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Facebook Online Paid Events Workshop : How To Host Events and Get Paid Directly on Facebook April 2021

Do you know what Facebook Paid Online Events are?


They are going to be a Gamechanger for your business whatever your niche is coaching, consulting, real estate, cooking, fitness, nutritition, any type of exclusive webinars. Imagine being able to charge admission fees for your Facebook lives!

Yes! You can create a Facebook Live event and charge for it directly on Facebook.

It means you don't need third parties anymore, such as Eventbrite, Ticketmaster...and others.

That's right! People pay you on Facebook and get direct access to your content.

Promote your event directly on Facebook with ads if you want or organically.

Anyone can host events

Paid online events are one of the ways of monetizing your live online event through a one-time access charge that’s collected when guests register to attend. POEs allow you create, charge people to attend your event, promote it to your audience and customers, and host, all in one place. Once in, your guests will be able to watch your event through the Facebook event page on their phone, tablet or computer, or through the Facebook TV app.

Why do paid events? 

People will show up and stay the duration if they pay.


In our workshop, I will show you exactly what to do, what to offer and how to plan and market your Facebook POE.

If you want to know more and understand how to use FB POE.

Find out: 

if you are eligible to host paid online events

How to create paid online events

How to promote your online events

Find out about paid online events payouts


Workshop has ended and is not available anymore but you can get our free guide.


👉Click HERE to Get Your Free Guide 👈



Facebook Power Admin - Groups Power Admin.


Thank you Facebook for the recognition. 

 I'm a POWER Admin! 🎊🎉

 There are only about 30 000 active power admins in the world. 🎯

I build thriving, powerful communities and I love it.



Are you part of the Women In Business Community group 🇬🇧🇺🇸🇨🇵 where women support women in their enterprises? 

If you're not yet, simply pop in to see us (Link in the bio), introduce yourself share with us, promote yourself. You know you want to and it would be great to have you with us! 👍🏾

If you need help building your communities, your groups or anything Facebook (family) 💯 related. Contact me, I'd love to help! 🗣️

See you soon on the other side 😊

https://www.facebook.com/groups/553887941461652/

Post to Submit in Women in Business Community Facebook Group

Thank you for joining and welcome to  Women in Business Community Facebook Group





Please read these rules carefully to the end before getting your gift, this month's gift is  'How to Set Your Profile'.

To avoid all confusion, here is what you can post and what is not allowed in the group unless you have a  Get-Featured membership Backhand Index Pointing Left on Google

You can submit a post to this group...

Allowed Posts:
✅ Ask for recommendations
✅ Look for collaborators
✅ Provide useful information
✅ Seek advice
✅ Share tips
✅ Fun
✅ Networking and building relationships
✅ Turn to our group for support 💕

NOT Allowed:
❎ Phishing posts
❎Images that contain business graphics or logos
❎ Links to your business
❎ LIVE videos
❎ Sharing direct from your business page or group
❎ Recruitment posts
❎ Sales posts
❎ Any promo
❎ Anything conflict of interest
There are specific posts weekly that offer opportunities for self-promotion, please see below.

If you want to get seen and advertise your business in the Women in Business Community group. Sign up to the Get-Featured Membership, you will be able to post any link you want and post your lives in the group.





Before the Flood - Full Movie | National Geographic

Before the Flood - Full Movie | National Geographic




About Before the Flood:
Before the Flood, directed by Fisher Stevens, captures a three-year personal journey alongside Academy Award-winning actor and U.N. Messenger of Peace Leonardo DiCaprio as he interviews individuals from every facet of society in both developing and developed nations who provide unique, impassioned and pragmatic views on what must be done today and in the future to prevent catastrophic disruption of life on our planet.





Act Now #BeforeTheFlood:
For every use of #BeforeTheFlood across Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram between October 24 – November 18, 21st Century Fox and National Geographic will together donate $1 to Pristine Seas and $1 to the Wildlife Conservation Society, up to $50,000 to each organization.


How to be more optimistic




Do you think every cloud has a silver lining or do you struggle to see beyond the storm? Whatever your personal outlook, it’s simplistic to see optimism as good and pessimism as bad. Both sides are relevant in life, and here you will find three ingredients to achieve a happy balance.

1. Find balance by being rational
Rational optimism is the balance, and it is more beneficial than pessimism. ‘If you don’t slightly miscalculate and think the reward is higher and the risks are lower, you might not ever get out there,’ says psychologist, neuroscientist and author of The Optimism Bias(Robinson), Tali Sharot. Being somewhere between optimism and pessimism is a good balance. And because we all respond differently to life, the key is to be aware of your mindset and stay flexible.
2. Find your natural bias
Think about the consequences your habitual thinking is having on your life. If you always expect the worst and the worst never comes, you can start challenging those negative thoughts. But if bad outcomes continually disappoint you, try to practice more realism. Just remember to have a flexible attitude. Naïve optimism can be destructive – it ignores warnings and signals, and can stop you from taking necessary action. Extreme pessimism, on the other hand, can lead to depression. The secret is to be more aware of the filter you view the world through and tune down your bias when it’s necessary.  
3. Find what motivates you  
Do you work better when you feel confident? If so, optimism is going to get you motivated to do the job. But if you feel uncomfortable with too much optimism – maybe it leads you to be reckless – then a little pessimism might be best to keep you motivated.   Mild negative mood – or defensive pessimism – can help manage anxiety, improve preparation and increase proactivity. Balanced optimism can lead to better relationships, less suffering towards adversity and persistence to achieve goals without giving up. You need to find where your motivation gets ignited and use either bias with moderation to have better outcomes in life.  
Source: Psychologies

6 Ways to Make Good Decision






1 Limit the amount of information you take in

Having too much information is often counter-productive and doesn't help make the best decisions. When we have too much information we may not pay enough attention to the relevant information but may focus too much on trivial elements.



2  Prioritise your decision.

What you are going to do for in your life such as whether to go to university, change job, get married or stay single is definitely more important than deciding whether you should go to the gym after work or whether should go out in for dinner or not.



3 Take Time to Make Your Decision

Weight in most of your options before making a decision, especially if it is an important one. Focus on the right pieces of information you need to reach your decision if you have too many options to consider.



4 Seek Advice

You don't have to follow it but you can learn so much from other people's experience.



5 Pretend you are giving advice to a friend

Picture yourself as a wise (old) person, and imagine a friend ask you the very same question you are asking yourself.



6 Flip a Coin

If all else fails, whenever you can't make a decision between two things, flip a coin. It usually doesn't matter which side it lands on, because as soon as the coin is in the air, you know what you want the result to be.



MORE on Decision-Making


Photograph: iStock

12 ways to get a good night’s sleep



According to The Sleep Council, we’re in the grip of an insomnia epidemic. As well as leaving us tired and irritable, lack of sleep can have a long-term impact on our health and wellbeing. David Hurst goes in search of some shut-eye

1 Track your sleep pattern

There are many revolutionary devices that have helped thousands of people to sleep better. By tracking there sleep pattern these devices are able to determine what you need.

2 Music

Drifting off to relaxing music can improve sleep-quality. ‘A carefully created playlist of relaxing songs helps the body prepare for sleep by lowering blood pressure and bringing us into a much more relaxed mental state,’ says psychologist Dr Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic from University College London. He recommends long, repetitive songs with no lyrics and fewer than 80 beats per minute – so get out the old Ibiza chillout albums.
For maximum comfort, invest in SleepPhones, headphones in a super soft headband.



 3 Balance your yin and yang
In traditional Chinese medicine, it is believed that insomnia is caused by an imbalance between our yang (positive, aggressive energy) and yin (passive, gentle energy). By inserting needles at points along specific meridians in the body, an acupuncturist can restore that balance. ‘Acupuncture treatment brings about balance and harmony within the body and the mind,’ says acupuncturist Gerad Kite of London’s Gerad Kite Clinic. ‘We are part of nature and so we must respond to its natural movements. For example, when the sun rises we’re designed to become more active and when the sun sets we’re designed to rest. Any kind of imbalance can cause insomnia as everything in the body and mind are interconnected. By restoring balance and harmony to the whole system, sleep becomes a natural side-effect of treatment.’
4 Talk about it
Researchers at Laval University in Canada conducted a study of 160 adults with chronic insomnia and compared the effects of a course of cognitive behavioural therapy with a prescription sleeping pill. Weekly therapy sessions proved more effective for those with long-term insomnia than medication, helping patients to recognise, challenge and change unhelpful thoughts and behaviours around sleep. Find an accredited therapist at bacp.co.uk or ask your GP to refer you.
5 Boost your magnesium intake
‘Magnesium is an essential mineral to the human body and is often referred to as the relaxing mineral because of its role in relaxing muscles,’ says nutritionist Fiona Kirk. ‘In a trial carried out at Albert-Ludwigs University in Germany, people who suffered from restless leg syndrome and insomnia showed significant improvement after taking a 300mg magnesium supplement for four to six weeks.’ To get more magnesium in your diet, Kirk recommends eating plenty of nuts, wholegrains, beans, dark green vegetables, fish and lean meat. Alternatively, massage BetterYou Magnesium Oil GoodNight Spray, £14.50, onto your skin before bedtime.
6 Change your mindset
Nothing aggravates insomnia more than worrying about it. Dr Gregg D Jacobs, author of Say Good Night To Insomnia, has spent 20 years researching insomnia at Harvard Medical School and believes we can sleep better by replacing negative thoughts with positive ones. ‘If you’re lying awake, instead of thinking, “Oh no, I’m awake”, try thinking, “I always fall back to sleep sooner or later”,’ he says.
7 Feng shui your bedroom
According to the rules of feng shui, the bed should be positioned where it allows us to see the door, but without being right across from it. ‘It’s important to avoid sleeping with your head towards the door,’ says Jakob Jelling of Feng Shui Crazy. ‘And avoid sleeping under a window as it will have a bad impact on your chi and might cause you to lose some of your positive energy by dispersing it.’
8 Surround yourself with calming colours
Decorate your bedroom in blues, greens and purples as these colours aid relaxation. ‘The most restful are the electrical colours blue, indigo and violet,’ says colour therapist Jules Blythe. ‘Green represents harmony and works on the parasympathetic nervous system. Blue is cooling and calming, and works on the respiratory system. Violet is a balancer of the body and mind. It works on the central nervous system to induce relaxation and aid sleep.’
9 Try aromatherapy Psychologists at Wesleyan University in the US asked 31 men and women to sniff lavender essential oil one night and distilled water the next for four two-minute periods just before bedtime. Their sleep cycles were monitored with brain scans and it was discovered that lavender increased slow-wave sleep, the deep, restorative slumber in which the heartbeat slows and muscles relax. ‘Lavender is amazingly effective,’ says Lisa Helmanis, author of Sleep Better Naturally. ‘In studies published in the medical journal The Lancet, lavender has been shown to be as effective as sleeping pills.’ Sprinkle a few drops of lavender oil on your bed linen or add to a warm bath.
10 Sleep in the Dark
There is mounting evidence that we’re designed to sleep in the pitch dark, and even the glow from a clock or a phone can disrupt the release of melatonin, the hormone that triggers the deepest sleep, and is also linked with reduced rates of certain types of cancer.
11 The Body Clock

We’re meant to go to sleep when it’s dark and get up when it’s light, so getting up in the dark can disrupt us. The Lumie Body Clock Go alarm clock mimics dawn, waking you with a gradually increasing light. Waking like this kickstarts your body clock, so you not only have more energy by day, but should sleep deeper at night.
12 Have a wind-down routine
‘Getting plenty of fresh air and exercise and following a healthy diet all contribute to improving sleep quality, but it’s just as important to learn how to wind down,’ says Jessica Alexander of The Sleep Council. ‘Happy, relaxed thoughts promote happy, relaxed sleep.’ Log on to sleepcouncil.com and tune in to its Can’t Sleep? vodcast, which demonstrates a calming visualisation exercise and meditation technique that you can practise at bedtime to help you wind down and calm your mind.
Source: Psychologies