have an easy setup, and a simple process that allows users to “pin” images of the same size. All of these images can include a link back, available upon a double click. Statistics show that Pinterest is one of the fastest-growing social networking sites, and all the more so when it comes to generating external traffic. Make sure that all of the photos and images you post match your business, which is a key point in integrating all of your different pages. Like any site, be sure to update the content regularly and launch daily pin themes. Don’t limit yourself to products…use Facebook style multitasking and post images of tidbits, tips, and even products of other users. Last but not least, use the key phrases on the board to reach out for those targeted viewers.
Forum Feats Forums don’t have the clout that they used to have. After all, before there was such a thing as MySpace (the first big social media site that slowly died over time) there was the Internet forum, or in archaic terms, the “chat room” or the bulletin board system. These applications were the predecessors of social networking and helped bring people of highly varied niche interests together long before there was a universal network that connected everybody together. Well, guess what? They haven’t gone out of style. Sites like Facebook and Twitter are actually so big that many people avoid them, figuring that aside from friends and family, it is too difficult to find people that actually share their most important interests. However, web forums still have the capacity to bring niche audiences together, especially if you create forums that cater to keyword interests, and visit other forums to post as a guest (or even a part time moderator). When you join a forum, you discuss all of the niches that really matter to people—the type of topics that bring you devoted followers, not just casual surfers. Forums also give you:
• Special tools like polls;