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Why You Need CoSchedule

April 27, 2016 By Jen Kehl

March 1st, with a partner, I started a contributor based website for parent’s with special needs called Break the Parenting Mold.

It all started easily enough; we had a great idea, a built-in web designer (moi), a built-in editor (my fabulous partner) and a lot of amazing bloggers with even better content.

What we didn’t realize was that as content came in, it would come in with special needs of its own. Posts would need graphics, writers would send bios without images, and Kristi and I would need an effective way to communicate all of that with each other.

And that didn’t even include scheduling posts, sharing them to social media, and having an effective workflow!

Enter CoSchedule.

We had been functioning with about 15 Google Docs, a few Google Sheets, email folders and a lot of IM’s back and forth.

We needed something new. We needed CoSchedule.

I had been hearing about CoSchedule for years. Many bloggers I know, who schedule multiple times a week used it, but it always seemed too robust for what I was doing.

The features I knew about were:

  • Ability to schedule posts and drag and drop them to new locations as needed.
  • Ability to schedule social media sharing from within the scheduled post.
  • Ability to integrate with WordPress.

Well that barely scratches the surface. After watching the CoSchedule Demo I realized that CoSchedule would rock our workflow!

Here is a screen cast I made of how CoSchedule works for us.

 

These are the things I do with CoSchedule:

  • Enter posts
  • Attach Author
  • Attach Categories
  • Schedule posts or put them in unscheduled state
  • THIS PART IS SUPER IMPORTANT – I Create a list of tasks, that are attached to each post that need to be done before a post goes live, and after
  • Schedule social media shares for each post
  • Re-share old posts on social media
  • Create stand alone tasks that need to be done outside of posts
  • Create stand alone notes that tell my partner Kristi things we need to do
  • Create stand alone social media posts that can post to our page OR a group
  • Drag and drop any type of post into a new spot
  • See EVERYTHING in one place!!!!

I would not be exaggerating if I said that CoSchedule has changed our lives. It has helped us organize and saved us hours of work. It has also enabled us to spend more time doing the things that will help us to make our site more productive and all over more excellent!

You can get a 14day free trial for CoSchedule?by clicking here. And I promise you won’t be disappointed, it was the best decision we made.

 

 

This is CoSchedule overview video by CoSchedule, you will learn more about other ways to use it here.

 

*There are affiliate links in this post, only because I LOVE CoSchedule so much. I would never endorse a product I wasn’t 100% behind.

Filed Under: Plugins, Social Media, Tutorials, WordPress

Those Facebook Follow Threads Could Be Killing Your Engagement

April 20, 2016 By Jen Kehl

Why I won't

Are Facebook follow threads a good idea?

In the blogging world, one of the big races is to get to x amount of followers. Round 1 is 500, round 2 is a 1000, and so on until you hit the ever elusive 100,000 or more!

Then it happens, you get to 1000 and you’re scratching your head. And frankly getting pretty ticked off at Facebook, and asking all of your blogger friends “How is it possible that Facebook only showed my post to 26 followers today?!”

I’ll tell you how it’s possible.

We all know Facebook is run by nasty little algorithms, and as much as we want to despise them, we have to like them too. After all, they are the reason we see posts from people we like in our feed, and not from that skeezy guy you dated for 5 minutes in college but didn’t want to hurt his feelings by ignoring his friend request.

Based on how you react to the news in your feed, Facebook judges what it thinks you want to see and what you don’t. And the more you interact by liking and commenting, the more Facebook understands your behavior.

So you see, you really want Facebook to use algorithms.

Unless of course it means Facebook is only showing your post to 1% of your page followers.

[bctt tweet=”You really want Facebook to use its algorithms. Unless it means only 1% of your followers see your content.” username=”jenkehl”]

Then you have to wonder what you are doing wrong.

Unfortunately something all of us bloggers do, could be the reason your posts aren’t getting out to people who genuinely want to see your content.

It’s called the Facebook follow?thread. It’s basically a like for like. And if you are trying to grow from 1 follower to 1000, chances are you are doing a lot of those.

You may be making a crucial mistake.

Facebook pushes your content out to readers based on the amount of your current followers engaging in your content. We see this number on our Facebook content as reach. Reach can be composed of actual page followers and friends of friends of followers.

Facebook determines engagement levels by showing your content to a small amount of your followers and seeing how they engage.

There is no way to know if Facebook is showing your post to actual followers (people who genuinely liked your page for its content) or people who just liked you in a Facebook follow thread.

Facebook is testing your followers’ authenticity.

If it?tests your content on non-engaged followers (people who don’t interact), it will deem your content un-interesting and therefore won’t show it to friends of friends, etc. This is your post that gets 1% reach.

Or, Facebook could happen to show your post to a decent amount of genuine followers, who engage and share, and that post has a reach of 34,765 when you only have 1000 followers!

This random sampling?is?why one post can see a ton of engagement and another can die, for no apparent reason. It’s all about the authenticity of your audience.

[bctt tweet=”Facebook’s random sampling of your followers could mean the difference between a post thriving or dying.” username=”jenkehl”]

You may love your blogging friends, and want to see them succeed, but if you are following them to help their numbers out, and not following to actively participate in their content, you may be hurting them more than you are helping.

The best possible thing you can do to increase your reach is to create engaging content that is true to your brand and share the heck out of it. If people like your content and choose to follow you, they become a genuine follower who can only increase your reach.

If you’re a blogger how can you help your fellow bloggers?

I won’t be doing anymore Facebook follow threads outside of my niche.

But I can tell you how you can help your blogging friends gain that reach.

Try a social share thread instead.?

A Facebook social share thread should include a link to a Facebook post you would like to see more engagement on. Your fellow bloggers should click thru to the post, then like it (or some other reaction), possibly leave a comment, and obviously the holy grail would be a share.

[bctt tweet=”Help out your fellow bloggers with a genuine Facebook share. A simple Facebook page like can hurt more than it can help.” username=”jenkehl”]

The only genuine way to grow exponentially is to build a following of genuine followers. Interesting, engaging content is the best way to make that happen!

Need some help with your social media strategy or reducing your bounce rate? How about some help?determining what you need and what you don’t, I am always available for a free consultation!

Why I won't be doing anyFacebook Follow ThreadsAnymore

Filed Under: Social Media, Tips and Hacks Tagged With: Algorithms, Content, Facebook

Facebook’s New Algorithms Aren’t Really Algorithms at All

February 15, 2016 By Jen Kehl

 

Facebook?s Big Announcement Last Week New?Algorithms?

We all know that Facebook’s top-secret algorithms effect who get’s to see our content on Facebook, and for bloggers and content marketer’s it is no small frustration.

Most of the time, we are convinced that Facebook won’t work for us, because we can’t unlock the great mystery.

And then Facebook up and changes their algorithm, just when you thought you might have a handle on it, ?and you are left wondering how that effects you.

Lucky for us, Facebook actually announced it’s change, publicly, and was kind enough to break it down for us.

 

What hasn’t changed?

What hasn’t changed is Facebook using its algorithms to make assumptions about what you?want to see in your news-feed based on engagement. (Likes, clicks, shares, and comments.)

What they are doing is giving the engaging behavior even more weight. And based on the behavior, it is deciding what to show you on the top of your news feed.

If a post, that is like other posts you have liked, seems to be like other posts you have liked, you are more likely to see it at the top of your feed. (wow, that’s a lot of likes!)

And if a post is getting a lot of engagement, Facebook is going to assume even more people want to see it, and push it out to more Facebook users. This is how your engagement numbers can be so much higher than your followers.

If you live up to Facebook’s expectations, you may?see your engagement go up. If you don’t get the clicks and like’s that Facebook assumes you will get, you may see your engagement go down.

 

What has changed? It’s not really an algorithm!

Facebook is using real users to determine what people really like. They are no longer assuming that just because you “liked” a post, you actually liked it.

They have enlisted over a thousand Facebook users to rate their experience on Facebook, and share what content they actually like and what they don’t like.

How many times have you clicked like because you wanted to be nice, but that you didn’t actually like like it?

On the flip side, how many times have you read something, enjoyed the content, but didn’t engage?

So Facebook is having actual users give their feedback about what they want to see and what they don’t. Instead of only little algorithm bots deciding the fate of your Facebook posts, real people are going to have a go!

 

Here’s why you shouldn’t care.

Facebook’s intention is not to crack down on bloggers trying to share genuine content, ?they want to cut-down on clickbait.

Facebook has?been actively cutting down on the use of click-bait. You know:
10 Things Entrepeneurs Must Know
Big Businesses Hate Him
What We Found Was Shocking!

However, people just got better at writing click-bait because it worked!

Facebook upped their game.

Now, Facebook is going to use the input of real people to help determine if people are being baited to click, or if there is genuinely valuable content coming from that page.
What does this mean for you?

If you create quality content, you are already winning.

Assuming you are already writing quality content, even without huge engagement, if you are posting content your followers actually like, you should see an increase in engagement.

More than ever, the new Facebook algorithms will benefit bloggers,?it’s time to do the happy dance!

via GIPHY

 

We are winning. And those who seek to manipulate you are losing.

What could be better? Now you can spend more time creating and sharing good content, and less time worrying about what Facebook is going to do about it.

Facebook said that most pages won’t see a drastic change, but?if your content is valuable, you may see an uptick. And let me tell you, one week later, I can tell you that I have seen a drastic change.

I have under 1000 followers, and this is my reach for this week. I didn’t even post on a trending topic.

Screen Shot 2016-02-14 at 4.38.08 PM

 

 

Give them what they want!

I think I know what kind of content my readers want to see, and although I felt I was sharing that, I wasn’t seeing the numbers line up.

Since the change I have seen a drastic change, and have shared as much in Facebook groups. Many other Facebook page owners have mentioned seeing the same kind of statistics.

This is good stuff people!

[bctt tweet=”Facebook’s new changes?are a winner for bloggers! #SocialMedia “]

Filed Under: Social Media Tagged With: Facebook, Social Media

 

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