Facebook as Connection Tool

There are plenty of reasons to maintain a healthy annoyance at Facebook. Things like, your privacy settings getting reset every time they change something you just got used to. Definitely a good reason to stay annoyed.

But there’s a really neat reason not to drop Facebook like a container of wriggling spiders.

Reconnecting and staying connected.

In my case, I’ve reconnected with family.

My parents moved us away from Rhode Island just before my 16th birthday. Which, for the record, was … a long time ago. Some of my cousins weren’t even born when we moved and I’ve maybe seen them once in all this time.

Thanks to Facebook though, we’ve managed to connect (and in some cases, reconnect) and I’m getting to know these really cool people. All without the awkward silences that come from say, family reunions, where relatives introduce you to someone you once met when you were an infant.

“Honey, you remember your cousin Karen, right? You were four months old the last time you saw her. She wrestles cheetahs or something now.”

Facebook lets you avoid the nervous smile and wave that usually accompanies that kind of re-introduction. (And I wrestle with a Cheetos addiction… not with actual cheetahs.)

One of the neatest parts is getting to live and travel vicariously through my family members as they post pictures of their time in places like New Zealand or Italy. And I’m learning that majoring in medicine is not for the faint of heart or weak of mind.

By extension, I’ve reconnected with their parents as well. And my aunts and uncles, I do remember. And miss. Yes, there are phone calls, emails, and letters. But Facebook is so immediate. On busy days, when life has me by the throat and is shaking me like a gator with prey, I can keep up with my family in real-time, with a glance at my phone.

Facebook may have its quirks when it comes to privacy and user experience (Timeline, anyone?), but with keeping you connected, it’s pretty awesome.

Now I’m curious about how to use this connection epiphany for business as well as personal. How can I use this real-time interaction with people to expand a business?

How have you used Facebook to a business advantage? And has Facebook helped you reconnect and stay connected to family or friends that you haven’t seen in years?

5 Replies to “Facebook as Connection Tool”

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  1. The phrase “connection epiphany” is absolutely perfect. For me it’s been friends from high school–most of them stayed local while I moved (and moved… and moved again.)

    For business, though, FB doesn’t work as well unless you can find a very specific tribe to communicate with. I find Linked In much better for that.

  2. I’ve only been on FB for about 2 years. I have found it to be a great way to connect with those people you “used” to know. Plus I have a lot of family that lives out of state and it is a nice way for them to stay updated with my children. It’s also fun to just get on and see what everyone in your network is doing. Currently, I’m messing around with a FB page for my blog. It is a work in progress lol

  3. I grew up in one of those “I am getting the hell out of your the moment I can” small towns. Of all the friends I went to school with only 3 still live in that town. The rest are scattered all over the world. If it were not for facebook we would never of had contact again. My family is also scattered across the world. I am thankful for Facebook or “Crack book” (my sister’s name for it}
    Vivian recently posted..Fishing (Snort)My Profile

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