What is the difference between a follower and a member on blogger




















Please forgive me for not answering all the comments in a more timely manner. Balance is definitely a day-by-day process. Here are mines. I follow as a courtesy. I subscribe when I want to read the blog. Also, just because a blog notification shows up in my email doesn't mean I read it.

The biggest determining factor for me is the subject line Blessings All - E. Great Edie! And can you explain what subscribing by RSS feed does?

I generally follow. I have some sites in an RSS feed, but I don't like emails that tell me someone has posted, and it's one of the big things I don't like about Wordpress blogs. If I can follow and see the person's blog in my blog list, I'll visit once a week or so. If not, I often won't go back. But then, I've never done things the way the crowd does.

In that case, I'm very honored to have you as one of my subscribers. I tend to follow as a show of support I'm horrible with my g Google Reader. I subscribe my email so I can read the posts. I don't read all of them, but do my best to be social. Thank you so much for sharing this, I always wondered about that Can anyone please tell me if you know, how to know who your subscribers are, or at least how many? I made a blog for my brother who recently passed away, and have been so hurt that no one seemed to have subscribed yet.

I thought this was the case by looking under "followers". SO I see I was wrong, but how do I know if and who has subscribed by email? Please, any info to share would be greatly appreciated. The website will redirect you to your Blogger dashboard. Click the gray "Add" button, located on the left navigational bar under the "Reading List" header. Enter the URL of the Blogger page you wish to follow. An example of a URL would be "example. Replace "example" with the username of the blog.

Fans are the relationship between a personal user and a business. When a personal user likes a business page — or any other sort of page — they are essentially subscribing to a content feed. This includes both organic posts and paid posts.

Since the fan relationship is the core of business interactions on Facebook, there are a ton of posts written about it around the web, so feel free to check out those instead. For users with strict privacy settings, they will have to implement follows on their profile to enable it.

In order to do this, you need to click the drop-down arrow in the top right of Facebook and click settings. In the settings menu, click the Public Posts section in the left column. From there, you can choose one of the two settings. You can also change other settings about your public posts. You can change who can comment on your posts, to limit it to just friends, friends of friends, or the general public. You can change who can get notifications and whose notifications you receive.

You can change who is allowed to like or comment on your profile. So what does a follow do? It allows people who follow you to see your posts without you having to approve a two-sided relationship. If B wants to see what A posts, they can follow A as well, or they can initiate a friend relationship. Follows are also instant. This is in contrast to a friend request, which must be submitted by one party and approved by the other before it takes place. Follows are subject to EdgeRank the same as any Facebook relationship.

The specifics will vary up and down depending on how much the follower comments, likes, and otherwise engages with the followee. When you take everything into consideration, a follow is a pretty standard relationship for many online forums.

The automatic reciprocal nature of a friendship on Facebook is the oddball, when most other social networks and virtually every non-social site works on a one-sided basis. Visitors to your site follow you by clicking the "Join This Site" button.

At the time of publication, Blogger blogs have Google Friend Connect installed by default. If using an older version, you can still join at the Friend Connect site and manually copy and paste a code to your blog.

You manage your account by logging in at the Google Friend Connect website. You can also add polls, a comments section and other community features. When a follower joins your blog, he will see an option to invite people in his online network of contacts. For example, if he subscribes with a Google account, he can invite all the contacts in his Gmail email account. Encourage your followers to invite their friends. This viral marketing effect can add more followers to your blog through many levels of friends inviting other friends.

You can get more followers for your own blog by finding related blogs that use Google Friend Connect. When you join a blog through Friend Connect, you can email other members when logging in at that blog.



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