Facebook???
Facebook???
(OP)
What does everybody think of a Facebook / social networking site profile for a structural (or whatever) engineering firm.
Seems a lot of my contractor and design/build clients are starting to get them. To me that seems to indicate it is time I consider doing the same.
Seems a lot of my contractor and design/build clients are starting to get them. To me that seems to indicate it is time I consider doing the same.
Mike Drinkwater, P.E.
http://www.mdrinkwaterengineering.com
RE: Facebook???
Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com
RE: Facebook???
Facebook is good for the performing arts, modeling agencies, talent agencies, support organizations, fan clubs, etc. I hope it does not go all corporate. It would completely change things for me. Maybe not in a practical sense, but certainly in a cultural sense.
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
Mike Drinkwater, P.E.
http://www.mdrinkwaterengineering.com
RE: Facebook???
Civil Development Group, LLC
Los Angeles Civil Engineering specializing in Hillside Grading
http://www.civildevelopmentgroup.com
http://www.civildevelopmentgroup.com/blog
RE: Facebook???
my kids use FB, i use LI.
as for SEO a ShareThis link on your website will capture more than a twitter.
however, if you use FB there is a new app available called BranchOut that searches your friends on LI.
RE: Facebook???
Tobalcane
"If you avoid failure, you also avoid success."
RE: Facebook???
On the other hand i do have a Group that i joined (local restaurant) that once a week post their special etc.
RE: Facebook???
RE: Facebook???
- 50% users are male
- 47% are between 18 to 34
- Less than 25% below the age of 18
- 15% are between 35 and 50
- 45% of people have a degree
- 61% make over $61,000 per year
FB has a lot of potential.
RE: Facebook???
Yeah, FB has great potential. I just broke up with my BF via wall post.
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com
RE: Facebook???
Hg
Eng-Tips policies: FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: Facebook???
Not only that, but since he doesn't use computers, he had to hear it from his ex. How the the saying go, a woman scorned.......
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
Hg
Eng-Tips policies: FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: Facebook???
Ah, found it
Heav'n has no Rage, like Love to Hatred turn'd,
Nor Hell a Fury, like a Woman scorn'd.
The fury also included returning his already-opened birthday presents and using the money for a 2-hour massage and a manicure/pedicure.
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
Remind me never to let you speak to my wife...
Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com
RE: Facebook???
All of this is a good example of why I personally would prefer FB to be social networking, and not a professional forum.
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
RE: Facebook???
-Kirby
Kirby Wilkerson
Remember, first define the problem, then solve it.
RE: Facebook???
The American Institute of Steel Construction has a Facebook page. They've been on a social networking kick lately. I'm not really sure what the point is. I guess they want to reach out initially to college students (they already do that with their bridge competition), and then when those students become engineers they maintain the warm fuzzy feelings toward steel.
I'm not too fond of FB as a marketing tool; it's a social space and most people don't want to be marketed to. On the other hand, other than the initial page invitation, getting marketed to on FB is an opt-in. They used to call it "becoming a fan" of a page; now you "like" the page; either way it means you sign up for notifications from them. I've signed up for a few of these myself, and I have a musician page that other people can "like", though I keep forgetting to update it. A couple times a year I post a link to that page on my personal profile in case I've added any new friends who may be interested in it. But I can't really see marketing an engineering business on FB.
If you do want to do business on FB, definitely separate your "page" from your personal "profile". One is you, one is your business, and you personally and your business engage in different things and need to reach a different crowd. Also FB frowns upon using personal profiles for commercial purposes. Don't "like" the business page from your personal profile. Keep them separate. You don't want the clients following the link back to your personal profile where you're yammering on about whatever the dog pooped out this morning.
If clients find you and want to "friend" you, consider (in violation of FB policy but whatever) creating separate FB profiles for your real friends and your business contacts. Hide the private one from searches, make it visible only to friends, don't let those two identities friend each other, and don't friend anyone on both pages--assign everyone to one category or another.
FB pages are good for entities who want to regularly broadcast something to their network via status updates, like Twitter. Not so useful, because of the rigid format, for just being out there on the web passively giving information about your business.
Hg
Eng-Tips policies: FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: Facebook???
A thought occurred to me today when I was de-friended for the first time. What happens if you 'friend' the boss or co-workers and then get laid off or fired. Do you un-friend those people because it's too hard to see photos of your former employers company outing? Do you keep your boss just in case there is the possibility of consulting work or rehiring?
What if a client is a friend and stiffs you on a business deal. Do you un-friend the client and risk no future business and possibly broadcast to your competitors that your client is looking for new blood?
IDK, just random thoughts......
"If you are going to walk on thin ice, you might as well dance!"
RE: Facebook???
How many bridges do you want to burn, and do you think you'll get work via common contacts? Some bridges are worth attaching a nuclear bomb to...
Dan - Owner
http://www.Hi-TecDesigns.com
RE: Facebook???
I agree that LinkedIn is a better forum for professional contacts--but it's harder to stay on people's radar. On FB people are posting all kinds of stuff all the time, so you're constantly reminded of their existence. On LI, if you want to remind people of your existence, you have to keep posting a status change, but since LI isn't really geared toward "streaming", your LI contacts might not appreciate getting the daily (or weekly) notification that you've changed your status.
I think in certain industries (probably marketing, for one) LI *is* used like FB, and people are posting and reading status messages all the time, but if your industry isn't like that, then trying to stand out on LI can backfire. Better to be visible by other forms of participation on LI like posting messages to groups or answering questions. Getting a weekly notification that "Cass has answered a question in the Care And Feeding Of Architects and Structural Engineers forum" is, in my opinion, moderately more interesting than "Cass has changed her status." The latter says to me Cass is changing her status to change her status (which, if you're the consultant who wrote the "how to succeed on LinkedIn" page advising people to update their statuses frequently, could be good, but in most cases probably not). The former says Cass is engaging with a network of her peers.
Just thoughts.
Hg
Eng-Tips policies: FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies
RE: Facebook???