A New Level of Life
Sam B. Goldberg
Meeting and greeting friends and neighbors used to happen on the street corner of your town. Now, more and more frequently, it happens with an instant message, e-mail or in an online social network. We've traded the actual physical or spoken interaction with a whole new form of interaction that's more convenient and more efficient.
Online communication began with DOS-based forums and chat rooms back in the computer dark (i.e. non-graphic) ages. Today, it's whole new virtual world with internet community sites that are infinitely more complicated and interesting than the real world. Social network sites are attracting more users, more investment and more marketing than ever before - the prime evidence being Microsoft's huge 240 million dollar purchase of a less-than-two percent share of Facebook.
Founded over three years ago by Mark Zuckerberg, a Harvard drop-out, Facebook's fifty million-plus member site still lags behind MySpace in numbers. But with two hundred thousand new users joining every day, Facebook definitely has the momentum. The reason? A dramatic change of policy by Facebook management that has breathed new creative life into the whole concept of online social interaction.
Why the sudden popularity? Because in the spring of 2007, outside companies were invited for the first time to create Facebook tools and applications in return for a slice of the ad money generated by the site. In less than six months, the scheme paid off big - with over 5000 new apps added. All at once, Facebook users found themselves able to become monsters, quiz each other in different compatibility tests, stick pins in a virtual map to show where in the world they've been, draw graffiti on each other's walls and a host of other wacky, extremely fun and entirely free games and gimmicks that guaranteed something for everyone - and something that could be shared.
Facebook was now elevated to the ranks of Web 3.0 (bypassing Web 2.0) with a running jump towards the much-talked about web semantic ideal. It was different in a way that excited users and caused them to invite friends, family and acquaintances to join in the new online experience that everyone was talking about.
This marketing base is why Facebook is so attractive to a corporation like Microsoft - and why internet marketers at all levels are looking for ways to get their messages into this amazing new social system that's experiencing the kind of explosive growth that comes along rarely.
But how does the little guy compete with a giant like Microsoft? One highly effective way is through Facebook marketing software packages and Facebook Bots like the Stealth Friend Bomber, Facebook Edition. While you go about the business of running your business, the Stealth Friend Bomber can mass message, mass poke and mass request Facebook "friends" for you. It's a Facebook Friend Adder system that links internet marketers to Facebook's 50 million and growing mob painlessly and efficiently.
Facebook marketing software like Stealth Friend Bomber, Facebook Edition means that the smaller marketer can outwit the big boys like Google and Microsoft who spend millions upon millions in their efforts to reach the same audience. It's just that simple.
Sky-rocket your business profits with the insider http://freefacebookadder.com/ Facebook Friend Adder the internet marketing gurus don't want you to know about! This incredible http://freefacebookadder.com/ Facebook Bot will bring loads of traffic to your site. Free Demo Available for a short time. This article is available as a http://www.uberarticles.com/?id=35141&b=79 unique content article with free reprint rights.
|