Important Notice To ALL BLOGSHOP OWNERS
23 Feb 2010 • Announcements, Voices From B.A.B. GirlTO ALL BLOGSHOP OWNERS:
I have received unhappy complaints from BAB Facebook fans about them being added as friends by many other blogshops. Please note that you should ONLY add anyone to ur profile only if you know them personally and do not mass add from BAB Facebook page.
- BAB Facebook fans are acquired through BAB own marketing efforts – I have spent time, effort and money through many advertising or marketing channels.
- Most fans have added BAB as their friend or a fan on BAB Facebook page on their own accord – this is the end result of proper advertising/marketing.
- Most BAB Facebook page fans are already BAB member.
Please do have some social networking/business ethics and have the consumer/business owner in mind. Thanks.
Below is an article on social networking etiquette that you may like to read through. Be it you are a business owner or just simply a social network user.
Excerpt extracted from techipedia.com
The Ultimate Social Media Etiquette Handbook
by Tamar Weinberg on December 10, 2008
- Adding users as friends without proper introductions. If you’re looking to make friends, tell people who you are. Don’t assume they know you — especially if they, well, don’t.
- Abuse application invites and consistently invite friends to participate in vampire games. Many call this spam.
- Abusing group invites. If your friends are interested, they’ll likely join without your “encouragement.” And if they don’t accept, don’t send the group request more than once by asking them to join via email, wall post, or Facebook message.
- Turning your Facebook profile photo into a pitch so that you can gather leads through your Facebook connections. Thanks, but no thanks. Facebook is about real friendships and not about business — at least not to me.
- Using a fake name as your Facebook name. I can’t tell you how many people have added me and their last name is “Com” or “Seo.”? I’m not adding you unless you can be honest about who you are. Once upon a time, Facebook deleted all of the accounts that portrayed people as business entities or things. I wish Facebook would employ the same tactics yet again, because I’m not adding a fake identity as a friend.
- Publicizing a private conversation on a wall post. In case it isn’t obvious, Facebook wall posts are completely public to all your friends (unless you tweak your privacy settings). Private matters should be handled privately: via email or even in Facebook private messages.
- Tagging individuals in unflattering pictures that may end up costing your friends their jobs. Avoid the unnecessary commentary also, especially on your childhood pictures that portray your tagged friends as chubby and not so popular. Further, if your friends request to be untagged, don’t make a stink of it…..




