Sure there is, you've just got to keep in perspective.Cassis wrote:Of course not - but let the buggers burn in hell.ChrisP wrote: We too have experienced a few unlikes since creating our FB page and have found that burning an effigy of the treacherous in a ritualistic ceremony helps to alieviate some of the betrayal.
Not that we take it personally or anything.
I was wondering, though ... is there any point in this mutual "liking" of each others' Pages? I just wonder if there's any value in it when you can be almost certain there's no further interaction or interest after the initial "Like".
Until such time as our page starts producing regular bookings (I'm not holding my breath), I'll only ever see facebook as a bit of fun anyway rather than a viable part of any marketing strategy, so why not rack up 'likes' just for the hell of it?
As regards interaction, most if not all facebook pages have more 'likes' than interactive participants, that's just the nature of the beast.
When Mark Zuckerberg boasts of a billion people using facebook in a single day, you can be absolutely certain that the majority didn't log on and interact, they logged on and did the opposite, they looked and nothing more.
I spend a fair amount of time on our two facebook pages and am quite happy with the level of interaction that we get which makes for a nice diversion from the regular stuff. Much more and it would become a chore.
Strangley enough, when I went through and liked the 145 or so pages a few days ago, I was really quite surprised that so many hadn't been updated in months, some since 2013. Makes me wonder why they even bother keeping them up, but that may be a question for a new thread.
I agree though, there is no real value in mutual 'likes', but I seem to think that Zuckerburg said that he/she who dies with the most 'likes' wins?