WHO DOESN’T LOVE GETTING SOMETHING FOR FREE?
Giveaways
In the past two weeks Suzie Cheel and I have had the pleasure of giving away a total of US $900 (AU $1,164) worth of Bitcoin. Three winners in all. 💰
All they did to earn that was turn up for one of our webinars, where we shared some information about forex trading and the company we are aligned with to support us on our way to complete financial freedom.
Each of the winners has now started with a $300 automated forex trading package – and when I say “trading” they don’t have to do any trading personally: that’s all done by our team of professional traders, with the help of proprietary software.
And the Beat Goes On
Our next giveaway event is this coming Monday, June 7th, at 7pm AEST (9 pm NZ, 10 am BST, 5 am EST).
Here is the link:
Zoom http://bit.ly/BTC300
Will we see you there?
Please Note: At this time the company is not taking registrations from the USA or Canada, so people in those countries are not currently eligible for the Bitcoin giveaway, but you are welcome to come on the call. "
**Note also that trading on the global forex market is risky: no past results can guarantee future profits in any type of real trading activity.**
Linked Algorithm: How Many Posts are Too Many?
One of the main challenges for LinkedIn experts in providing advice on how best to use the LinkedIn platform effectively is that the LinkedIn algorithm seems to change frequently, and usually without any notification to the users.
For example, for a while I was sharing with people that a detailed study about two years ago had indicated that posting more than 20 times in a month – say one a day, five days a week – could have an adverse effect, which was explained by the source I used as possibly or probably being based on a judgement that more than twenty posts a month could suggest
spamming.
I can assert confidently that for many LinkedIn users twenty posts would be more than they would produce in six or twelve months, let alone one!
But “serious” users might easily post more than that.
Just last month, I raised this issue with a group of LinkedIn experts and was informed that the author of that earlier study had indicated recently that a good rule of thumb on this matter was to leave a gap of about four hours between posts.
So, based on that advice, you could comfortably double or even triple that earlier number of 20 and not be “marked down” by the algorithm. That said, I would find it a big ask to try and produce an average of three quality posts a day, or even two a day, five days a week.
My best advice would be to go first for one quality post a day, and if you find you have an abundance of quality content – preferably with good graphic images, by all means amp it up with a second, for a couple of those days.
___________________________
If you would like to know more in the meantime about any of the topics in these weekly messages just reply to this message and I’ll be in touch.