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Facebook: Difference between revisions

166 bytes added ,  6 April 2012
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*A picture (or short video) is worth a thousand words.  
*A picture (or short video) is worth a thousand words.  
*Ask an open-ended question (who, what, where, when, why, how) directed to the reader. Example: What comes to mind when you see this picture of our grandfather?  
*Ask an open-ended question (who, what, where, when, why, how) directed to the reader. Example: What comes to mind when you see this picture of our grandfather?  
*Share a link to a meaningful resource. You want to keep the message here short, but you can link to a blog post you wrote about your grandfather or some other item that will likely generate interest. When you paste a URL into a status update Facebook will generate a nice looking link. Then you can delete the URL link to make the post appear more neat. You can even click on the title of the generated link before you post it and change the link title to whatever you feel is best.
*Share a link to a meaningful resource. You want to keep the message here short, but you can link to a blog post you wrote about your grandfather or some other item that will likely generate interest. When you paste a URL into a status update Facebook will generate a nice looking link. Then you can delete the URL link to make the post appear more neat. You can even click on the title of the generated link before you post it and change the link title to whatever you feel is best.  
*Keep the conversation going. (Post comments, like select comments from relatives or others who respond, share the post to a page of group that you are an admin in)


=== Using a Facebook group  ===
=== Using a Facebook group  ===
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