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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: Let's Talk In the Kitchen Gets Social - Feel Free to Post ~ No Affiliate Links~
7/2/2013 10:25:01 PM
Thanks Diane, You need some of the old and new. Like a bride needs, something old, something new, something blue oh well you get the meaning
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A great post Jim that talks about a lady that has had my admiration for a very long time. I tend to agree with Ann Handley when it comes to "rules" but from a different perspective. While there are millions of people still doing marketing using the "old rules", there are equally as many people coming online and learning ONLY the new rules without understanding the basics of those old rules ( I am one of those people by the way). I beleive there is always going to be stories to learn from...one way or another.

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: Let's Talk In the Kitchen Gets Social - Feel Free to Post ~ No Affiliate Links~
7/12/2013 10:38:19 PM

Facebook Graph Search: Facebook Takes on Google With New Search Tool

PHOTO: Facebook's Graph Search allows you to search more about your friends, including their interests and photos.

By DAVID WRIGHT (@WrightUps) and JOANNA STERN (@joannastern)
MENLO PARK, Calif., Jan. 15, 2013
How you search Facebook is about to change. In fact, just the act of searching Facebook is probably about to start.

Facebook is trying to give Google a run for its money, with a new product called "Graph Search." It turns some of the personal information people have shared on Facebook into a powerful searchable database.

For the social network's 170 million users in the U.S., it's bound to change the way people interact with their Facebook friends. It also could mean lots more time wasted at work.

Facebook allowed ABC News "Nightline" behind the scenes ahead of today's product launch, an event shrouded in secrecy and rife with speculation. Company officials had sent out a tantalizingly vague invitation: "Come and see what we're building."

IMAGES: Screenshots of Graph Search and the offices where it was built

CEO Mark Zuckerberg has long wanted to develop a social search engine, even hinting back in September that one might be in the works. The new feature gives users the ability to easily search across the network and their friends' information. Company officials say they believe it has the potential to transform the way people use Facebook.

Graph Search: What Is It?
Until now, the search bar you saw when you logged in to your Facebook page wasn't very powerful. You could only search for Timelines -- your friends' pages, other peoples' public pages and business or product pages.

But now, after close to a year and a half of development, the new "Graph Search" will allow you to search and discover more about your friends and other information that's been put on the world's largest social site.

PHOTO: Facebook's Graph Search allows you to search more about your friends, including their interests and photos.
Facebook
Facebook's Graph Search allows you to search... View Full Size
Facebook Graph Search: How It Works Watch Video
Facebook Introduces Graph Search Beta Watch Video
George Zimmerman Trial: Closing Arguments Watch Video
The new tool, available only to a limited set of U.S. users at first, turns key information that nearly a billion people have shared on the site -- including photos, places, and things they "like" -- into a searchable database tailored to your individual social network.

The new tool allows you to search across your friends' Timelines, without having to go to each of their Timeline pages to find out if they like a specific place or thing.

"I can just type in a short, simple phrase, like friends who like soccer and live nearby," Facebook product manager Kate O'Neill, told ABC News "Nightline" in an exclusive behind-the-scenes interview. "And now I'm getting the exact group of people that I'm looking for, so I can play soccer and ask them if they want to kick the ball around with me after work." O'Neill was able to narrow down the search in a demonstration only to show women.

MORE: Guide to Facebook's New Privacy Settings

The tool can search your friends' publicly shared interests, photos, places and connections. O'Neill showed ABC News how you can search for different musical artists and see which of your friends like them. She also showed how you can search a company and see which of your friends, or friends of your friends, work there. Additionally, you can search for photos of a specific place -- like Big Sur -- and the Graph Search will return images your friends might have taken of the location.

Right now, you can't search for things that were shared in a Timeline post or an event. However, O'Neill confirmed that this would be added to Graph Search later.

Privacy and Opting Out
The new product raises obvious privacy questions. Will personal information now pop up in the Graph Search, even if you never wanted to share it? How about those photos you never wanted to have on Facebook in the first place, or the ones you thought you were sharing only with your close friends?

"[Privacy] is something, of course, we care a lot about, and so from the very beginning we made it so that you can only search for the things that you can already see on Facebook," Tom Stocky, one of the lead Graph Search senior engineers, told "Nightline."

Stocky also pointed ABC News to Facebook's recent privacy tool changes, which allow you better to see what personal information your friends and others can see on Facebook. O'Neill showed the new Activity Log tools as well as the photo "untag" tool, which lets you contact others who might have a photo of you posted that you'd wish they'd take down.

When asked if users can opt out of the new search in general, Stocky said that they can choose to change the privacy settings on each of their pieces of content.
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MENLO PARK, Calif., Jan. 15, 2013
"For every post you shared, there's an option so you can share this publicly, or with friends, or only me. For each item you basically have the control over what audience that's shared with," he said.

Advertising; Taking on Google?
The feature might seem like a simple product addition, but not only has it been in the works since mid-2011, it puts Facebook in a unique position as a search engine competitor to Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft's Bing. However, Facebook says it hopes to provide something entirely different -- something that's more personalized.

"I think the thing that makes this product the most interesting is the content that you have access to," Lars Rasmussen, one of the lead engineers who has worked on the tool since its inception, said. "I think most of the stuff people are going to see again or discover anew is not going to be public, and that's what makes it so new and different from any other product out there."

Rasmussen and Stocky both worked at Google before joining Facebook.

Facebook Graph Search: How It Works Watch Video
Facebook Introduces Graph Search Beta Watch Video
George Zimmerman Trial: Closing Arguments Watch Video
Google itself has tried to get into social search with its Google Plus and Google search integration. But while Google handles over 100 billion search queries a month, a small fraction of its users have embraced its Google Plus social network.

Microsoft took another route with Bing, partnering with Facebook to show relevant Facebook information on the right side of a Bing.com page when you enter a search query. But the success of the Bing site depends on your friends opting in to the social search function.

Like Google and Microsoft, Facebook will likely be able to generate new revenues with search ads.

"You do a search on Google because you have a particular thing that you're after, the ads that they have shown are very compelling," Danny Sullivan, the editor of Search Engine Land, told "Nightline." "And so this already has some of that same monetization. You'll go through and start to do a search, and it's already suggesting in some cases that there's an ad and that there's somebody who's already a match."

But Facebook says that isn't in the immediate plan.

"Right now we are focused squarely on the user experience," O'Neill said. "This product was built for the people who use Facebook, to help them really to take advantage of the information that they've shared with each other. There aren't any ads in the results of Graph Search. We may monetize this further in the future, but we have no immediate plans to do so."

Either way, Facebook is hoping you'll start searching more when the Search Graph begins in a limited test to Facebook's U.S. users starting today.

You can go to facebook.com/graphsearch to get on the waiting list.

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: Let's Talk In the Kitchen Gets Social - Feel Free to Post ~ No Affiliate Links~
7/12/2013 10:41:32 PM

Facebook Graph Search: Now Is the Time to Go Over Your Privacy Settings

PHOTO: Facebook's Graph Search requires you to be more vigilant about privacy settings.

By JOANNA STERN (@joannastern)
Jan. 16, 2013
Facebook has now unveiled its Graph Search tool, which turns the personal information people have shared on the social network into a powerful searchable database. While it is only rolling out on a limited basis in the U.S. right now, ultimately it will allow everyone to search easily across the network and their friends' information.

Facebook made a point of telling ABC News and others that the new feature respects Facebook's current privacy settings. In fact, Facebook created a video and page just to explain to people how privacy works with the new Graph Search.

IMAGES: Screenshots of Graph Search and the offices where it was built

"With Graph Search, you can look up anything shared with you on Facebook, and others can find stuff you've shared with them, including content set to Public. That means different people see different results," Facebook said on the page.

While Facebook's new search tool might respect those settings, it does mean that your information will be surfaced more. "The phishers and the hackers and the ID thieves woke up to Christmas morning with all this data," John Sileo, author of "Privacy Means Profit" and an identity theft expert, told ABC News.

But that's the extreme. More realistically, it is your friends or the college admissions counselors, employers and others who might more easily discover things you thought were private.

Facebook Graph Search: How It Works Watch Video
Facebook Introduces Graph Search Beta Watch Video
George Zimmerman Trial: Closing Arguments Watch Video
That's why it's a very good time to review your privacy settings and go through your data on Facebook to make sure you're not sharing anything publicly that you wish you weren't.

"If someone hasn't spent 90 minutes in their privacy and security settings, they are at a significantly greater risk than they need to be," Sileo said. "Facebook does a good job of explaining what the settings are when you are looking at it, but you have to go through it."

MORE: Guide to Facebook's New Privacy Settings

Before Graph Search starts rolling out to a wider audience, set aside some time and follow some of these tips.

1. Set your default preferences to share with friends only.
Underneath any status update or photo you share is a small toggle that allows you to select with who you would like to share that piece of content. Set it to "Friends" and it will automatically default to that setting on anything you share. This way you know that everything you share is only going out to your Friends. You can always expand it to "Public" or "Friends of Friends" but it's better to play it safe with the default setting.

2. Go through your likes.
The Graph Search searches your likes. As Gizmodo points out, you can search for "People who like…" and it will return some shocking results. Maybe you "Liked" something in college, like "Weed" or something else that you wouldn't like at this point in your life. This is the time to go clean that up. Unlike!

3. Go through your photos.
Graph Search can also search photos. Now is the time to go through photos that are tagged of you and untag the ones you don't like or may be inappropriate. Facebook's new privacy tools have made this easier to do. Click the little lock icon in the upper right hand corner, select "Who can see my stuff?" and then "Where can I review all my posts and things I'm tagged in?" That will take you to the Activity Log, where you can select the photos tab. There you can see if photos are public or private.

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Jan. 16, 2013
4. Go through your friends and make lists.
This is the one that can take the most time. You can create different lists of people who have different access to your information. For instance, you might not want your coworkers to be able to see or search for any of your photos. Go to your Friends list from your Timeline and you can see which of your friends is on which list. You can even create new lists and permissions for each list. Lastly, you can view your Timeline as that person by going back to that lock icon in the top right corner, selecting "Who can see my stuff?" and selecting "What do other people see on my Timeline?" From there you can view your info as if you were them.
Facebook Graph Search: How It Works Watch Video
Facebook Introduces Graph Search Beta Watch Video
George Zimmerman Trial: Closing Arguments Watch Video
5. Keep it up.
Lastly make sure you keep an eye on what you share and with whom you share it. The search function is going to make finding infomation much easier on Facebook. Just make sure you want the info you share to be found. http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/facebook-graph-search-now-time-privacy-settings/story?id=18230399#.UeCFnEEm23C

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: Let's Talk In the Kitchen Gets Social - Feel Free to Post ~ No Affiliate Links~
7/16/2013 4:21:21 PM
5 Global Recruiting Trends To Help You Land Your Dream Job [INFOGRAPHIC]

Brianne Shally, July 15, 2013

The recruiting world is changing fast – recruiters are becoming more social, mobile, and data-driven. In our newly released 2013 Global Recruiting Trends Report*, we uncovered five key trends that are changing how employers find, engage, and hire you. What does LinkedIn know about recruiting? Well, 88% of the Fortune 100 and corporations from every industry around the globe use us for recruiting. If you follow these trends, you’ll spot career-advancing opportunities that you wouldn’t have otherwise.

1. Recruiters are relying more and more on social professional networks to find you.

Most of you are happy in your current jobs, but if your dream opportunity fell into your lap today, you’d consider it, right? Well, there’s a recruiter out there who is sitting on your dream job, and they are looking for you.

What you should do: Go where recruiters are, and put your best foot forward. Since they’re using platforms such as LinkedIn more, make it easier for them to find you.

  • Build your profile, keep it updated, and grow your network.
  • Keep your activity fresh and compelling. Share relevant LinkedIn Today content via status updates and join LinkedIn Groups to add color to your profile.

2. Recruiters are increasingly using data to make better hiring decisions.

Recruiters use data analytics to find the right person for a job with the perfect set of skills, expertise, talents and passion.

What you should do: Add specificity to your profile. More input = better matching.

  • Use keywords from the profiles, job descriptions and Company Pages that appeal to you.
  • Think about what sets you apart from other candidates who have the same skills and expertise.
  • Consider adding rich media such as articles, videos, and slideshows.

3. Employers are investing more in managing their reputations.

Employers know you care if they are considered great places to work. And they know you can easily find out. So, they are helping shape those conversations by being more proactive and transparent.

What you should do: Peek into a company’s culture much earlier in the hiring process. Visit Company and Career Pages on LinkedIn to figure out if it’s a good fit. Join their conversations and engage – you’ll both save time and make better decisions.

4. Companies want your next career move to be in-house, not to the competition.

Most companies recognize the importance of promoting talent from within, and they are putting their money where their mouth is.

What you should do: Look at your own company’s page on LinkedIn to see the latest job openings. Take advantage of the fact that you already know how the company works and already have an internal network. Look at the skills in the jobs that interest you, and find ways to develop them in your current job.

5. Companies are trying to figure out ‘mobile recruiting’ so they can connect with candidates like you who are on the go.

Are you reading this on your phone? Mobile recruiting is in its infancy, but it has huge potential to make the hiring process more immediate and more convenient. One thing is clear – candidates want it and will use it.

What you should do: Download LinkedIn’s mobile app for a mobile-friendly way to find and apply for jobs.

To learn more about recruiting trends, check out Global Recruiting Trends Reports and Infographics.

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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Jim
Jim Allen

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RE: Let's Talk In the Kitchen Gets Social - Feel Free to Post ~ No Affiliate Links~
7/21/2013 1:26:01 AM
It’s not surprising that a less-engaging platform like RSS is less effective for marketers, but it bears remembering that “so that I can be effectively marketed to” is not typically a prime motivation for people to do anything.
Sam Blake


Published on July 18th, 2013 | by Contributing Author
After Google Reader’s demise, does RSS matter to your business?

When Google Reader, a popular service for consuming content by RSS feeds, shuttered on July 2nd, it ignited a RSSdebate amongst the some 200,000 publishers and marketers who use RSS (really simple syndication) to stream content to their audiences. On one hand, the medium was an aging one no longer worth supporting for a tech giant such as Google. But on the other, the outcry from Google Reader fans made it clear there are still plenty of people who think RSS is worth savoring, if not saving.

Should businesses follow Google’s lead and turn to other methods to push out content? Or should RSS stick around for the time being? RSS may be mature by internet standards, but experts disagree on whether or not it’s worth keeping and few businesses want to be first to tell their audience, “No.” Let’s hear from both sides:

“I actually don’t think RSS works,” said blogger, entrepreneur and angel investor Andrew Chen, who pointed out in a recent post on his own website that RSS feeds aren’t interactive, and that readers who subscribe to content via email marketing (think newsletters) are far more responsive.

Andy Crestodina, principal and strategic director of Orbit Media Studios, a community of professionals and media specialists, agrees: “[RSS] is becoming irrelevant as a way to connect with your audience. Smart marketers are rushing to build their email lists and social followings. These channels push the message out. RSS is passive.”

What makes RSS less attractive to modern marketers is that it requires an additional action on the part of the audience, says Crestodina: “The feed sits there until someone views it. It’s not in anyone’s inbox (unless you’re using RSS to syndicate via email, which isn’t ideal) or in anyone’s social streams. I know very few people who check their feeds in the morning. But most people I know check their social streams. Everyone I know checks their email!”

However, though numbers are hard to come by, RSS is still consumed by a huge number of people and it’s relatively easy for businesses to do. Chief Executive Marshal Kirkpatrick of Little Bird, a service that discovers and helps businesses engage with influential people online, points out that suggesting great feeds to your audience is one way of adding value to their experience.

“Curate a collection of great content to fill that channel and include your company’s feed in it! That’s what I would do if I was determining a business’s RSS strategy,” Kirkpatrick explains.

With Google Reader gone, feed junkies are scrambling to choose one of several dozen alternative platforms, such as Feedly, the new Digg Reader or NewsBlur. Whether RSS goes or RSS stays, all content publishers who use RSS should make sure theirs is at least set up properly.

“The quickest way to verify that your RSS feed is working correctly is to use the free feed validatorprovided by W3C, an industry standards body,” said web developer Jason Siffring, who owns the web development studio Surprise Highway. All you need to do is plug in the URL of your feed (which is usually your URL followed by ‘/feed’) and the site will point out any formatting issues that are problematic.

Another strategy is to subscribe to your own feed, which may help you find any formatting (or visual) issues yourself. Also, make sure that the RSS feed is displaying your newest posts.

“To further test it…publish a new post (or test post) and then refresh the feed in the reader,” says Jon Henshaw, chief marketing officer of Raven, a startup offering all-in-one marketing software tools for businesses. “If it doesn’t appear, then something may be wrong with the feed.”

What’s your opinion on RSS? Share away in the comments.

This post contributed by guest author, Yael Grauer. Grauer is a Minneapolis-based freelance writer and editor. Find her online at Yaelwrites.com. http://www.verticalresponse.com/blog/after-google-readers-demise-does-rss-matter-to-your-business/

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


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