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Mistakes NOT to make here on DealerRefresh

AI Summary

Jeff Kershner outlines common mistakes to avoid on DealerRefresh, including breaking community rules and rehashing old topics, though the thread quickly devolves into lighthearted banter about purple ties and forum etiquette. A key insight emerges from Joe Pistell's contribution: disagreement and being wrong are valuable on the platform because they expose overlooked opportunities and ultimately help members succeed in their business. The thread demonstrates that DealerRefresh values both rule-following and a culture where respectful challenge and open-mindedness are encouraged.

Jeff Kershner

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Being an active member of here on DealerRefresh can be extremely useful and rewarding. However, it is common and easy to make avoidable mistakes.

Here are a list of "Commonsense" mistakes you will want to avoid:

Don't Break the Rules

We do have a set of community rules that are easily accessible. Take the time to read them. For a deeper sense of the rules, read through older threads to see what's allowed and what's not. If not, you may find that most of your replies are being deleted. Ouch!

Repeat Old Posts

It's a good idea not to bring up old conversation topics that have been discussed sufficiently. For example, if you see that the topic of Twitter Tools has been brought up many times and become less and less popular, there's no need to bring it up again.

To help with this - make use our our super search feature found in the top right. Our search not only searched out matches here on the forum but ALSO over on the blog.

Me Too!
When replying to threads on forums don't go with the lazy "Me too!" reply. It adds no value to the thread and will cause other users to think less of you. New information is good; echoing is bad.

Agree with Everything

It's healthy and normal to disagree. And if you didn't already know, we're always up for a good debate here on DealerRefresh. There's no need to agree with what everyone says; if you feel differently let them know because it will make it more interesting for everybody.

Lengthy Signature

Here on DealerRefresh we do allow you to attach a signature to your posts. There is no need to make yours five sentences, a few images, and ten links. It's enough to just have your name, business and one link. Long signatures with huge unnecessary photos and or links drive us nuts.

Self Promotion

If you're participating here on Dealerrefresh solely to promote yourself, GET LOST. Providing great answers, opinions, and becoming an active member will do a better job of self promotion than only talking about yourself.

Spam
Obviously, don't blatantly spam. That will call for immediate expulsion from the forum, something that I wouldn't recommend.

Long, Complicated Titles

If you're starting a new thread don't give it a title that's too long and impossible to understand. Make everybody's life easier by using small, meaningful, related titles that everybody could comprehend. *You can always be super cool and use relevant keywords on your title ;)

Private Information

Be careful before sharing any private information or data that could get you in trouble. Remember anyone could see these posts and your safety and privacy are important.

What would you like added to the list?
 
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A good rule of thumb (that applies to life in general) is to follow the twitter character limit: 140 characters. Staying within that limit appeals to the lazier-not-wanting-to-read side most people have today. You'll get more likes ;)
 

✨ AI Highlights

Jeff Kershner outlines common mistakes to avoid on DealerRefresh, including breaking community rules and rehashing old topics, though the thread quickly devolves into lighthearted banter about purple ties and forum etiquette. A key insight emerges from Joe Pistell's contribution: disagreement and being wrong are valuable on the platform because they expose overlooked opportunities and ultimately help members succeed in their business. The thread demonstrates that DealerRefresh values both rule-following and a culture where respectful challenge and open-mindedness are encouraged.

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