When you meet people you’ve interacted with on social media, they are not like they are on social media.
The youth should work on popularising central and state government schemes among people. The young generation should make social media their weapon.
Social media is a superimposing place where people are usually bragging.
Social media opened up basically every opportunity for me because, traditionally, I wouldn’t be thought of as a model.
I know that I have this platform with our fans and with social media and all of that good stuff. I really hope that people become more aware of premature birth, and I hope there’s more that can be done to prevent this.
I feel like it’s social media that’s opened that door. We’re able to accumulate and generate our own fan base. Once we do that and put our own work in, labels take notice that we have our own following.
As far as putting stuff on social media, I think Instagram is really cool because I like the visual aspect. You’re taking pictures, and you can put a filter on them, and it’s super creative.
I don’t look at Instagram. I don’t have much to do with social media.
My two daughters live on Facebook, and social media is their mode of communication.
Social media has come a long way. With the good has come some bad, and you always have a lot of people hiding behind their computers and being very critical of what you do on and off the field, of what you tweet, of what you say, of everything you do.
Leaving the record companies tweaked something inside me and I realised I don’t have to deal with labels to make something happen. If I want to meet someone, I don’t have to go through the label – I’ll just go to them. I took my life in my hands and social media has just helped me do that more.
I like sharing my family with my fans, but my son hates it. Like, I am literally blocked on all his social media.
When I was young, I was crazy in the head on social media.
I had to turn social media off. It was just crazy. Just to see the messages rolling through and people shouting, ‘Till beat Tyron,’ booking flights and booking hotels, that’s becoming the norm right now.
People are mean on social media, whoever you are. It’s a shame people have to be that way.
Almost every week, there are stories in the press or on Chinese social media about what even the official Chinese media call ‘hot online topics:’ stories about how people in a particular village or town used Weibo to expose malfeasance by local or regional authorities.
We’re surrounded by distractions. Whether it’s emails, phone calls, text messages, social media notifications, or people entering and leaving your workspace, those distractions end up eating a good portion of your time.
My kids are really good with social media; that’s really an important dynamic in our relationship with our audience, and it’s a great way to connect.
I’m hardly a smartphone addict. I rarely look at social media.
The social media bit is really about documenting process. I like the dialogue if it’s constructive, but I’m now at a crossroads. I’ve accumulated a lot of followers, and it’s great, but I’m also at that teetering point where people are feeling themselves a little too much, commenting a little too much.
You learn the hard way. That’s the thing with social media. Nobody knows what they’re doing.
I get on social media sometimes. I think it’s good to find a balance and to be able to put your phone down.
You cannot underestimate people’s ability to spot a soulless, bureaucratic tactic a million miles away. It’s a big reason why so many companies that have dipped a toe in social media waters have failed miserably.
The image of myself that I give on social media isn’t actually who I am; it’s not 100 percent me, obviously.
The Ricky that the public see, whether it be on screen as a character, in public, or on social media, is very outgoing, and I’m a bit of a class clown. Then those who are closest to me know that I can be very sensitive. I can be quite insecure about myself.
I always try and put out posts on social media about feeling good inside, and there’s so much pressure for people to look a certain way and have a certain hairstyle or a certain lipstick.
Here’s what I love about social media: You get to peer into people’s lives that you normally wouldn’t be able to.
We obviously know that terrorist groups have become very reliant on social media.
All of us in social media and regular media, we’re all competing for the same thing, which is this gap between something happening in the world and you knowing about it.
We use social media as an adjunct to my total media/market outreach.
Customer service teams at many companies have already embraced social media, often out of necessity.
Technology and social media have brought power back to the people.
I believe that if I wasn’t born in this technological and ‘social media’ era, I would have found another way to express myself.
To those who wish to shape the nation’s political dialogue, social media is dangerous.
It’s amazing how directly you can connect with people via social media.
Social media is an ever-changing world. You want to be ready if a certain platform becomes red-hot, and you don’t want someone else taking your company name as his or her handle. That does happen!
Social media is reducing social barriers. It connects people on the strength of human values, not identities.
I feel social media can be very distracting, unhealthy, and harmful to one’s self-confidence. I don’t even log on to it on my phone except when I post something on Instagram.
Personally, I’d love to see more social media firms develop business models that aren’t reliant on advertising. If you’re a social media firm selling ads, your goal is to get people to interrupt what they’re doing all day long so they come and stare at your service as much as possible.
If I did have social media, I would spend way to much time on it. It is way too addictive for me.
Social media is not about the exploitation of technology but service to community.
Social media is its own sort of thing: Twitter and Facebook have changed the way everyone perceives everything.
I just don’t do much social media. No, it is more important to strike a balance between ballet and real life.
I had seen a lot of bullying on social media. If this is happening to me, who only a few people are paying attention to, what happens to somebody who is on a bigger scale?
Regarding social media, I really don’t understand what appears to be the general population’s lack of concern over privacy issues in publicizing their entire lives on the Internet for others to see to such an extent… but hey it’s them, not me, so whatever.
No matter how much you make the world a part of your life through social media, it’s never enough. They all want more, and I truly understand why. It’s their never-ending love for me that wants to know every detail of my life possible.
I’m very grateful for social media. I think it has shown people my true nature, and through that has come a book deal, and I think it certainly contributes to people’s view of me as a person with a sense of humor, which is only helpful in my industry.
One of the greatest challenges companies face in adjusting to the impact of social media, is knowing where to start.
I come from a theater background, and if you’re doing a play, your audience is right there, and you’re able to have that one-on-one experience. Doing more TV now, when fans come up to me on the street and talk to me on social media, that’s a way to bridge that gap.
The world when I was 13 wasn’t truly driven by tabloid magazines and social media and reality shows. I was able to have a little more of a private life.
Preconceived judgments. I think we’re all guilty of it. I judge other people even though I get judged myself. It’s such a disease and gets spread so much through social media.
I am not hungry for roles on TV or in films. I am happy being a social media sensation.
A lot of people who are ‘social media’ stars aren’t considered to be ‘real’ stars, and people underestimate the amount of work it takes to edit and upload a video every single day and document your life like that.
The USA marketing team are geniuses at what they do. They do the right kind of thing for every medium. They’re very active on social media; they’re releasing videos every day up to the premiere.
Finding the perfect lookalike to work with is crucial and a lengthy process. We have our regulars, but we also use social media all the time to find people. It’s amazing who you can unearth on Twitter.
‘The Facebook Era’ articulated a radical vision for how social media would transform media, relationships, and influence, creating new opportunities for businesses in the process.
I’ve been on social media for quite a long time, maybe because I’ve been sending out nutrition information.
I think social media is so important; the young bands have certainly embraced that and used that to their advantage.
There is a fundamental shift that social media necessitates in business today – the need to transition from ‘Me First’ to ‘We First’ thinking.
Social media forced us to look at the bigger picture. More people are standing up saying, ‘Hey, wait, this is beautiful, too,’ and the fashion industry is listening.