Myspace Marketing Crew: How to Obtain more friends on Myspace

Status
Not open for further replies.

carlo2343

Banned
Aug 16, 2006
68
2
0
We all know having more friends is an advantage when it comes time to promote something of yours. I've put together a list of sites that help you legitimately generate tons of friends quickly. Now keep in mind, these sites require a small amount of effort to gain top priority, which brings you more incoming friend requests. Or money. The sites give you points for each outgoing friend request you SEND and each new user you bring to the site. The more points you have, the closer you are to the front of the "list" all other users add friends from...

FriendFury

Good:
  • Easiest to use of them all
  • Allows you to add 5 friends at a time
  • No user pictures, so you don't wait for anything to load
  • Free subscriptions when you refer enough users (the required amount is VERY reasonable)
  • You can see how many people are adding friends and referring new members. They don't keep you in the dark about anything
  • They also keep a blog that gives marketing advice for all the Myspace marketers using the site
Bad:
  • When you subscribe, it doesn't bring as many friend requests, but I attribute that to its age. This site is always showing that they care and are creating innovative ways to trump the competition.
---------------

FriendStorm

Good:
  • When the system works, it'll bring you the most friend requests (this site also enters you into several "whore train" services
  • Its flash system is pretty neat, and you get to see who you are adding
  • Their "Turbo" button allows you to add 3 people at a time
  • They show the daily top 10 users
Bad:
  • The site seems to be slow a lot of the time
  • You can't "drop" or "toss" anyone you don't want to add when you see their picture
---------------

FriendFleet

Good:
  • The site is well-designed and uses AJAX pretty well
  • You can "Toss" a user you don't want to add
  • They have more in-depth options you can use while adding friends; you can send messages to the users you add, view their profiles before you add them, etc. etc.
  • FriendFleet also displays the daily statistics, like FriendFury
  • They have a discussion and help forum
  • They have a blog to keep their members up to date on happenings with the site and also tips + hints
  • There is a ton of features on the site
Bad:
  • Having ads is alright, but you have to manually close each ad section
  • You can only add one friend at a time
---------------

Other sites:
FriendFlood
I don't know much about this one. It's one of the newest site out there, but to me it seems like they're just trying to ride the wave.

You can also use programs such as:

- badderadder
- adderrobot

that allow you to add 500 friends on myspace per day, however these are different than the sites above because people won't be adding you.

I hope this review helps you guys, and I hope your Myspace marketing turns out successful! I personally own FriendFleet, so if you have any questions about myspace marketing, post here.

--Approved by Jon
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jdog and Jon


thanks a lot. i would like to add adderrobot.com to the list. it's great and cheap you can add like 100 friends per day, it does auto approve, auto message submission, schduling and a lot more for just $16.95. that's chepa.
 
Aren't most of the potential "friends" on these sites other marketing people looking for more friends not real people?
 
Good question. The demographic truly does vary. Many of the people that purchase subscriptions on the site are people trying to market their band or website (not many purchase, maybe 30 or so a month.) The rest of the crowd on the sites are just regular people from what I can see. If you check out some of the people's profiles, you will see that not many have friends -- although it does always strike me as odd why people would want random people to be their friends.
 
I have looked at them and thought that most of those people that have few friends are fake accounts that are just getting started, but I don't know for sure. I know that if you looked at 2 profiles that I built up and never really used, you would not be able to tell that they are strictly for marketing. My wife even replies to messages on them and stuff. I have been using badderadder and when it is working it is awesome.

Anyways, it is a great list.
 
Jdog said:
I have looked at them and thought that most of those people that have few friends are fake accounts that are just getting started, but I don't know for sure. I know that if you looked at 2 profiles that I built up and never really used, you would not be able to tell that they are strictly for marketing. My wife even replies to messages on them and stuff. I have been using badderadder and when it is working it is awesome.

Anyways, it is a great list.

The robot programs are good if you are looking for to target a specific group of people. If you truly don't care who you market to, then these sites are the best way to go.
 
From what I've found, when I've used the 'friend whoring' methods, my results have sucked. I have always thought those people are just going for the high friend count and don't actually check their bulletins and messages. Have you noticed good results with the services you posted?

For me, nothing works better than numerous accounts with 3k-5k friends each, and with each account having a girl with massive jugs as the default pic.
 
I have a few large myspace accounts, and my total friend count is over 60,000 friends. When I post bulletins the results are pretty good, and depending on what I promote I receive good traffic.
 
ive got a (maybe lame) question to all those myspace moneymakers: do you remove tom before sending out your bulletins or doesnt it matter if he gets those spammessages? :laughing-smiley-007
 
Do you mean it is better for the actual users or better for making money on?

I meant facebook is better functionality wise for the actual users. I think it would be very hard to make money off of facebook because of all the settings they have in place (you can't view anyones profile who isn't your friend, and everyone is split up by workplace, college, or highschool)
 
I meant facebook is better functionality wise for the actual users. I think it would be very hard to make money off of facebook because of all the settings they have in place (you can't view anyones profile who isn't your friend, and everyone is split up by workplace, college, or highschool)

Ok cool. That was the same feeling I got when I looked at it too.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.