind that the average Facebook mom is highly educated and is not receptive to strong-arm or condescending marketing messages. The surest way to turn off a mom is to eat into her busy day with unwanted, unneeded and frivolous posts.

How do you attract and keep your mom audience? Save her time and money!

Money: Special offers and discounts available only through Facebook need to be real and true savings. If you want your moms to bring their kids to your restaurant, don’t offer a free soda with her meal. A better offer is “Today Only – Kids Eat Free! Mention this post and your kids eat free, with a purchase of an adult meal.” If you have an activity, offer half off during your slow period—again, make it contingent on mentioning the Facebook post.

Time: If you offer a service, get your moms to take advantage of it by playing up how your service will save her time. Cleaning, organizing, meal prep, errand running—there are countless services that can save busy moms time. Convince her!

Don’t forget to share your expertise and fun!

Moms are often looking for advice on all aspects of their life. By all means, share tips, tricks and hints. You can even get these from other sources and share (with credit!). Take time to show off your fun side with silly photos and videos, but be careful not to overdo it.

Ask for feedback–and listen.

Ask your moms to comment on your posts, ask for advice on a product or service you offer and take it seriously! Engage with your mom audience because moms, just like everyone else, like to feel their input is and feedback is important.

Do you market to a mom audience? What has worked for you? Please share with us in the comments!

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

Mid-Year SoMe Check

OK everyone, summer is racing by and it’s time to take a mid-year look at your social media efforts! By now, you should be able to look through your analytics from January through June, so let’s see what worked and what didn’t.

Facebook

You got your page set up or you resolved to pay attention to it. Did you begin by posting once or twice a week? How many posts do you do now? The more you engage, the more your customers engage, so by now you should be posting daily. Year End Goal: Posting 2-5 times a day.

You began by posting what you do and what you offer. By now you should be offering more varied content, from links, photos and even video. Ask your clients/customers for permission to photograph or video them using your product or providing a testimonial. Year End Goal: Varied content at least once per day. Stock up on client/customer photos.

When you started, the conversation was mostly one way. You wrote and hoped people were reading. Now you should know how many people are seeing (reading) your posts.

You should have comments and interactions with your fans. Year End Goal: Several times a week, ask a question, for a referral, a review, anything to provoke a conversation.

Other Social Media Outlets

In the beginning, getting and managing a Facebook page was all you could handle. Since then, you reviewed and researched Twitter, blogging, Goggle+, Pinterest, and other outlets to see what would be a good fit for you and your business. What have you added at the mid-year mark? Year End Goal: Establish a presence in as many social media outlets that make sense for you and your business. Again, start slowly and build.

Consistency

You remember the hard part wasn’t getting started, it was continuing. Everyone (just about) has some sort of social media presence, but one post, one blog, on video does not a success make. Social media is free; meaning just about everyone takes advantage of it. But, like a child with a new toy, many get bored, or realize that the work that goes into it is more than they bargained for in the beginning. Year End Goal: Don’t stop now, be that reliable presence and store of information your fans come to expect.

Call to Action

Maybe when you started your social media presence, you found it easy. You liked sharing content that is relevant to your fans and your business. One thing though, you discovered your fan base hasn’t grown. Why is that? While it’s great to get information, don’t forget to tell your fans what you do/offer, and WHY they should get it from you! Ask for the comment, the retweet, the sale, and ask your fans to share your content with others! Year End Goal: Ask for the sale at least once a week!

How did you do? Are you happy with your social media presence? Don’t forget that at Nova Creative Media we can coach you to meet your goals and help you expand your social media presence!

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

Two Great Changes from Facebook

One of the dilemmas many small business owners have is whether to grant Facebook administrative—or admin—privileges to another person. In doing so, the page owners leave themselves venerable to malicious posting and even cases of page theft.

Now page owners can receive help and protect their Facebook page. Admin roles have been introduced and the manager of page can assign roles to their admins. If you own a page and have admins, know that all admins are by default managers, so you need to get on the page sooner, rather than later, to make the assignments.

The five roles and responsibilities, as outline in this table from Facebook:

Facebook admins

The ability to restrict usage will be a great relief to business owners who need and want help managing their social media presence, but are wary of “giving the keys to the kingdom” to someone. Now you can have people do what they do best, without allowing them to overreach.

Another great feature recently added is the ability to schedule posts right from Facebook. Until now, that could only be done through third-party apps. I always recommend to my clients to use those apps sparingly, as it could potentially annoy your fans, it shows you’re not posting ’live,’ and Google doesn’t care for it either, which could hurt your ranking.

Scheduling posts on Facebook is easy!

  1. Write your status.
  2. Click the clock icon in the lower left corner of the post.
  3. Select the year.
  4. Select the month.
  5. Select the day.
  6. Select the time.
  7. Click schedule!

With all the ‘improvements’ Facebook gives us that are not wanted, it’s nice to see improvements that actually help small businesses reach out to their customers. What else could Facebook do to help you manage your page?

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

Social Media Post Calendar

You have good intentions…really. You created a Facebook page for your business, and you’re excited about telling your customers and the wider world about you, your business, and your product or service. You post a few times and then…you get busy. You look at your Facebook and it hits you: you haven’t posted anything in a week (or more).

It’s time to get organized, plan and really think about what it is you want to say. A great tool is an editorial calendar. Used by bloggers for years, it’s a useful tool for managing your social media presence. You can easily find templates on the web, but they’re designed with blogging in mind, not Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, etc. So here’s one I developed–let’s call it the Social Management Calendar.

Open your spreadsheet program and go! This one is for both Nova Creative Media and Find It In Ashburn. I do daily posts, and sometimes I just need a few ideas for spark. You can also just write out the entire post and on the particular day, just copy and paste it into Facebook, Twitter, or wherever.

This is an enormous timesaver, as you don’t have to stop whatever you’re working on, and think, “What do I want to say today?” You can even insert a column labeled  ‘theme,’ if there is a particular angle or theme you want to talk about that week.

Social Management CalendarPut this planning on your calendar. Take a half hour or so every week to develop your next week’s social media presence. You’ll find that the daily time-suck of social media decreases; you’ll have a more uniform flow of ideas, and by looking back over your calendars, see when you last spoke a particular product or service.

How do you manage your daily postings? Leave a comment!

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

Social Media and Your Business ~ How One Small Flower Shop Got Started

by Gary Dickens
Note from Lisa: Gary generously allowed me to repost this. Please read on how one very skeptical business owner learned to embrace the power of social media.

Jerry’s Flowers & Twitter

For those of you who see me around the community, it might come as a surprise that by nature, I am very reclusive, not out-going at all. The out-going facet you might see is me getting beyond my comfort zone, doing that which needs to be done.

So I was very much a late adapter of social media as a marketing tool for our small business, Jerry’s Flowers & Gifts, here in Leesburg, Va. I thought Facebook was simply an easy means for girls to talk about boys and Twitter, the most ridiculous thing on the planet. Who needs to say something in 140 characters or less? But a recession that hurt the ad budget and a revolt half a world away was about to change all that.

The (almost) Iranian Revolution in 2009 was probably the first popular uprising fueled by Twitter and was at the grassroots level, incredibly successful. In my opinion the only reason it failed was that the United States didn’t support the rebels. We’ve seen the impact of social media most recently in the successes of the Arab Spring.

In the 1980s’ book “To Inform or Control: The New Communications Networks”, my Aunt Gladys and Uncle Osie practically predicted that the VCR would help bring down the Iron Curtain. In the summer of 2009, deep in the recession, I wondered, “If Twitter can nearly bring down a dictatorship, what power might it have in growing a small business”.

Thus the @jerrysflowers Twitter account was born. (“@” prefixes all Twitter account names)

And very quickly, nothing happened.

@jerrysflowers started by “tweeting” (posting) tips of the day. Now the goal of social media is to have someone listening to what you have to say. We had, say maybe, 10 followers at the end of the first month. Hoping for osmosis to bring in new followers just wasn’t working.

So we followed some Twitter advice and looked for others interested in the same things we were, which oddly enough were florists. So @jerrysflowers started following florists. But guess what, florists aren’t our typical customers!

Folks who live in, and have connections to Leesburg and Loudoun County are.

By doing a Twitter search on Leesburg and Loudoun @jerrysflowers found dozens of relevant local businesses and organizations to “follow” (Twitter accounts whose postings you want to read). And to our surprise, many of those accounts followed us back.

Then we discovered “Twellowhood.com”, a website that geographically identifies Twitter accounts. By searching “Leesburg, Ashburn, Purcellville, etc. @jerrysflowers was soon following hundreds of local accounts, some of whom followed us back.

By the end of August, it was clear something was happening. Traffic to our main website, jerrysflowersonline.com, was up by some 40%! Typically, our website traffic goes down July-to-August, as folks go on vacation, simple as that.

Now, 30 months later @jerrysflowers has 1075 followers from Leesburg, Loudoun and around the world, truly helping us become an international company. We don’t do those tips anymore and while we’ll occasionally tweet sales and specials, mostly we try to interact with people conversationally.

Because, at its core, social media is best a conversation…not a bunch of carnival barkers along the midway.

Jerry’s Flowers & Facebook

We didn’t get started with Facebook until the following year, 2010, when we started to use it to showcase our wedding work on the page named “Jerry’s Weddings”. Twitter was a more intuitive platform for me than Facebook and also seemed to help us connect with new businesses, very valuable accounts in our trade. So we didn’t push Facebook so hard.

Twitter’s greatest downside though from a marketing perspective, is that a tweet has the lifespan of a fruit fly. Facebook posts are much longer lasting and you can post photos and photo albums, a feature vital to a florist. (You can tweet photos too, via services like Twitpic, but again, lifespan of a fruit fly.)

And as Twitter seems to be stronger at business-to-business customer development, Facebook is clearly the business-to-consumer champion. It was designed to bring people together.

As a full service florist, Jerry’s quickly found that the specialty page “Jerry’s Weddings” was too limiting and started a second page “Jerry’s Flowers & Gifts”. I ran into my friend Grafton deButts from the Loudoun Chamber of Commerce, told him we had two pages going to which he responded, “dude, two pages is the kiss of death, you have to consolidate” (or something like that).

We took his advice and killed off the Jerry’s Wedding’s page.

I’d love to report to you today that like Twitter, we now have a thousand fans on Facebook. Alas, that is far from the case, as of this writing we only have 70. I’m not sure why we’ve not been more successful on Facebook. We have great images, always doing something cool. It may be that I view life from a testosterone laden perspective, frankly a bit of a handicap when selling flowers.

But, if the first rule of social media is not to talk about yourself too much, then the second is to never give up if at first you don’t succeed. Unless your last name happens to be Streep or Pitt it’s going to take time and lots of posts.

So, like any small businessman (or woman) worth their salt, we don’t quit.

So what does this mean for your business?

(Note: I also employ social media for my online publication Leesburg Magazine.)

Social media should be part of a balanced marketing plan that includes a well-produced website, print advertising, press releases email and direct mail, radio and TV if you can afford them, then finally plain ‘ole meet ‘n greet/shoe leather networking. Social media is free but definitely a sweat equity proposition.

Within the world of social media there are numerous options: Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and Pinterest to name a few. I’ve listed them in the order I feel they are most relevant. Right now, Jerry’s Flowers and Leesburg Magazine are only involved with Twitter and Facebook.

If you’ve decided to get in the pool, I’d suggest launching a Twitter account first, get a bit of experience then follow soon thereafter with a Facebook account.

In naming your Twitter account, try to make it short and memorable so that it’s easy for others to remember and type. @jerrysflowers serves us well and @leesburgmag also reflects the magazine’s domain name.

In naming your Facebook account make it precise. The Facebook page name for our flower shop is Jerry’s Flowers & Gifts, for the magazine it is Leesburg Magazine.

You can link you Twitter posts to automatically post to your Facebook page and vice versa. My opinion is to link Facebook posts to post on Twitter, but not Twitter to Facebook. Facebook posts tend to be more durable, detailed and information that you want your Twitter audience to see too. But Twitter posts tend to be more “stream of consciousness”, conversational, and perhaps even highly opinionated, and frequently you’d not want them clogging up your Facebook page.

If you are posting on behalf of your employer or organization, remember you are representing them not you. It’s best to keep your opinions close to the vest when working for others; you can be as snarky as you wish on your own time and account.

Remember the Golden Rule of Social Media: at its best it’s a conversation with friends, not a time for you to channel Billy Mays.

Take time to retweet postings you find interesting on Twitter and to comment on other’s Facebook posts. That little bit of recognition and affirmation can be very satisfying to the recipient.

On Twitter, don’t be afraid to engage with celebrities, athletes and politicians, you’d be amazed at how often they’ll respond. Local news media (meaning DC) tend to be very good at responding.

As a business owner should you contract out your social media work to others because you are too busy? Well, Martha Stewart does her own posts and Governor McDonnell does most of his. Are you busier than Martha or the Governor?

Finally, this could go on and on with how-to tips but let me end with this. Remember that social media is a very powerful thing. It is a great way to build your brand or start a revolution, just think twice before you post once.

Gary Dickens is an international business development specialist
with experience in the automotive, heathcare, construction and
publishing industries. His current project, Leesburg Magazine,
uses the power of the web and social media to share this historic
Virginia town with the world. You can connect with Gary on Twitter or Facebook.

A Rant on Facebook Changes

OK, so yesterday I spent the better part of the day creating new cover photos to use once I converted to the new Facebook Timeline. Switching to the new timeline itself isn’t hard—you just click ‘publish’—but deciding on the cover photo had me in a sweat. It got me thinking, along with this great article on how the new Facebook look betrays small businesses, about how so many social networks behave as if that’s all you do all day.

But wait. You are spending your time running your business, for crying out loud. You are ordering supplies, handling paperwork, taking orders, and dealing with customers. Most likely you have a small staff, and you are the CEO—chief executive everything. When a social media network throws changes your way, you just can’t drop everything and attend to it. Trust me, I know it’s hard enough sending out your tweets, posts, pins, and writing your blog–along with running your business.

Let’s face facts: as Jay Baer notes in the above article, Facebook has become decidedly unfriendly to small businesses. The company proudly announced the changes to business pages, trumpeting great new features. Except, unless you have staff dedicated to social media—and most small businesses don’t—the new changes weren’t terrific. They are ending up a time-consuming, stressful mess.

Take the cover photo, ugh. As I said, I spent most of yesterday working on the cover photos for Find It In Ashburn and Nova Creative Media. The one for FIIA was more time consuming, although it doesn’t look like it; after all, it’s just a couple of photos and the logo, right? Right. I had to decide on the photos, resize them, arrange them, place the logo, resize the logo, add text and decide on a background color. Then change the photos, arrangements and background color. Rinse, repeat. Deciding on what to do for NCM was a bit trickier—I don’t have a lot of photos of me blogging or posting to Facebook. So if you have a business that doesn’t lend itself to beautiful visuals, what do you do? Get even more creative.

And now, a new feature to be rolled out by Facebook: Interest lists. People will be able to develop lists of things that interest them and it will be continuously updated, creating a newspaper-like experience. So now you need to think about keywords and how to target those lists.

It will be interesting to me to see how these changes evolve and how small business owners react. The new timeline emphasizes engagement and visuals, such as photos and video. How long before small business owners decide to disengage entirely?

Please comment on how you’ve reacted to the new Facebook timeline and what it means for the future of your social media engagement.

 

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.

Before You Publish, 5 Things to Consider for Facebook Timeline

Whether you love or hate the new Facebook Timeline for business pages, and it sounds like most of you feel passionately, please take time to learn about it before you go public with it. And take the time now, because the end of March (Facebook’s deadline for conversion) is coming quickly! Here are five points to consider:

Cover photo: Your landing tab—if you had one—is history; now you get to decide on a beautiful new ‘cover photo.’ You want it to be visually appealing and descriptive of your business. Do not use your logo or business card here! If you’re thinking about just changing your old landing tab to fit into the space, think again. Facebook wants your business page to act like a personal page, so it added some no-nos. No calls to action or really any other text, except your business name. This means you can’t splash “Like Us!” or any other kind of offer on the cover photo. The cover photo can be as large as 850×315 pixels and that’s a fairly large space, so play with an idea or two before settling on one.

Profile Picture: This is your logo or descriptive photo that looks good as a thumbnail. This is the photo that will accompany your posts.

Bigger visuals: Facebook wants you to use more photos and videos, so these posts will stand out by being larger. Make sure when you post photos they are of good quality.

Tell your story: Facebook is making it easier to tell the story of your company with Milestones. Simply click on the line in the middle of your page and select Milestone. You’ll be able to highlight the important events in your company’s history.

Instead of tabs, you’ll have apps: A tab is an app, of course, but you need to be creative in positioning, naming and adding photos to them now. There are now 12 applications, but only four of them will appear along the top of your Timeline  (under your cover photo). Photos cannot be moved, but it’s your choice as to the other three you’d like to appear.

Here are some good local examples of the new look:

Catoctin Creek

Earth Day @ Loudoun

Visit Loudoun

Let me know once your new timeline goes live, I’d love to see it!

About Lisa Karl
Lisa Karl is the president of Nova Creative Media, a social media/marketing firm in Ashburn, VA. She is also the publisher and editor of Find It In Ashburn! Connect with Lisa via Facebook (NCM), Facebook (FIIA), Twitter and LinkedIn.