via Sayfco
I don’t know how Virgin Radio Lebanon managed to get almost 3.8 million likes that fast but they now have more likes than Sayfco, noting that Sayfco has reportedly spent 3 million dollars on Facebook advertising according to its president and chairman Chahe Yérévanian.
via Virgin Radio
you can easily buy “likes” on facebook
i doubt that 3 million persons really like virgin or sayfco…..
You can buy likes easily…for example theres a photographer on Facebook that got 4.2+ million likes in less than a year…
I mean TOP WORLD photographers barley have 10,000 likes and they’ve been there for years.. or even global brands dont have that number of likes, and they’re global brands, the easiest pages to collect likes are brands lol
2e27em 2e27em Said Muhammad
Ask any of the fans of Virgin Radio if they know the frequency of the radio station. That’s how you will know how many of those 3 million are “true” likes and how many of them are 9GAG type of likers (liking funny posts and pictures of cats).
In the case of Virgin, this could be part of Global Pages that Facebook launched a while ago. This is the only page for Virgin worldwide or ME, but the name varies with the location in which you open the page.
for a while, sayfco had a few million likes on fb and only 8000 on twitter, a disparity like that is indicative of purchased likes (in my opinion)
so?
“so?” – so i’ll just go ahead and claim that 3 million people like my pile of crap (random example, not related to the companies mentioned) so my pile of crap is more successful than yours. It makes no sense… however, if 3 million people legitimately liked my pile of crap and only 2 people liked yours, it’s either indicative that my pile of crap is actually better than yours or that I have a better marketing team, either one is an honest buck. Buying the likes is not.
sayfco not sayfo
Fake Facebook likes actually do more harm than good. This was released a while back: Facebook Fraud: http://youtu.be/oVfHeWTKjag (not sure if you tweeted about it)