- You’re in control of your feed. …
- Find a purpose to your screen time so that it doesn’t become a pastime.
- Highlight your best self and turn all social media platforms into a living/breathing portfolio.
- With great power, comes great responsibility.
- Social media abstinence isn’t the way, planning is key.
- Plan. Create clear goals and objectives with measures to track progress. …
- Consider your audience. …
- Remember that social media is social. …
- Dedicate time to social media. …
- Experiment!
- Use caution when you click links that you receive in messages from your friends. …
- Know what you’ve posted about yourself. …
- Don’t trust that a message is from who it says it’s from. Hackers can break into accounts and send messages that look like they’re from your friends, but aren’t.
- Decide which social media platform(s) to use.
- Optimize your social media profiles.
- Connect your website or blog with your social media pages.
- Add social media buttons on your website.
- Find and follow the influencers in your niche.
- Keep a balance between following and followers.
Thing about social media is that
it can make things quickly go viral
. That is, explode onto the internet for the world to see. If you make one hiccup and say the wrong thing, it can quickly spread across social media like the plague and shatter your reputation.
- Use a Facebook Page to broadcast updates and alerts. …
- Use a Facebook Group to stream live lectures and host discussions. …
- Use Twitter as a class message board.
- Pick One Social Media Site to Start. Gary Bates / Getty Images. …
- Create a Social Media Time Budget. …
- Clarify Your Social Media Goals and Objectives. …
- Outline Your Approach. …
- Complete Your Social Media Profiles … …
- Lurk and Observe. …
- Use a Social Media Dashboard.
Social media promotes
self-directed learning
, which prepares students to search for answers and make decisions independently. When reinforced in a classroom setting, these social media skills can be guided and refined to produce better learning outcomes and critical awareness.
- Build a social presence. Start by deciding who you want to network with. …
- Post engaging content. Think of engaging content to post on your social media sites. …
- Avoid the hard sell. Avoid self-promotion on social media. …
- Focus on quality over quantity. …
- Practice good etiquette.
There’s bad news for those self-proclaimed social media “addicts”: multiple studies from the last year show that
too much time
spent on your favorite platforms can make you depressed and less satisfied with life. It starts early, too; even young teens report negative effects from social media obsession.
How do you ruin your reputation?
- Not trusting your gut instinct. …
- Ignoring your online reputation. …
- Only meeting expectations, instead of exceeding them. …
- Taking shortcuts. …
- Being ashamed of your failures. …
- Being fake. …
- Prioritizing the wrong things. …
- Blaming.
When a brand does not consistently live up to its promises and its attractiveness suffers in consequence, we talk about brand damage. In the long run, brand damage
leads to loss of brand loyalty and brand trust
. In the worst case, the company loses market share and ultimately has to close.
- Otus. …
- Plurk. …
- Skooville. …
- Skype in the Classroom. …
- Teamie. …
- TED-Ed. …
- Twitter. It is by far one of the most successful and one of the best social networking sites for students. …
- WhoTeaches. It is a popular social media for students network that links teachers, caregivers, and educators.
The study found that students who spent the most time using social media had “
fewer academic behaviors
, such as completing homework and attending class, lower academic confidence and more problems affecting their school work, like lack of sleep and substance abuse.”
The use of social media in education provides
students with the ability to get more useful information
, to connect with learning groups and other educational systems that make education convenient. Social network tools afford students and institutions with multiple opportunities to improve learning methods.
- Forgetting to Edit. …
- Putting All Your Social Eggs in One Basket. …
- Marketing Without a Strategy. …
- Referencing Sensitive Material. …
- Ignoring Negative Feedback. …
- Being Too Formal. …
- Separating Social Media and Your Homepage. …
- Not Monitoring Automated Tools.