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Dale Denham
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Having a company page on Facebook is great but remember, if people like your page, your posts will show up in their FB feed. So if you are annoying, they'll either UNlike you or HIDE you (HIDING you is worse since you think they are following you).
So you have to be relevant and interesting. Stop selling. Sure, it's OK to post a product or special on occasion but you have to be interesting with it. And post things that are useful to get people thinking. Even if you didn't sell the promotion, talk about current uses of promotional products in big launches and big events. And include snippets to great AND RELEVANT articles and a link to the original article.
The same is true for Twitter, Google+ and all other social networks. It has to be interesting.
To be interesting, include spontaneous, personal, human, light-hearted, interesting, funny, timely and photo-driven content.
The one site you MIGHT get away with being very product focused is PINTEREST. Pinterest is all visual so having cool, kooky and unique promotional products is actually a part of being social. And it transfers well to Facebook.
But, I still prefer, for most distributor and supplier salespeople, to be friends with the person. If that person is interesting. You don't want to be a star, you just want to be interesting enough to have people not be annoyed when they see your posts.
Don't SELL and you will sell more.
One more thing, people still go to your website more often than Facebook so you have to keep both up to date or include a widget with your facebook status updates to keep them aware of postings. My wife went to the Falmouth library site to check hours and showed up to a closed library. I had seen their Facebook post earlier in the day that they were close for Patriots day. Which, not being from Maine we had to look up...
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Dale Denham
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Dale is a business leader who is best known for providing business-focused I.T. leadership. He believes technology is not limited to increasing efficiency, but is essential to driving revenue. Dale strongly believes having great people is the critical ingredient to success no matter how great your technology might be.Known to many in the promotional products industry as a leading technologist, Dale is using his mix of business and technology to help drive the industry forward. One of the leaders and founders of the PromoStandards effort, Dale and others are working hard to address industry inefficiencies. Dale also is a board member of PPAI through 2018.Follow Dale on Twitter @daledenham or connect with him on LinkedIn via http://www.linkedin.com/in/daledenham.
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