Public Relations & Social Media Insight
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PR insight, social media & thought leadership - from The PR Coach www.theprcoach.com
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The worst way you could ever respond to a social media troll | Leaders West

The worst way you could ever respond to a social media troll | Leaders West | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it
The Pigalle Restaurant in Boston recently received a negative review on their Facebook page. In patron Sandy Tremblay’s review, she recounted her meal complaining that her pumpkin pie “tasted like vomit” and that she would rather have given that money to the homeless. The restaurant’s chef, Marc Orfaly, responded to her harsh criticism in the worst way imaginable. He posted “go f*** yourself” on her Facebook page.  Orflay futher elaborated by posting that she enjoyed vomiting, addressed her by the perjorative “b****”, and urged her to come back for her money snarking: “sorry if you can afford it, I do not want your money.” When Boston’s leading newspapers reported this, conflicting opinions and controversy ensued. Social chatter escalated about the crtique and response, with people vehemently supporting “Team Pigalle” or “Team Tremblay.”...
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Rescooped by Jeff Domansky from Content Curation World
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How To Setup Your Curation Channel on Scoop.it: A Mini-Guide by Shirley Williams

How To Setup Your Curation Channel on Scoop.it: A Mini-Guide by Shirley Williams | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it

Robin Good: If you are just about to start testing how effective a content curation tool like Scoop.it can be for building your own reputation and visibility in a specific interest area, this 10-step guide by Shirley Williams does provide some important information on how to start with the proper foot.

 

The guide is illustrated with many screenshots and it pinpoints the key items you need to be paying attention to when starting to curate a dedicated channel.

 

Informative. Useful for novices. 7/10

 

Full mini-guide: http://socialmediapearls.com/10-steps-to-curate-your-social-media-content-with-scoop-it-for-increased-value


Via Shirley Williams (XeeMe.com/ShirleyWilliams), Robin Good
Ken Morrison's comment, May 21, 2012 3:32 AM
Hi students (and visitors). If you are having trouble with your profile photo changing every time that you post a new scoop, you can fix it by following these directions that a representative from Scoop.it sent me:
Indeed there's a setting to avoid that. Tell your students that on their Curate page, click on Manage>Customizations>untick "Last Post Image" box and click on Save.
Ken Morrison's comment, September 29, 2012 9:34 PM
Thank you for the rescoop. It looks like you have a great site. If I spoke Spanish, I would follow it.
Robin Good's comment, September 30, 2012 2:41 AM
Hi Ken, no need to speak Spanish to follow me or read my stuff.
Just check:
http://www.masternewmedia.org

;-)