101 Facebook Tips - Best Free Facebook Video Course

101 Facebook Tips - Best Free Facebook Video Course

101 Facebook Tips - Best Free Facebook Video Course


Introduction

Facebook is a great platform for meeting friends, creating a following for your hobby, service, or project, and relaxing. There’s an app for every taste, and several of them are incredibly fun and addictive. These 101 tips will get you navigating Facebook like a pro in no time. Part 1 – finding friends and influencing people Depending on why you join Facebook, you may find it easy to make friends, or may only have it to stay in touch with friends in distant parts of the world. No matter what you do, signing up can be a process that will take up to a couple of hours (including your profile).


1. Signing up

Your own name You should use your own name or your nickname if people use it more commonly, to sign up. It’s important to ensure that your friends, family,  and colleagues can find you easily.

2. Your email

Facebook sends out a lot of notifications once you start signing up with various groups and fan pages, apps, and even comments. But people can also find you by your email, so you should probably use a personal email account. Check it frequently for friend requests and more. It has to be real though because Facebook uses it and sometimes your mobile number to verify who you are.

3. Read the terms and conditions

You should always read the terms and conditions on any site, and Facebook is no exception, though, it should be noted that Facebook frequently updates its TOS causing a lot of outrage in the community. Know where your rights are and read their documentation.

4. Search your email

In some cases when you sign up for Facebook, especially if you use a ‘free’ email system such as Hotmail or Gmail, Facebook can search your email addresses and see if anyone in your address book is already on Facebook.

5. Profile information – school, university, company

The first piece of profile information Facebook asks for is your School (leaving year), University (leaving year), and Company – this starts the first basic group's links so you can find Alumni and colleagues from work – if you don’t want to find anyone there, leave it empty and click skip.

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