If you haven’t noticed recently, spam has become a regular occurrence on most successful Facebook Pages. I have various different pages for all types of projects I am working on and so they get hit with spam almost daily on each page. When on coaching calls with my clients they ask me how to remove this spam and if there was a way to block these people from being repeat offenders. Well, there is! Here’s a short video on how to remove the spam from your wall, report them to Facebook, and permanently ban them from your page.
By removing the spam, it allows your visitors to see what your page is really about, to be able to interact with other fans safely and also not be turned off by the garbage that shows up on your wall. Luckily for me, most of the spam I have seen so far is just for work at home & make thousands each week. None of the pornographic material has shown up. Also, the links that are placed in these posts could be directed to a phishing or virus attacking site.
If visitors to your page feel the slightest threat of their computer being attacked/hacked, they will leave. So make sure to visit your page regularly and monitor for spam. If it does have some, follow the steps in the video above and keep it clean.





First, the Longtail Shift

He also shared with me that when you take a computer to an electronics store and they say the hard drive is fried that I should be asking for it back to take with me. You never know where that piece of equipment might end up and you could be in serious trouble if it ends up in the wrong hands. Think about it, how many times have we punched our credit card number into a website to purchase a product, filled out a form with our social security number, saved private personal information onto a computer? I know that nowadays I pay all my bills online. I hate wasting paper, buying stamps and even just the walk to the mailbox. Instead, I enjoy being able to sit down at my computer and within 15 minutes pay all my bills for a month. But each time I make that payment, something is being stored onto my hard drive.

Whatever means of communication you prefer, the same principles hold true. When a consumer contacts you, they expect responses. And they expect them to come quickly. If it is taking more than 24 hours to respond you run a very high risk of losing them. If this is the case, then you need to either hire an assistant to deal with your incoming messages from consumers.