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Facebook Tagging For Business

  • Only tag people who will find the information you’re posting relevant. Throwing up a coupon and tagging all your friends is spammy. Use your update or email marketing features for that. Use tagging when you mention one of your Facebook friends showed up at your event and you were glad they came. It sends a personal “thank you” in a public way and allows them to see that you appreciate them.
  • Don’t tag the same people all the time. Just like blasting messages via email, when you get into copy and paste procedures, you become spam-like and annoying. Make sure you follow rule number one, but mix it up and tag different people in different messages, pictures or notes.
  • Read more at www.socialmediaexplorer.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Warum der Chief Social Media Officer kommen wird

    Dieter Schwarz says:

    Gute Zusammenfassung zum Thema CCO + CSMO

    Amplifyd from www.besser20.de

    Aus Sicht der Rechte dürfte die größte Schwierigkeit aus der Rolle selbst kommen: Sind doch die „herkömmlichen“ Ressorts klar gegliedert und abgegrenzt, stellt die horizontale und vertikale Verantwortung des CSMO die Organisation vor die Herausforderung, neue Weisungsstrukturen zuzulassen. Die Pflichten stellen die Zielerreichung dar und werfen ein neues Licht auf die Frage der Messbarkeit der Social Media Anstrengungen. Das neu justierte Aufgabengebiet des CSMO könnte demnach so aussehen (übersetzt aus Sysomos Blog und angereichert)

    - Erarbeiten einer strategischen Vision und Planung für Social Media Aktivitäten des Unternehmens
    - Umsetzungsverantwortung horizontal und vertikal
    - Koordination und Integration der Planungen mit den weiteren Geschäftsaktivitäten
    - Erfolgsüberprüfung und Benchmarking der Social Media Aktivitäten
    - Führen des Social Media Teams und der Community Manager
    - Evangelisierung und konsequentes Vorleben der internen und externen Aktivitäten

    Read more at www.besser20.de
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Personal Brand and Word of Mouth, Part 5

    Dieter Schwarz says:

    Part 5 of the great series on Branding and WoM from http://www.personalbrandingblog.com/personal-brand-and-word-of-mouth-part-5/

    Who do you need to know3731249776_f2e74ec270_o

    The best contacts for you fall into one of three categories:  Your INFORMATION network, your REFERRAL/RECOMMENDATION network and your personal brand ADVOCATE network. And, there’s a definite strategic plan that needs to be created to fill each network.

    Your information network consists of people who can keep you up to date in the latest of you industry or community.  This can include association leaders, auditors, authors, policy makers and speakers.

    Your referral/recommendation network consists of people who can connect you with your best clients or best contacts.  Again, you’re looking for those people who can connect you with large numbers and those who connect with large numbers of your potential client or contacts.  Who have you referred? Who has recommended you?

    Lastly, your personal brand ADVOCATE network are those people who have already spoken positively on your behalf.  Do you know who they are and have their up-to-date contact information?

    Read more at www.personalbrandingblog.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Getting Real About Enterprise 2.0


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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Social Media Jedi Training

    Dieter Schwarz says:

    Cool link list on PR 2.0 articles! Check it out!

    Amplifyd from www.pr-squared.com
    Jedi

    From the PR-Squared files, my suggested reading for PR 2.0 tactics:

    Read more at www.pr-squared.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    4 Ways Social Media is Changing Business

    Amplifyd from mashable.com

    Social media is helping to forge a new era in business transparency and engagement, creating both new challenges and opportunities. Gone are the days when companies could rely on carefully crafted press releases or flashy ad campaigns to communicate with their customers, often in an attempt to convince people that their products are the best in the field. In the age of social media, the rules have changed radically, and people today demand a more honest and direct relationship with the companies with which they do business.

    Companies now face a clear choice: wall themselves in and become increasingly controlled and hidden, or use social media and other means to reveal their human side, welcome transparency, and forge new relationships with their customers. The old game is undoubtedly over, and the question now is, “what can businesses do to transition and succeed in this new era?”

    Below are the top four broad shifts that social media is causing in business. Please feel free to share any others you have observed in the comments.

    1. From “Trying to Sell” to “Making Connections”

    In order to change the context of customer relationships from trying to sell to seeking to engage and connect with customers, companies need to use various means, including sites like Facebook (Facebook) and Twitter (Twitter), to socially interact with people. The most popular brands in social media tend to post less about their products or services and more about things that help their customers get to know the people and personality of a company. Their goal is less about “selling” and more “engaging” — and, as a result, through such engagement people feel more comfortable doing business with those companies.

    timberland

    Jeff Swartz, who is the President and CEO of the Timberland Company, is a great example of this. Swartz uses his Twitter account to show his personality by tweeting about his life and the social issues he is passionate about, rather than the shoes his company makes. He also links from his Twitter bio to Timberland’s Earthkeeper project that supports environmental awareness, rather than to the company homepage, in an effort to make a connection with people around something that goes beyond just the products Timberland sells.

    Lesson: Release fewer “official statements” and more personal ones that help you make a connection to your customers and audience.

    2. From “Large Campaigns” to “Small Acts”

    With sites like Facebook and Twitter, we all essentially have our own broadcasting network, and businesses are beginning to see that rather than spending millions of dollars on traditional ad campaigns, small acts can be more valuable because people will inevitably share such experiences through the social web.

    In the past, if we had a very bad or very good experience with a company, it could take days or weeks to tell all of our friends and relatives about it. Today, in a matter of minutes, we can let all our friends on Facebook or followers on Twitter know about what happened. When every customer experience can be easily and widely broadcast, small issues become super important.

    Loic Le Meur, CEO of startup software company Seesmic (Seesmic), once told me that one of the most important jobs of a CEO today is to hear what people are saying about the company’s product across social media channels, and to respond to them directly. In fact, much of his Twitter stream is @replies to people commenting on his company’s product.

    southwest

    Bigger companies, such as Southwest Airlines and Comcast are using Twitter in the same way, making sure customers’ concerns are addressed. Because bad experiences are broadcast just as fast and just as easily as the good, it pays for companies to pay attention to the one-on-one customer relationships forged via social media.

    Lesson: Instead of only relying on big campaigns, make authentic, helpful relationships and communication the new campaign.

    3. From “Controlling Our Image” to “Being Ourselves”

    Of course companies need to have employee policies, and there is such a thing as bad press, but look at the most popular companies in the era of social media, and you’ll generally find the ones that give their employees freedom to be themselves in online spaces. The goal should no longer be to create a very controlled and polished image that everyone in a company tries to reinforce, but rather to give employees the means necessary to be human beings that can put a friendly face on the corporation.

    I am not sure how NBC directs the social media efforts of their employees, but in watching NBC newscaster Ann Curry (@AnnCurry) on Twitter it is clear that she is not simply trying to get people to watch her shows. Curry is someone who speaks out about women’s rights, deeply cares about justice, and likes to quote the Persian poet, Rumi — there is a person there, not a company representative, and as such, I am much more likely to pay attention when and if she does talk about any of her television shows.

    adobe

    John Nack, the Principal Product Manager for Photoshop at Adobe, offers another great example. Adobe is a company that smartly encourages and provides the means for their employees to blog, and anyone who reads Nack’s blog will notice that Adobe doesn’t put many restrictions on what people write about. Nack’s blog is focused almost exclusively on his area of interest — graphic design and photo manipulation — but he doesn’t post solely about Adobe products. Many of the interesting art projects and articles he links to have nothing to do with Adobe and some may even have been created using software from competing companies.

    Lesson: Forget the unified company image, give staff the freedom to be themselves, and trust that the relationships that they build will help the company in the long run.

    4. From “Hard to Reach” to “Available Everywhere”

    To engage with customers, it is no longer enough to have an email address and customer service number on one’s website. Today, people want to interact with and engage businesses via their chosen means of communication, whether that is Twitter, Facebook, discussion forums, or a feedback site like Get Satisfaction (Get Satisfaction).

    If I want to communicate with a company, I tend to look them up on Twitter first. Knowing that I can communicate with a company on the networks upon which I am already most active makes me feel more comfortable doing business with them, because I know that if I have an issue, there is someone at the company I can communicate with through those means.

    dell

    Companies like Dell, for example, have fully embraced multiple channels of support. Their community site lists all the ways customers can connect with them through Twitter, Facebook, Flickr (Flickr), YouTube (YouTube), forums, blogs, email, and more. Dell wants people to be able to connect with them through whatever channel is most comfortable.

    Lesson: Rather than expect customers to communicate through your chosen means, allow them to do so through their chosen means.

    The New Business Paradigm in the Age of Social Media

    In this new era of social media, companies are asked to be increasingly transparent and personal. Of course, traditional advertising and press releases will still have their place, but social sites such as Twitter and Facebook allow a whole new type of communication to take place that has previously been unknown to most businesses. Possibly more important for businesses than getting a large number of followers on social media sites, is following through on the opportunity to forge more genuine and direct connections with their customers.

    Businesses who choose not to adapt to the new culture will be at an increasing disadvantage, as their customers slowly build personal relationships with their competitors. We are now in the age of open communication, engaged dialogue, and transparency, and business success may now have less to do with the size of ad budgets, but on the quality of interactions with customers.

    Read more at mashable.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    HOW TO: Set Up a Winning Facebook Fan Page

    Amplifyd from mashable.com
    facebook
    With more than 300 million active users, Facebook is nearly the size of the United States in terms of population. In fact, odds are that you’re a Facebook user, perhaps using it to keep in touch with family and friends, with a dash of business thrown in for good measure. Maybe you look at some of the 2 billion photos uploaded each month, or contribute a few of the 40 million daily status updates. In short: Facebook is where it’s at, and you’re already there.

    But what about your business? Does it use Facebook (Facebook)? If you’re a business owner, you really need to set up a Fan Page, or else you risk being left behind as more businesses shift to social networks like Facebook. This post is a beginner’s guide to setting up and getting the most out of a Page on Facebook for your business.

    Facebook Pages 101

    Facebook Pages are different than profiles. You have a profile for you, Jane Doe, but your business can’t have a profile — it can have a Page. A Page is a place to house all the pertinent information about your company. They’re so useful because you can include everything that relates to your business in one place with a built-in potential audience:

    - Overview of company
    - Website and contact info
    - Press releases
    - Videos
    - Blog RSS
    - Twitter (Twitter) updates
    - Company news and status
    - Customer interaction

    One of the major benefits of a Page on Facebook over (or in addition to) a webpage is that it’s so simple to update. With a website, if you’re not technical, you have to contact your web developer, who will then charge you to make even a tiny change. With Facebook, updates are as easy as logging in and typing or uploading. The fresher your content, the more you will engage people.

    Setting Up Your Page

    Once you’ve logged in to Facebook, scroll to the bottom and click on Advertising. Then click Pages and Create a Page. Select the type of business you own and start filling in all the details. The more info you add, the better your page will be (and remember: Google (Google) thinks highly of Facebook in its search engine results).

    create-page

    Make sure to include your company logo, any RSS blog feeds that are relevant, videos, images — the whole nine yards. Once you’re satisfied with the Page, publish it, then get ready to dive into promotion.

    Enhance Your Page with Apps

    You can also enhance your Facebook Page by adding applications to it. Apps add particular functions to your page, such as drawing in your blog’s RSS feed (the Social RSS app is a good example of this) or YouTube videos. They are a great way to further engage visitors to your Page and provide them reason to come back, and there are hundreds of apps designed to help you do business better on Facebook.

    pizza-hut

    Another option you have is to internally develop a new app. Pizza Hut’s Order App which allowed fans to order their pizzas directly through Facebook was a huge hit, for example. Red Bull has a custom application on its Page that pulls in Twitter updates from all of the athletes they sponsor. Developing a custom app for your Facebook Fan Page can be pricey, but if you can afford it or have in-house development talent that can get the job done, it can be very rewarding.

    Promoting a Page

    The tricky thing about Facebook Pages is that you can’t friend someone the way you can from your profile. People can elect to become fans of your Page, but only if they know about it. So you’ve got to spread the word organically (and keep doing it) to introduce people to your Page and to your company.

    First identify contacts from your profile that are either business connections, people working in a field related to your business, or who would otherwise benefit from the information your company provides, and invite them to become a fan of the Page. Send a short note explaining what you want to offer from the Page (remember, people are thinking “what’s in it for me?”) and include a link to the Page.

    app-search

    You should also promote your Page elsewhere online by putting a Facebook Page button on your website to help others find it, spreading the word on Twitter if you’re there (and you should be), sending out an email notification, or putting a link on your business cards. Do whatever it takes to help people know that you’re on Facebook and you want them to become a part of your community.

    Get the Most Out of Your Page

    If you’ve got a brand that already has a strong following like Zappos.com or True Lemon, a Facebook Page can be a great way to launch a community. Encourage discussion among fans by asking questions like: “what’s your favorite product?” or “what could we do to improve our product?” Post updates weekly, if not daily and point your fans to any off-site promotions, such as giveaways hosted on different web sites.

    And keep it fun! Nobody likes straight up business all the time! Zappos, for example, has crazy videos and posts that aren’t related to shoes, which is why their fan base is well over 21,000.

    It will take time to build your fan base, so remember to keep sending out invites to new contacts asking if they want to become a fan of your business Page. Constantly promote the Page in any way possible, and keep your content fresh — give people a reason to check in on your page regularly.

    Check your analytics: before long you should see a large portion of your website’s referrals coming from Facebook!

    Wrapping it Up

    Your Facebook efforts will be ongoing, so plan to dedicate a few hours each week to getting new fans and updating content. You’ll quickly appreciate the instant ability to connect with customers and future customers through this social media tool!

    Read more at mashable.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Your Social Media Strategy Won’t Save You

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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Brand Yourself Before Someone Else Brands You

    Discovering your personal brand is the first step in the personal branding process for a reason.  If you don’t know what you’re brand is then how are you going to convey it to the world?  Your brand is what you will be known for.  When your name or image is seen or heard, what will people say?  Will that description or single word be what you want them to think?  These are all questions you need to ask yourself now, not in five years!  The reason is simple: brand yourself before someone else brands you.

    First impressions have changed

    The internet has promoted perception over reality, which is both a threat and an opportunity. A first impression is obviously the most important and if it’s not perfect or authentic, then you will lose that opportunity, whether it’s a possible job, speaking engagement, friend, etc.  There are no second chances, especially now since there are an infinite amount of people and websites that are easily accessible and free to the world.

    You will be judged based on what appears online in many different situations, such as:

    • Google: Your name is google’d and the first result is clicked on.  You will be accessed based on that single website they click.  If you were prepared and had created content, joined social networks and had your own domain name, then you could, for the most part, know what that first point of contact would be.  That is a huge window of opportunity to make an impact.
    • Facebook: I always say that Facebook does more harm than good.  Recruiters, for instance, use Facebook to conduct background checks more than any social networks.  It’s very challenging to build a “professional” brand on Facebook, as you can easily do with LinkedIn.  When people search on Facebook, depending on your setting, your name and picture may show up.  If the picture is you doing something suspicious, then you lose out.  Your Facebook profile might rank first in Google, which means that becomes your first impression in the above example.
  • Domains: Some people will type in your name as a domain name without using a search engine.  Did you purchase your domain name?  If you didn’t, it will show them that you aren’t thinking about personal branding and that you don’t have a great web presence.  Go to GoDaddy.com and use the promo code “oyh7″ to purchase a $7.15 domain name.  Try and get yourname.com or yourname.net.
  • Shared content: The latest and most interesting first impression machine is content shared through social networks.  For instance, let’s say you never heard of me before.  Someone shares a link to a poorly written blog post that I wrote two years ago and another person clicks it.  That would be a bad first impression through shared content.  This means that everything you do has to be high quality, consistent and portray a positive image of your brand.
  • Other social networks: I mentioned Facebook above, but people are searching for you on industry networks, LinkedIn and maybe using tools like Twitter search.  Based on what your the search results are for your name in Google (this could be Yahoo! or Bing now too), it will create an impression.
  • You need to have SOME control
    It’s hard to have control when people are sharing your contributions just about everywhere these days, at a pace that is like lightening.  That being said, you still can take control of your online image, such that you know what impression you’ll make making so you can capitalize on it. For the most part, everything I mention below is something you can create, control and/or influence.
    5 ways to own your Google search results:
  • Domain name: As said above, claim your domain name right now.  You should then put up at least one web page that people can access from this domain and so it becomes “crawlable” in various search engines.  I recommend taking your resume, splicing it into different sections, such as “education” and “major projects,” and then having one page that talks about each.
  • Social profiles: Social networks have very high Google PageRanks (Facebook=9, LinkedIn=8, Twitter=9), which means that once you create a profile, give it a unique URL and establish it, it will more than likely rank high for your name in search engines.
  • Content: The best content you can create is in the form of a blog because it’s refreshed a lot (if you put work into it) and therefore ranks high and is shared more.  You can also upload videos to sharing sites like YouTube or Vimeo and write for other blogs and/or news sites.
  • Press: When a publication or blog writes something positive about you, especially if your name is in the title of the story, it can rank high as well, as well as give you traffic and credibility with that audience.
  • Search engine optimization (SEO): Before, during and after you perform the above four strategies, you’ll want to think about how you can influence search engines.  For example, if you want to own two keywords in the minds of your audience and dominate your niche, then you want to use them in the title and description field of your website or blog.  There are many other SEO strategies out there, but since content is king, those with the best content will get the most links and therefore conquer search engines anyways.
  • What happens when someone brands you before you brand yourself?

    Well, it depends on your mark of highest visibility. What I mean is that if you’re really success doing something you hate and you don’t invest the time to think about your branding, then you will always be known as something you despise.  On the other hand, if you understand your brand and everything you touch has that branding, consistently, over a long period of time, then it will start to resonate with your audience.  People brand other people very fast.  It might have to do with what you’re wearing, if you’re beautiful or not, how you respond to a question or what your profession is.

    The end result is that your audience is confused about what you do, what value you can provide to them, what your values are and your mission in life.  There is no going back either.  You can’t run down the hall and explain to them that you are someone different than you may have appeared.  All bets are off.  You probably don’t want to be known as the lazy intern or the drunk executive!

    Pick a brand and sick with it!

    You need to brand yourself even before someone even meets you in the first place. That way, the conversation is less of an introduction and people draw a line between who you are and what you do.  I’m not saying that you won’t evolve your brand over time, but I’m trying to make the point that consistency is encouraged and preparation and execution are everything.  When you’re not in a position doing what you love, then it’s hard to brand yourself based on who you are.  When that happens, you’ll be branded based on a life you don’t want to have and nobody wants that.  So take the time and think about what type of impression you want to make and what you want to be known for.
    How do you think the people around you brand YOU?Read more at www.personalbrandingblog.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago

    Guidelines to Strategic Inbetweening for Social Media Initiatives

    I recently learned that inbetweening, in animation, is adding additional states of motion to increase the fluidity of a sequence.

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/flight_hager02.jpg


    Flight reference drawings by Jennifer Hager

    I suggest ’strategic inbetweening’ can add fluidity, and increase the ROI of social media initiatives.

    Guidelines to ’strategic inbetweening’

    Recognizing when it’s necessary
    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/inbt1.png
    Here are 4 key indicators that suggest you should consider some strategic inbetweening:

    1. If your audience is confused.
    2. If you see a dramatic increase or decrease in sales.
    3. If you have many social initiatives running concurrently.
    4. If you focus all your efforts on one initiative at a time.


    Remember, the goal of inbetweening is to increase fluidity. So if you recognize any sign of discontinuity between initiatives; inbetweening can be helpful.

    Adding strategic states


    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/inbt2.png
    Since strategic inbetweening is a term I just made up; I’ll explain the process I use.

    Step 1: Identify all social initiatives you’re currently engaged in, and all initiatives that are planned. (Social marketing, business development, research, branding etc.)
    Step 2: Preform a strategic card-sorting exercise; writing all initiatives on cards, and grouping them into piles that make use of the same strategy.
    Step 3: Consider how each group of initiatives support each other. Find key commonalities between the initiatives and decide how to connect them.


    Here are some examples:

    Strategic Recycling: Designing for re-use

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/exbt1.png

    Regardless of what you’re doing, design the initiative to be reusable. Whether it be the data you collect, the technology, or the people you touch; plan to reuse. (e.g. Let’s say you create a cool way to visualize data superimposed over a map. You could design it specifically for one initiative, or design it using a bunch of variables, so that it can be used for many initiatives.)

    Making the rounds: Designing for multiple sites, iterating as you release

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/exbt2.png

    Lets say you figure out that the most effective way to reach your audience is through myspace. You could design a bunch of initiatives that live on your my space page; or you could design each initiative so that it could work on multiple sites. You could start my running it on myspace, then when you replace that initiative with the next one, move the old one to Facebook, then to Youtube, then to Twitter. All it takes is figuring out how to adapt the initiative to work on each site.

    Simplifying by accepting complexity: Designing a user-generated content layer & integrating key content creation sites.

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/exbt3.png

    Lets say you have a Facebook page, and your fans are engaged with you. You talk to them every day to help add personality to your brand. You know that if you engage fans on other social media sites, you might not have as much time to spend with your Facebook fans. Why not encourage users to communicate with you using other social media sites to create the content. Inspire your users by asking them something abstract but relevant to your brand. (e.g. How would you cure the common cold?) Ask users to submit multimedia responses as Youtube embeds, or Flickr photo links, or a screen grab of a Twitter conversation. Making it easier for the customer by asking them to create content in a way they are used to, but making it a little bit harder for you to track.

    Creating a Chimera: Designing component releases

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/exbt4.png

    A really great way to extend brand equity is by making it better over time. Lets say you create a game and host it on your Myspace page. Your users play it, like it, and share it with their friends. You could leave it up, take it down and replace it, or add something to it. Maybe you add a leaderboard where users can compete for the high score. Next, maybe you add the ability to sign in with OpenID. Next, maybe you suggest having a contest to see who can create the best ‘new level’ and make the code for the game open source.

    Ensuring Continuity

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/inbt3.png

    As any animator will tell you, inbetweening done wrong makes the final product much worse. It’s important that you check your strategic inbetweening before you implement anything. I’ve created a checklist of strategic heuristics that help me to ensure continuity on several levels. It’s similar to a recent post outlining a framework to tie social media marketing tactics across several channels but is more of a checklist. I can make it available to those interested.

    Regardless of how you go about ensuring continuity, it’s something that’s important to do.

    Learning

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/inbt4.png

    As with any initiative, inbetweening should be tracked, analyzed and refined. As you continue, you should develop documentation that shows what worked and why; and what didn’t work and how to avoid it. This process will eventually lead to not having to do inbetweening anymore. You’ll stop noticing the 4 key indicators that suggest you should do it.

    Sharing

    http://thejordanrules.com/IMG/inbt5.png

    The final guideline is simple; don’t hoard knowledge. Share what you know, what you learn, how you learned it, and what your going to do with your new knowledge. Remember, these are guidelines for helping with social initiatives; success shouldn’t stop you from being social. Transparency can be VERY helpful.

    During one recent project, a brand manager sent a message to the community telling them that she planned on migrating a site to a new platform - something most brand managers wouldn’t normally do. A member of the community responded by telling her about a technology that would allow her to distribute her content across multiple platforms without having to migrate her site. Just an example of how transparency can lead to unexpected results.

    Read more at thejordanrules.posterous.com
     
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    Posted by Dieter Schwarz  4 months ago