Someone look at my cat
Posted: Thu Feb 20, 2025 4:15 am
Absolutely not. Is it constantly mentioning other users and bombarding them with promotions for your company? Not really. What if I post something and then leave the thread abandoned because I don't care about continuing the conversation? We wouldn't recommend that either. If you do any of these or other practices, you run the serious risk of becoming a social media loser . One more who gets lost in the network and who only users remember to report for spam. How to properly manage our company's social networks? Sumall proposes this infographic on 12 things you should do simply to not be a loser.
infographic-losing-followers Here we translate each denmark mobile database point to which it refers one by one: Don't overload your audience -> Look at my cat. Look at how he sleeps. Look at how he eats. . Reply within 30 minutes -> Unlike email, social media users are looking for quick responses. A 60-minute delay is fine. As little as 30 minutes is better. Use hashtags correctly something #wrong #and #need #help #urgently. Entertain 80% of the time. Sell in the remaining 20% -> If you publish interesting content on a regular basis, users will take the time to listen to what you have to say when you need it.
infographic-losing-followers Here we translate each denmark mobile database point to which it refers one by one: Don't overload your audience -> Look at my cat. Look at how he sleeps. Look at how he eats. . Reply within 30 minutes -> Unlike email, social media users are looking for quick responses. A 60-minute delay is fine. As little as 30 minutes is better. Use hashtags correctly something #wrong #and #need #help #urgently. Entertain 80% of the time. Sell in the remaining 20% -> If you publish interesting content on a regular basis, users will take the time to listen to what you have to say when you need it.