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How to create a custom Facebook Landing Page in 5 minutes or less - Social Media. There are a variety of reasons why Red Bull has over 20 million Facebook fans, but one that surfaces to the top is their unapologetic “Like our Page, hint, hint” custom landing greeting. And while Red Bull has a budget larger than most of us, that doesn’t mean we’re cut out of the custom landing page party. Thanks to a fantastic WordPress plugin and a bit of copy/paste inside Facebook, you can have a custom landing page up and running within 5 minutes. Here’s how: Visit and click on “Set Up New App” in the top right corner.Give your app a name and agree to Facebook’s Terms of Service.On the next screen, give your app an official name (this is the one the public will see). The About and Website tabs are optional, however it’s recommended to create and upload a custom icon and logo.Click on Facebook Integration Now here’s where most of us get hung up. From the Facebook Tabs icon in your WordPress sidebar, select Add New.

So far, so good. Référencement : comment rendre les commentaires Facebook indexables. Par Olivier Duffez, Mercredi 15 juin 2011 Peut-être avez-vous déjà installé le module de commentaires Facebook sur votre site, ou bien envisagez-vous de le faire. Le fait que ce soit géré dans une iframe ruine les espoirs de profiter de ces commentaires pour le référencement. Mais il y a des solutions, il suffit de lire cet article ! Les avantages des commentaires Facebook Avant de décrire la solution compatible SEO des commentaires Facebook, voyons pourquoi vous devriez envisager à les utiliser : Facebook vous aide à lutter contre le spam, puisque les internautes qui laissent des commentaires le font avec leur compte Facebook.Cela signifie également que vous pouvez à peu près considérer que ceux qui commentent sont des personnes physiques réelles.

Bien sûr, le point noir est d'exiger de vos internautes qu'ils utilisent un compte Facebook (ou Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail avec lesquels on peut se connecter), mais j'aborde ce point plus loin... Un script PHP pour récupérer les commentaires Facebook. Facebook Listens. RSS Added Back to Pages. Will Twitter be next? In perhaps one of my most controversial articles (unintentionally), I wrote a week or two ago about how both Twitter and Facebook both quietly removed RSS from user accounts and Pages. Of course, with Facebook, on user accounts that made sense since they were intended to be private, but with Pages, 100% public versions of the site, it didn't make sense that they would remove the links and access to be able to subscribe to updates via RSS. It appears that Facebook listened though, as there is now a "Subscribe via RSS" link on Facebook Pages, and the source now links to an atom feed for clients that want to auto-discover the feeds.

You can see it by looking down at the bottom left on any Page now. David Recordon, Senior Open Programs Manager at Facebook, mentioned in the comments of my previous article, "I actually think you're misinterpreting the reasoning here. There is a glimmer of hope with this move by Facebook.

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Facebook Apps. Facebook To Release A “Like” Button For the Whole Darn Internet. There will be lots of news leaking about Facebook’s product announcements at their upcoming F8 Developer Conference in April. That’s because they’re already starting to test out a lot of the new stuff with third party developers, and once two people know a secret, it isn’t really a secret any more. 10 Critical Things That Facebook’s Insights Can’t Tell You. There’s a lot of great basic data you can view on your Facebook page. Here are critical items that you actually can get from Facebook via some clever programming, but which are not available in the web-based insights tool. If you’re Red Bull, how do you fare against Monster Energy? What about going beyond just who has the most fans and start asking who has more active fans or fans in the right demographic? Let’s say you are Domino’s Pizza. You might have three million fans on your main brand page, but what about the 6,000 other place pages for each location that you have, each managed by different franchisees, all acting independently of each other.

Lane Bryant might have 300,000 fans. When are you (as admin) on Facebook, versus when your fans are on Facebook? Sure, you spent $50,000 on a slick app, but how many impressions, installs, shares, or activity did you get? What’s the earned media value of your Facebook presence?