So if you happen to find yourself doing any of the 11 following things, you should look to stop doing so immediately before all of your friends look to jump ship!
Look,
I understand you’re a little short on content and things to say. We all
basically post the same stuff on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, etc. but
at least have the decency to not automatically send your Twitter tweets
to Facebook. For one, you’ll get much less engagement posting to
Facebook via any third-party app let alone Twitter which basically
disregards Facebook etiquette. If you do this, it’s a clear sign you’re
not really engaged on Facebook or maybe just too lazy to post yourself,
either way a fail.

image: http://cdn.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/message.png




If
you are one of the millions of people committing these crimes on a
daily basis, please refrain from doing so at once! You know who you are.
I promise you whatever you’re trying to sell or market will have a much
better chance if you come up with some honest hard-working tactics like
creating or curating interesting and relevant content as opposed to
relative social media douchebaggery.


It’s
that simple folks, avoid these 11 things and one day you can go from a
spam-bot back to being my friend! Does anything else annoy you about
Facebook?
1. Tagging Random People in Photos
Please stop tagging people you barely know in photos that have nothing to do with them. It’s one thing when your buddy tags you in an unphotogenic pic, then sends it out to friends for some laughs, because, hey, at least it’s you. But the people I’m talking about upload photos and tag as many people as they can to try and gin up as many likes as possible. This is a classic move by spammers so be cautious of anyone who does this. I’ve had to call out several individuals over the years, even friends for their random tagging, and you should do the same in any suspect post. Sending a personal message to them to stop could work, too, but I feel like if some goofball wants to tag me in every one of his posts, he must be looking for my input so I give it to him publicly right then and there. Yes, revenge is a dish best served cold…2. Cross-Posting From Twitter
3. Liking Your Own Posts
So you’ve just posted the cutest cat or baby picture ever. That’s cool, I guess. But then you go ahead and like your photo too. Well, I know you already like the post, aren’t you the one who just shared the damn thing? Besides being annoyingly repetitive, the real reason people feel the need to do this is that the action of liking the post will again show up in the streaming news ticker, giving the post even more exposure (it’s potentially seen twice). These are typically the moves of self-proclaimed “social media gurus” or people who just feel insecure about their status posts.4. New Page Invites
Look, I understand you need to create a page for your business, but please stop inviting me to your half-ass Facebook pages. Instead post interesting content to your own page, share it on your profile as well (so your friends see it), and if people find it interesting they will follow. It’s almost not your fault, as creating a page and inviting all your friends can be tempting, but most of your friends won’t like your page and maybe they won’t like you anymore either. And the ones who do like it would’ve probably found it anyways without your begging them to do so. So don’t do this…image: http://cdn.business2community.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/message.png
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