Everything you need to know about the differences between your personal profile on Facebook and your Facebook Page and how to navigate between them.
Share ideas that matter on the social web and experience
the benefits of curating the world's best content.
I don't have a Facebook, a Twitter or a LinkedIn account
|
|
Scooped by Khaled El Ahmad onto SM |
Everything you need to know about the differences between your personal profile on Facebook and your Facebook Page and how to navigate between them.
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
7 Social Design Principles: How to Make Content People Want to Share |
A Day In The Life Of The Internet – infographic |
Twitter Introduces Lead Generation 'Cards' to Collect Leads From Tweets |
Your new post is loading...
Check out this overview of best practices to stand out from the crowd with your Twitter theme and follow the tutorial to create your own profile from scratch.
With Twitter quickly becoming the hottest site to be seen on, everyone wants to stand out from the crowd. There has already been a range of quality designs showcased on various sites, which has shown an emergence of trends such as the ‘sidebar’. Let’s take a look at some of the best practices around Twitter background design and get to work creating our own.
We all recognise the default blue Twitter background right? It’s not a bad design, it’s clean and trendy but it doesn’t stand out when the majority of Twitter users also have the same look. Furthermore, if you’re keen to achieve more followers, removing this background would probably help out by showing that you’re an active user, or if you’re tweeting on behalf of your company or service, it helps prove that you’re not a spammer.
Generally speaking, there are three main approaches when it comes to creating your Twitter background (other than a boring solid colour!):
Read more: http://bit.ly/KoEvz4 Via Martin Gysler Delete the scoop?
Are you sure you want to delete this scoop?
Yes
No
|



Your new post is loading...