Post by account_disabled on Dec 8, 2023 22:44:35 GMT -5
Many think of signing up to social media and then letting their presence die. When asked “Are you on Twitter?” or “Are you on Facebook?” they answer yes, because after all you find their name and their beautiful face on the profiles. The problem is that you can't find anything else. Uncurated profiles, updates that date back seven months, little presence and almost zero interaction. This is not social networking. You might as well not sign up, seriously, because social media.
Facebook only if you want, but Phone Number Data little changes - and if someone searches for you, if your readers search for you, you won't make a good impression. Do you do social networking? Do you interact with others in your circles, your contacts? Do you share what you know with others? Do you promote what others post? Do you make yourself known and appreciated by those who have chosen to have you among their contacts? If the answer to all these questions is no – as I imagine – then you need to reconsider your positions.
How do you approach the public? How do you treat your readers? How do you show yourself as a person? Being online, having an online presence, requires greater responsibility, because the network, unlike physical reality, is constantly public. It is history in the making in real time. What you write, your thoughts, your criticisms, the messages you send, the subliminal ones and the transparent ones, everything you put on the internet is in the public domain. You are in the public domain. You are what you communicate to those who listen to you. How do you approach the public? How argumentative are you? How creative? How proactive?
Facebook only if you want, but Phone Number Data little changes - and if someone searches for you, if your readers search for you, you won't make a good impression. Do you do social networking? Do you interact with others in your circles, your contacts? Do you share what you know with others? Do you promote what others post? Do you make yourself known and appreciated by those who have chosen to have you among their contacts? If the answer to all these questions is no – as I imagine – then you need to reconsider your positions.
How do you approach the public? How do you treat your readers? How do you show yourself as a person? Being online, having an online presence, requires greater responsibility, because the network, unlike physical reality, is constantly public. It is history in the making in real time. What you write, your thoughts, your criticisms, the messages you send, the subliminal ones and the transparent ones, everything you put on the internet is in the public domain. You are in the public domain. You are what you communicate to those who listen to you. How do you approach the public? How argumentative are you? How creative? How proactive?