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What are the best ways to think of ideas for a startup?

This approach will help you think of a solid startup idea.It is broken into 5 steps to facilitate progress through a system that in total should take about 30-40 hours to complete over a week or two, if you do it all.Add rigor and discipline to your brainstorming and idea evaluation process:Build lists of potential customer types and business or pricing models.Evaluate the opportunities where these lists overlap.Then, exit your ivory tower and evaluate the top ideas with real potential users, customers, or suppliers.This will improve your likelihood of success and waste less time down the road, even if you pivot from your original idea.Preface: There certainly are simpler answers like, “pick an area that is trending”, “look for a large market that hasn’t changed in 10 years”, or “convert your hobby into a business”. Unfortunately those aren’t particularly helpful, and since this question comes up often in discussions, I wanted to get my thoughts down in a more comprehensive way. I’m sure Quora will have some good feedback for me :)Also, while this answer covers the ideation part of the journey, keep in mind that implementing the idea is the hard part.Three primary paths to a new business idea1. The spontaneous idea: It hits you when you’re in the shower, driving in your car, talking with friends, or doodling during a meeting. The dots suddenly connect in a new way and you have an epiphany...your sudden insight is surprising and exciting, and the value of this new idea seems obvious. You can’t believe nobody else has thought of it before!So you go online and poke around...and...most of the time it turns out that someone has thought of it before. But, you still might be able to do it better...so you keep thinking about it and a day passes, and you start to realize some problems. You share it with a few trusted friends and get feedback about a lot of things you hadn’t thought of yet (e.g., nobody pays for it, it’s a tiny market, etc.). It could turn out to be a great idea, but you don’t know, you have a good job, and it is uncharted territory...so you let the dream slowly die away. Cheer up, that was probably the right decision.2. The insider idea: Maybe you’ve spent the last 7 years building enterprise software for airlines and you’ve noticed some voids in the product stack or issues with how your company brings it to market. You point these deficiencies out to your bosses, but there are other company priorities and nothing changes. Or, say your company pays vendors a lot of money to do some work, but nobody ever seems happy with the results....and you see a way to do it better for less. Or, maybe you witnessed your company kill an amazing new product or feature not because testing didn’t show user interest, but for political or organizational reasons.You see an opportunity to do it on your own, so you start moonlighting on a solution. You gather more specific information, talk to trusted co-workers and industry contacts, and determine the viability of solving the problem. The good thing is, you’re already knowledgeable and well positioned/networked in the business space...so good luck to you!3. The deliberate idea: In this case, you aren’t starting with a business idea. Instead, you’re starting with a desire to create a new business and become an entrepreneur. You may be ready to quit your job and go for it whole-hog, or just start it on the side of your desk...but you’re looking for the right business idea to pursue (which could be a business related to your work environment or industry, as in #2).While the first two paths may happen unintentionally, the third is for people who know they want to start a company, but don't yet have their idea. If you fall into the third group, then this answer is for you.#3 The Deliberate IdeaIdeation is fun and freeing, but it is the easy part of the process. Execution of your idea separates the wheat from the chaff and is where most people fail. That said, coming up with the right idea will improve your odds of successful execution. This system will help you do that well.Step 1 - Decide what is your primary motivation or personal goal for starting this (1 hour)For example, do you want a:Fun or hobby based business (e.g., making bracelets to sell on Etsy (product))Part-time lifestyle business that could become full time (e.g., running a wine-investment club)Full-time startup hoping for acquisition exit in 3-5 years (e.g., It’s like Airbnb (product) for fish, get it?)Large, cash-flow positive business (e.g., B2B furniture import and delivery business)Path to industry credibility and networking over financial gain (e.g., scriptwriting peer-training exchange for aspiring comedy writers)Create a new spreadsheet and write down your goal in the first tab. It may seem like overkill now, but if you take a break from this project you’ll want to be able to have it as a frame of reference when picking it back up.Step 2 - Frame the problem (2 hours)If you try to just write down a list of ideas from scratch, you’ll probably be underwhelmed with the results. You’ll likely hit a block after a handful of ideas, and what you come up with will be based on your predispositions...i.e., if you are a gamer, you’ll have ideas for games. If you work in cloud computing, you’ll have ideas for new approaches, etc. This isn’t a bad thing, but it is limiting.Instead, make a deliberate effort to facilitate your own brainstorming.In the spreadsheet you created in step 1, create a new sheet and type out a list of 15-20 different categories of customer/audience types in the first column. Don’t start with the usual demographic descriptions like, “18-35 year olds in urban environments making over $100k per year”. Instead, use descriptive phrases that represent specific groups of consumers and/or businesses with unique challenges and needs. These tend to be easier to conceptualize so they are more useful and helpful for generating ideas.Start with some that relate to your personal interests, hobbies, experience or professional network, but don't limit yourself to them. Some examples include retail insurance agents, cyclical dieters, ex-pats in Asia, news junkies, people that eat out 3+ times per week, new college grads, stay-at-home mothers, winemakers, startup founders raising money, youth sports teams, companies at trade shows, wedding planners, gamers, health nuts, software development agencies, etc. If you’re having trouble coming up with enough, broaden to specific industries, e.g., public transportation, dating, real estate, etc. If you’re going after a specific geography, call it out (e.g., ex-pats in Asia).Next, along the first row of your spreadsheet, type the business or pricing models (i.e., the type of business) that you could apply to these customers/audiences. There’s no exact right or wrong approach, and I’m using the term “business model” very liberally here. Not all models will apply to each group and some overlap is okay. Remember, you’re doing this to help you brainstorm and compare new business ideas, not to become an expert on business models.For example, subscriptions, product bundling, risk management/insurance, auctions, resale/classifieds, peer-to-peer exchanges, outsourcing non-core functions, freemium, advertising-supported content, new product development, after-sale care, daily deals (discounted pre-sale), collaborative consumption (think AirBnB), rapid evaluation/matching (e.g., Tinder), sales channel innovation, lead generation and referrals, marketplace, brokerage, BI/CI solutions, community, etc. (more here: TechCrunch business models)Step 3 - Generate ideas (4-6 hours)Your spreadsheet is now a grid with customer/audience types down the side and business/pricing models across the top. Each box where the two lists overlap is a place to brainstorm ideas. Go through each square in this grid. You can dismiss many of the boxes in a few seconds (e.g., Business Intelligence for stay-at-home moms?), but it is worth giving each consideration as you’ll inevitably come up with ideas you didn’t expect.The easiest way to do this is go column by column. Pick a business or pricing model, think of a few existing businesses that use it, and spend 5 minutes reading about them to get your head into that space. Then, apply it to each potential customer or audience group: how could it fit? What are their priorities, what gets in their way, where are they wasting time or money, what do they depend upon? Browse discussion forums where they participate or are discussed. See what they care about, what people complain about. Search online for other companies that already compete to offer them products and services. What are they?Your pass through the first column will take the most time, because you're learning about each of the 15-20 customer types as you go. It speeds up after that.Each time you come up with a keeper, type it into the corresponding box. For example, providing after-sale customer management for retail insurance agents? Or, a debt auction business for startups looking to raise seed funding? Type it in.Note: You may have 2+ ideas in a box. To add a new line inside of a cell type Alt-Enter for Excel on PC, Option-Command-Enter for Excel on Mac, Ctrl-Enter for Google Docs on MacTry to come up with at least 6 solid ideas. Then, create another tab in your spreadsheet and list all of your ideas there. In addition to writing down the ideas themselves, you should state the goal, audience(s), and model(s) for each one. These will change over time, but it is good to start grounded with something you can work-back towards.Step 4 - Evaluate ideas and narrow it down (3 hours)The next step is to evaluate your list of 6+ ideas against a set of criteria that will help you narrow down to the most promising three. For example:Heat in this space: E.g., Some answers on QuoraYour experience and connections: Do you have experience in this industry or with similar businesses? Are you well connected with friends or family that operate in this space? Any advantages, or disadvantages?Alignment with goals: How well does this align to your original goal? Are the upfront capital costs compatible with the level of investment you want to make in this business?Market opportunity: How big is this market and how unique or differentiated is your approach? Consider competition here, but don’t be discouraged by the presence of competition. It is validation that the space is interesting. Also, there are plenty of companies have come along and disrupted markets that others had written off as already solved, like:Google ... after Altavista, Metacrawler, Lycos, etc.Facebook ... after Friendster, MySpaceUber ... after Yellow cab, black car services, etc.Gmail ... after AOL, Yahoo!, Hotmail, etc.iPhone ... after Blackberry, Palm, Windows MobileFlipboard, Wavii, Zite, Pulse, Prismatic, etc. ... after Yahoo!, AOL, MSN, CNNYou probably don’t have time to really deep-dive on 10 ideas, so getting this narrowed down is both science and art. What does your gut tell you, what would be fun, where are you most comfortable and confident?OPTIONAL STEP: To add more science try quantifying some of these criteria.To do this, add a column to the Ideas tab, one for each criterion. Then, for each new column score your ideas from 1-5, with 5 being the best. So, for “Alignment with my goal”, a 5 means it aligns perfectly, and a 1 means it doesn’t align at all (e.g., your goal is to create a fun hobby business, but the idea is to sell offshore development services to technology companies in the US).Don’t worry if you aren’t sure whether something is a 3 or a 4, just go with your gut or do 5 minutes of online research. Keep moving forward, don't get stuck here bogged down in the weeds.When you’re finished, add up the scores and sort your list by the sum of these scores. In theory, the higher the score, the more interesting the idea should be to you.When you’re done evaluating your ideas run them by a couple of trusted friends, and narrow it down to the three that seem most promising. If you do the optional scoring step, don’t feel like you must pick the three that scored highest.Note - we could have used these criteria earlier in step 2 to narrow down the list of audiences and business/pricing models, but that would have limited the creative process too far upstream (i.e., before the brainstorming process), so I suggest waiting.Step 5 - Deep dive on those 3 ideas (20-30 hours over a week or two)Congratulations, you have come up with 3 solid ideas! Now it’s time to step out of your ivory tower and start getting street-level information and feedback. There are three basic steps for doing this (i.e., 5_a, _b, and _c) that are general enough to apply to most types of ideas.A quick aside: at this point people ask, "If I share my idea with a lot of people, won't someone steal it?" The answer is possibly, but unlikely. As previously mentioned, there are a lot of startup ideas but few people with the time, energy, or know-how to implement them. The benefits of getting good feedback early on outweigh the risk that someone will steal it. So, don't tell people that won't benefit you, and avoid telling direct competitors that are in a position to do it themselves, or to block you from doing it, but generally don't worry. Related questions / blog posts:Will a VC or Angel steal my idea?How can I be sure people won't steal my idea during a pitch?Will anyone steal my startup idea?Why you shouldn’t keep your startup idea secret5_a. Get smart(er) (6-8 hours)You will be able to evaluate and refine your ideas 10x faster by engaging in discussions with real potential customers, users, and partners. But, if you go into these unprepared you’ll wind up asking the wrong questions, sounding out of place, and wasting your opportunity and their time.So, before you invest in surveys, coffee shop chats, or informational meetings, you need to get up to speed on the basics of the industry you are targeting. If you gave yourself a 5 in the “Experience and connections” category in Step 4, you can skip this. If not, invest 2-3 hours per idea.Note - throughout this process you should take detailed notes. Create a new tab for each of your ideas, or an entirely new document; doesn’t really matter as long as you can write stuff down. Track who you've spoken with, emailed, feedback, etc. Trust me, you will be glad that you wrote this all down.This will probably take a couple of days. At minimum I would:Call up or email savvy friends and family to get their thoughts (LinkedIn is a great tool for this).Give them the 10,000 foot view of your idea and ask for their opinion. (Take good notes on or right after the call; do not trust your memory for this.)Ask them what they think is the biggest problem with it, otherwise they might just say nice things.If they’re in your industry then ask if they know of other companies in your space, what they think is broken, etc.Ask them who they would speak with if they had your idea. Ask if you can get informational interviews with those people.Talk to potential investors if possibleThey don’t have to be the people that will actually invest in your business, but at this step ideally you have a personal relationship with them. Position your conversation as looking for advice to make a decision, not their money.Anyone you know that does angel investing, VC, M&A, etc., will have a trained perspective.Do lots of online research. For example:Find out who competes in this space, and add them to your spreadsheet.Read their websites, watch their videos, and search for them together, e.g., “Windows AND Android AND iPhone”. These search queries surface articles and blog posts that analyze the broader industry, offering helpful perspective and discovery of competitors you missed. E.g., “Windows, Android and iPhone versus Blackberry”.Browse on Wikipedia to learn industry vocabulary and organization.Search Quora for questions about the industry or these competitors.Determine external dependenciesYou may need data. Is it available free or paid, or will you have to mine it yourself, etc.?Do you need any particular physical materials, machinery, etc. that are hard to come by?Will you require any permits or government approvals?Will you need to hire any specialists people that are particularly difficult to find and recruit?Expensive equipment?Will you need to raise a significant amount of outside funding just to get started b/c there are high capital costs?Etc.Now you are smart enough to have the intelligent conversations with people in your prospective industries, and you probably have also improved and refined your ideas. Woohoo, you’re getting closer to “the one”.At this point a lot of people would pick something and invest time in “creating” their business. I.e., set up a corporation, pick a name, secure a domain, design a logo, print business cards, figure out their title, etc. While these things feel like progress towards a “real company”, they are an unnecessary distraction at this point. It is much wiser to spend that energy on validation of your idea, like testing with real customers, meeting competitors, mocking up prototypes, etc.5_b. Talk to potential customers, competitors, and industry partners you don’t know personally (5-10 hours)Before you pour your heart and soul into a new venture, you should validate it outside of your friends and family circle. Is this solving a real issue for potential users or customers? Would they be willing to pay for it...or do businesses even have budget for what you’re offering? Again, the mechanics of this depend on the type of business idea that you have (e.g., starting a sandwich shop vs. office supply delivery vs. peer-to-peer insurance), but here are some general approaches that I would recommend.Run an online surveyQuick way to get a relatively large sample of answers from your target customers or audience.There are probably others, but Google Surveys is drop-dead simple to use and it allows you to easily limit responses to your target (e.g., people that buy life insurance).It’ll cost you a couple hundred bucks per survey. A cheap alternative is to post the concept on a discussion forum or Quora to get feedback.Talk with your potential customers/audienceIf you’re targeting consumers, figure out where they spend time and go there to ask them questions (e.g., certain neighborhoods or coffee shops, concerts, sporting events, conventions, etc.). If you end up in a coffee shop, print a sign for the back of your laptop that says “Your feedback on my idea for a free latte”!If you’re targeting B2C businesses, approach them as a customer, and ask them some questions. Buy something if they sell retail.If you’re targeting B2B businesses, email them or go to conferences that they attend, etc. Try to get an informational interview based on the premise that you’re working to improve the industry and do something valuable for them, so you need their expertise and advice. People like it when others ask for their ‘expertise’.Talk with suppliersThis is relatively easy, since you are a potential buyer and they will want your business.In a previous step you identified the external dependencies you’ll want to take, i.e., what you should buy vs. build, and some possible vendors. Get meetings with them.You need to verify your assumptions, and while a lot of the details will be available on their website, information about pricing, access restrictions, etc., is often not, so you’ll want to email or call them to get details.Try to speak to more than 1 provider for each item so you can compare prices and look for differences or similarities, which will tell you a lot about the industry.OPTIONAL - Start selling before you have anything to sellSome people call this doing a “smokescreen test”, and the mechanics of it really depend on the business idea. In many cases, it actually won’t be practical to do this until you are working on your final idea.B2C: If you’re targeting consumers you can do this via the Google or Facebook ad platforms.B2B: If businesses, then send a bunch of emails to potential customers (you can find them online) with a proposed offer and price...vary the price and offer details and keep track of how people respond (hopefully some do). see if you can get on the phone with one or two of them. Learn what questions they ask, what they push back on, if the price seems reasonable. If someone wants what you’re selling, then you may have your first customer if you can deliver something quickly (you won’t be the first to sell something before you own it...remember Bill Gates and IBM (company))5_c. Write abbreviated business plans (7-10 hours)We’ve spent a lot of time working on the individual components of each idea, and now it is time to step back and see the big picture. Bring your thinking and research together into a brief business plan for each idea that still appears to be worth pursuing. If it is obvious from the previous steps that that an idea isn’t going to work, drop it.Here’s a suggested outline. Try to limit it to be 2-3 pages, and no more than 3 hours per idea:Page 1One-line description of your idea:[Company] will <do, make, or provide> for <target audience or customer> so that <the value/outcome you bring>.Example: Lewis Industries will develop customer management software for automotive dealerships so that they can increase loyalty post-sale and sell more services and upgrades to consumers that buy vehicles.Description of your products and services: 150 word description of the problems you are addressing and the scenarios you will focus on first.Page 2How and when you monetize: Will you start as a free service for everyone, and hope to monetize later through premium offerings (freemium) or advertising (ad-supported)? Or, will you start charging immediately, or never? You won’t know for sure, but give your best guess.Distribution model: How will potential customers or users discover you? What marketing and/or partner channels do you plan to use?External dependencies: For what core things will you rely on others to provide, e.g., A database of all vehicle makes and models, and option packages since 1970? You should have this list from previous steps, and don’t worry about generic things (e.g., office space).Page 3Estimated cost to reach your Minimum Viable Product (MVP): Just try to get in the ballpark here. The main reason to figure this out during the ideation stage is that it will impact how you approach starting the business, which may or may not align with your goals. I.e., if you’re planning to build a Zipcar for trucks and need to raise $2 million for the vehicles, then you probably can’t do it as a lifestyle business off the side of your desk.What are the major external dependencies and how much will they cost (e.g., $20,000 for the automotive database)How much development and design do you need to do for this idea, any large capital costs (e.g., a fleet of trucks)?Here are some places to learn how to estimate these costs: Estimating startup costs for a new businesses (StartupNation), How to estimate the cost of starting a business from scratch (United States SBA), Estimate startup costs (Entrepreneur)Summary of idea’s strengths and weaknesses (1-2 sentences for each)Research: What did you learn from your survey, calls, emails and online research that supports or challenges this idea? E.g., Positive if 67% of people surveyed say they will pay $10 for this, less so if 4 of the 5 companies you spoke with have no interest in what you’re proposing.Industry/macro trends: Will you have a tailwind or a headwind doing this? List out the specifics (e.g., My largest customer, retirees, is estimate to grow at 10% per year for the next 20 years.)Your knowledge and connections: You'll have a good sense for this, but write it down anyways. E.g., I have spent 4 years working on software for this industry, and x, y, and z from college are potential buyers.Risks: Are you taking dependencies where the solution isn’t yet clear? How competitive is the market, and what advantages do competitors have...or, is competition not a deterrent for x reason?You could easily increase the scope of this business plan by an order of magnitude, and there are a dozen templates for this (Writing a Business Plan) or approaches to analyzing your ideas (e.g., SWOT analysis). The important thing is that you’re being honest and self-critical, because ultimately you are the one taking the risk.Step 6 - Pick the best idea and get startedIf after all of this digging you are still feeling really good about one of these ideas, then go for it...this is where the real work begins. You’re going to need to think about financing, hiring, networking, and business operations in addition to the fun part of actually building your product or service.That is for another post! In the meantime, here are some resources to help you on your way:First I'd sit back and read...Startups are roller-coasters that often end in failure...make sure that you know what you're getting yourself into! Check out Mashable’s post on Why 90% of Startups Fail, David Lee's on Why I Never Started My Own Company, and Dave McClure's slides and video about “Why not to do a startup”.Now, if you still want to do this, read Paul Graham 's essay on How to start a startup (he also has an interesting view on startup ideas)Next, grab a drink and read Quora's take on what first timers often miss - What first time entrepreneurs are blind toThen, Jimmy Wales' answer to how to contact him about a startup idea...it applies broadly to how you should contact a potential advisor or investor about their startup.Lastly, go up-vote something Ashton Kutcher wrote on Quora and ask Mark Zuckerberg a question that he won't answer...Congrats! You're half-way to a great startup (scene story for your friends). :-)Startup advice and storiesQuora questions - What is the hardest part about staring a company, Common mistakes made when starting a tech company, Top five things to remember whens starting a companyJames Altucher, TechCrunch - Should you start a company?Jason Goldberg, Betashop - 13 things you must do every week as a startup CEOSeth Sternberg, Meebo co-founder (acquired by Google since this article) - From nothing to something. How to get there.Ben Horowitz vs Fred Wilson - Ben posts (case for fat startup), Fred rebuts (fat not healthy), Ben rebuts (revenge of fat guy)Neil Patel, Geekwire - Wish I would have known before starting my own businessDane Carlson - 20 things not to do before starting a business (I agree with most of this, but not #1 if you can afford it)Scott Weiss, TechCrunch - The path to starting a startupJames Altucher, TechCrunch - What you can learn from Woody AllenErick Schonfeld (2006), 5 ways to start a company (without quitting your day job)ChecklistsRyan Roberts, Startup Lawyer - If I launched a startup (great cheat sheet)Quora - How do you start a companyForbes - 38 things to do when starting a business (non-tech)Fiverr (marketplace) - Startup checklist (non-tech, and website is a little kitschy with all the dashes, stars, and arrows in the text)Finance and LegalQuora - What questions do entrepreneurs want to ask venture investors most but are afraid to askUser-10887637379381104900 - So you want to raise seed capitalFred Wilson, AVC - Financing options for startups, Financing options: convertible debt (likely way you will raise your first round of angel/seed money)Ryan Roberts, Startup Lawyer - How convertile debt works, What type of entity should I form, What does a series A term sheet look likeMartin Kleppmann - Valuation caps on convertible notes explained with graphsOrrick - Startup toolkitBrad Feld, Foundry Group (venture capital firm) - Term sheet series wrap upHiringBabak Nivi, Venture Hacks - What does an employee offer letter look like, Questions recruits might ask Part I, Part IIRobert Scoble, Quora - How to avoid hiring the wrong people for your startupElad Gil, Elad blog - Hiring for cultural fitBlogs by entrepreneurs:Jason Goldberg - BetashopDanielle Morrill - Danielle Morrill’s blogMarco Arment - Marco.orgBen Milne - Ben Milne’s blogKate Kendall - Kate Kendall’s blogGuy Kawasaki - How to change the worldSeth Godin - Seth Godin’s blogSriram Krishnan - Sriram Krishnan’s blogPenelope Trunk - Penelope Trunk’s blogScott Adams - Dilbert blogNeil Patel - Quick SproutEric Ries - Startup Lessons LearnedSteve Blank - Steve Blank’s blogDharmesh Shah - OnStartupsQuora - Other startup founder blogsBlogs by VCs:Brad Feld (Foundry Group) - FeldThoughtsFred Wilson (Union Square Ventures) - AVCDave McClure (500 Startups) - Master of 500 hatsPaul Graham (Y Combinator +) - Paul Graham EssaysDavid Lee (SV Angel) - dasleeUser-10887637379381104900 (Andreessen Horowitz) - Chris Dixon’s blogJeff Bussgang (Flybridge Capital Partners) - Seeing Both SidesBen Horowitz (Andreessen Horowitz) - Ben’s blogJosh Kopelman (First Round Capital) - Redeye VCMike Hirshland (Resolute.VC, formerly Polaris Ventures) - VCMike’s BlogDavid Cowan (Bessemer Venture Partners) - Who has time for thisJalak Jobanputra (FuturePerfect Ventures) - The barefoot VCHoward Morgan (First Round Capital) - Way too ealryGreg Gottesman (Madrona Venture Partners) - Stark Raving VCDavid Skok (Matrix Partners) - For entrepreneursMark Suster (GRP Partners) - Both Sides of the TableOther blogsJared O'Toole and Matt Wilson - Under 30 CEOAnita Campbell - Small Business TrendsAndrew Chen - Andrew Chen’s blogCarson McComas, Work Happy blog for entrepreneursYoung Entrepreneur BlogHarvard Business Review Blog NetworkBusiness PunditQuora entrepreneurs to follow (there are a lot of ‘must follow’ lists of entrepreneurs on Quora, of which many aren’t very active. These people are)Wikipedia, Jimmy WalesCraigslist, Craig NewmarkBlippy and Adbrite, Philip KaplanVontu & Pipewise, Michael WolfeQuora & Facebook, Adam D'AngeloFriendster, Jonathan AbramsInstagram, Kevin SystromFoursquare, Dennis CrowleyPath, Dave Morin500 Startups, Dave McClureFacebook, Dustin MoskovitzMahalo, LAUNCH, & Weblogs, Jason CalacanisPayPal, David SacksEchoSign, Jason M. LemkinWavii, Adrian AounOther people’s listsRyan Spoon, Polaris Ventures - list of Quora threads for startupsOther resources:SBA (U.S. Small Business Administration)StartupNation (Source for Small Business Advice)Notes: I tried to use mostly plain-speak when writing this. There are a lot of opinions on vocabulary and the definition of business models, business plans, etc., so if you’re hung up on those details write your thoughts in the comments, but keep in mind that the nuances are less important than the spirit of applying some rigor to picking an idea.

How do I recover a Facebook account, when it is blocked?

If you want to know how to Recover A Facebook Account , then Visit This Website. It has a Facebook Account.How to Recover Facebook Account When Get BlockedSocial media is recover a Facebook account fastest growing medium to communicate and with recover a Facebook account help of social media your business thrives relentlessly. Nowadays, Facebook is crucially important to obtain information about your long lost friends and world events. What if your Facebook account gets blocked due to certain reasons? In this situation, you don’t want to lose your account’s access and we will help you out in that matter. There could be certain reasons for account blocking but there are numerous ways to recover your blocked account. We will understand recover a Facebook account ways in recover a Facebook account steps –Steps to recover blocked account –When your account gets blocked, you can’t access your account rather it will show you recover a Facebook account list of reasons (why you get blocked).1. When you get blocked, you don’t see your account in option of ‘find my Facebook account’. When you face logging trouble, you get recover a Facebook account options to recover your blocked account through “choose a security check”.2. You will get 2 options to recover your account. Select first option “Text a security code to your phone”. Now you will get one security code on your registered (registered with Facebook) number. Through this step, you can login to Facebook with phone number swiftly.3. If you don’t have registered number with you anymore, don’t lose hope because Facebook provides you with another option for ‘how to recover my Facebook account through friends’. This option is “Identify photos of friends”. Through this Facebook confirm your identity. So, click on this option.4. Now you need to verify some of your Facebook friends to get access to recover a Facebook account account. This gives you a way for.5. If you get failed in recover a Facebook account above step, Facebook gives you recover a Facebook account third but last option for ‘how to unblock my Facebook account from others options’. This option is “Upload a photo ID”. Select this option.6. When you select “Upload a photo ID” one new screen will pop up and you need to send a photo or scanned copy of any ID from group one. ID from group one can be your passport, driving license, marriage certificate and national ID card. Some of recover a Facebook account IDs from Group 1 are given below-· Birth certificate· Driver's license· Passport· Marriage certificate· Official name change paperwork· Personal or vehicle insurance card· Non-driver's government ID (ex: disability, SNAP card, national ID card, pension card)· Green card, residence permit or immigration papers· Tribal identification or status card· Voter ID card· Family certificate· Visa· National age card· Immigration registration card· Tax identification card7. If you don’t have any ID from group one Facebook gives you another option of “I don’t have an ID from group one”. Click on this option.8. After clicking on this option another window will pop up and it will ask you to upload 2 different Ids from Group 2. These IDs can be “Utility bill and a membership ID” and many more. Some of recover a Facebook account IDs from Group 2 are given below –· Bank statement· Transit card· Check· Credit card· Employment verification· Library card· Mail· Magazine subscription stub· Medical record· Membership ID (ex: pension card, union membership, work ID, professional ID)· Pay check stub· Permit· School ID card· School record· Social Security card· Utility bill· Yearbook photo (actual scan or photograph of recover a Facebook account page in your yearbook)· Company loyalty card· Contract· Family registry· Diploma· Religious documents· Certificate of registration for accreditation or professional· Professional license card· Polling card· Health insurance· Address proof card· Social welfare card9. You can get recover a Facebook account full information about Group 2 you need to click on recover a Facebook account option of “See recover a Facebook account complete list of IDs from group two”.When you complete this process of sending a copy of your ID to Facebook, it encrypts and then stores it securely. Facebook doesn’t show your ID to anyone. When your identity gets confirmed, you get a confirmation mail for recovering blocked account.How to View a Blocked or Deleted Profile on FacebookFacebook is a social networking website that connects friends and families from all over recover a Facebook account world. However, Facebook also has a use for a small business; Facebook can connect you with your customers, your employees, your clients and other businesses. In addition, many businesses now use Facebook for things that you normally would need a public relations company for. Product announcements, product recalls and special deals can all be announced on your Facebook page. If you have noticed one of your employees or clients has disappeared from your Facebook page, there is a chance that they have blocked their profile or deleted it. You can view a blocked profile using two methods.Log out of your Facebook account.Click recover a Facebook account address bar at recover a Facebook account top of recover a Facebook account screen. Erase any Web address that is currently listed.Enter recover a Facebook account URL of recover a Facebook account Facebook account that you suspect has blocked you. The URL looks like this: where "name" is replaced with recover a Facebook account account you are checking. If you do not know recover a Facebook account URL, there is no way to find it.Press "Enter" to view that person's Facebook page. If recover a Facebook account person's Facebook page appears, that person has blocked you. If you receive a Facebook error, recover a Facebook account account is deleted.Viewing A Blocked Profile If You Don't Have The URLLog out of your Facebook account.Navigate to any search engine.Enter recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account person or business you are trying to find. Try "name facebook" and replace "name" with recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account person or business. While you can block someone on Facebook, you cannot block them from viewing your page from an outside source.Scroll through recover a Facebook account found entries. If you find their Facebook account, it is a sign that they blocked you. If recover a Facebook account account does not appear at all, they have deleted their account.How to Retrieve a Deleted Facebook AccountFacebook is a useful tool for connecting with co-workers, employees, customers and members of recover a Facebook account community. If you want to make use of this social network but have deleted your account, there is no need to worry. Unless you filled out a form specifically stating that you wanted to delete your account with no possibility of recovery, recover a Facebook account developers at Facebook have made it quick and easy to restore your account and begin reaching out to those business contacts once again.1Navigate to Facebook in your Web browser.2Enter recover a Facebook account email address and password associated with your deleted Facebook account.3Click recover a Facebook account "Log In" button. You have successfully reactivated your Facebook account.How to Fix a Hijacked Facebook AccountYour Facebook account represents a virtual version of you and your business. Having that account hijacked amounts to an impostor conducting business or contacting your clients and friends disguised as you. It is imperative that your recover your account as quickly as possible and fix any damage potentially done by recover a Facebook account hacker. Facebook includes tools to both protect your account from hijacking and to recover it when it is hijacked.Security Question ResetClick recover a Facebook account “Forgot Your password?” link beneath recover a Facebook account Facebook login fields.Search for your account by username, email or phone number. After you locate your account, select “Email me a link to reset my password.” Check recover a Facebook account email associated with your account and enter recover a Facebook account six-digit code you receive in recover a Facebook account provided space to continue.Enter a new password in recover a Facebook account “New Password” box and then enter it again in recover a Facebook account “Confirm Password” box. Click “Continue.”Log in to Facebook and check for any posts made on your business page or your personal Timeline while your account was hijacked. Remove recover a Facebook account posts and notify your clients and friends of recover a Facebook account infraction.Trusted Friends MethodBrowse to recover a Facebook account “Forgot Your Password?” link found beneath recover a Facebook account Facebook login fields.Select recover a Facebook account “Trusted Friends” option if you cannot identify your account. Facebook issues a URL that you give to your trusted friends over recover a Facebook account phone. They use recover a Facebook account URL to receive a code.Call your trusted friends and ask them for recover a Facebook account codes. After you have recover a Facebook account codes, enter them into recover a Facebook account fields provided by Facebook and click “Continue.” Call -- don't email -- your friends. The hijacker may have access to your email account.Enter a new password in recover a Facebook account “New Password” box and then enter it again in recover a Facebook account “Confirm Password” box. Click “Continue.”Log in to Facebook with recover a Facebook account new password. Check for any posts made during recover a Facebook account suspected hijacking. Remove those posts and notify your clients and friends of recover a Facebook account hijacking.How to Determine if One Has Been Blocked on FacebookFacebook blocking is designed to make you and another user invisible to each other on recover a Facebook account social networking site. When you're blocked, you can't find recover a Facebook account other user in Facebook search results or see her profile or posts anywhere on Facebook. Just because a user disappears from your friend list, however, doesn't mean you were blocked. There are a few ways to investigate whether or not you were blocked, though there is no concrete way to discover who has you on a block list.1Conduct a Facebook search for recover a Facebook account former friend using recover a Facebook account search bar at recover a Facebook account top of any Facebook screen. If recover a Facebook account person has a common name, click recover a Facebook account "See more results" link at recover a Facebook account bottom of recover a Facebook account short list of results that appears to open recover a Facebook account full results screen. Click recover a Facebook account "People" link on recover a Facebook account left side of recover a Facebook account full search results screen and then apply one of recover a Facebook account search filters, such as recover a Facebook account location filter, to narrow down recover a Facebook account search. If you still don't see recover a Facebook account person for whom you are looking, she has either blocked you or deactivated her account. If you do see her, then she just removed you from her friend list but didn't block you.Ask a mutual friend if she can still see recover a Facebook account person's Facebook account. If recover a Facebook account mutual friend has also noticed that recover a Facebook account user is gone from Facebook, then your missing friend has most likely deactivated her account. If, however, recover a Facebook account mutual friend can still see recover a Facebook account user, then you have specifically been blocked from seeing recover a Facebook account profile.Conduct a Google search. Block settings don't apply to public search engines, so if your former friend's profile still exists, you can see recover a Facebook account Google result for her Facebook profile even if you can't view recover a Facebook account profile. Bear in mind, however, that some users have disabled their account from turning up in public search even when their profile is active. The Google cache is also not updated in real time, so a deactivated Facebook profile may still turn up in results for a few days.How to Make a Blocked Person Be an Unblocked Person on FacebookOnce you block a person on Facebook, not only can they not interact with you through Facebook comments, chat or messages, but they also have no access to your profile at all. This feature is useful when dealing with stalkers or other online harassers. If you have blocked someone accidentally or changed your mind about recover a Facebook account block, though, it is also reversible. You can change your Privacy settings to unblock and allow someone back into your Facebook world.Click recover a Facebook account down arrow next to "Account" at recover a Facebook account top right of any page on Facebook.Click "Privacy Preferences" from recover a Facebook account Account menu.Click recover a Facebook account "Edit Your Lists" link under recover a Facebook account Block Lists heading. It is at recover a Facebook account bottom center of recover a Facebook account page.Click recover a Facebook account "Unblock" link next to recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account person you want to unblock. A list of recover a Facebook account people you've blocked is found under recover a Facebook account Block Users section.How to Unblock Someone on TwitterYou can unfollow or block annoying people on Twitter with a simple mouse click. If you select to block them directly, they are automatically removed from your followers and banned from trying to follow you. Blocking someone is easier than unblocking him. You must search for recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account blocked account and you can unblock it only after you find it. Due to recover a Facebook account number of people using Twitter, this can be harder than it sounds.Navigate to Twitter in your Web browser and log in to your account.Type recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account blocked person in recover a Facebook account search box and press "Enter" on your keyboard. A list of results is displayed.Click "People" to view only people.Search through recover a Facebook account list of people to find recover a Facebook account blocked person.Click recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account blocked person, and you will see his profile in recover a Facebook account right side of recover a Facebook account Twitter window. Note recover a Facebook account "blocked" button replacing recover a Facebook account normal "Follow" button.Click recover a Facebook account "Undo" link you see next to "blocked" to unblock recover a Facebook account person. Now this person can follow you.Why Am I Blocked From Liking and Commenting on Facebook?If you cannot like or comment on posts on Facebook it's possible that recover a Facebook account user in question has blocked you -- this is particularly likely to be in recover a Facebook account case if recover a Facebook account problem only occurs with one of your contacts. You should also check for issues related to your browser which may be interfering with Facebook's functionality.Blocking on FacebookFacebook gives its users control over who they add as friends and who they block. If you've been blocked by someone else, you'll be stopped from liking or commenting on that person's content (though it may still appear if other mutual friends have been tagged in it). If you have been blocked, you cannot get in touch with recover a Facebook account user in question directly -- your only option is to wait and see if you are unblocked in recover a Facebook account future.Browser IssuesIt's possible that a problem with your browser is affecting recover a Facebook account way that you interact with Facebook. A quick way of testing this is by running Facebook in an alternative browser. Make sure you are correctly logged in to your Facebook account when trying to like and comment. Clearing your browser's data cache, restarting your browser, updating recover a Facebook account browser software to recover a Facebook account latest version and disabling any Facebook-related extensions can all help to resolve recover a Facebook account problem.Can You Block Someone From Your Business Page on Facebook?With a personal Facebook account, you can block another user using recover a Facebook account privacy settings. These settings are not available on Facebook Business pages, but you can ban users in other ways. You can ban someone from your page's admin panel, from a post recover a Facebook account person created on recover a Facebook account page Timeline or from a comment recover a Facebook account person made on a status you posted on your page. No matter what method you use, recover a Facebook account person will be permanently blocked from accessing your business page.Admin PanelClick on your business name from recover a Facebook account drop-down menu beneath recover a Facebook account arrow on recover a Facebook account menu bar of your Facebook page. Click recover a Facebook account "Show" button on recover a Facebook account business page to open recover a Facebook account Admin Panel.Click recover a Facebook account "See All" link in recover a Facebook account New Likes section to view recover a Facebook account list of people who like your business page.Click recover a Facebook account "X" next to recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account person you want to block. Select recover a Facebook account "Ban Permanently" check box on recover a Facebook account Remove confirmation box and click "Okay" to remove and block that person.Click recover a Facebook account "Hide" button to close recover a Facebook account Admin Panel.Timeline PostClick recover a Facebook account "X" near recover a Facebook account person's name on a message he or she posted on recover a Facebook account page.Choose "Delete" from recover a Facebook account drop-down menu.Click "Delete and Ban User" to remove recover a Facebook account post from recover a Facebook account business page and block recover a Facebook account person from recover a Facebook account page.Point to a comment recover a Facebook account person made on any post on your business Timeline. Click recover a Facebook account "X" that appears to recover a Facebook account right of recover a Facebook account post. A message stating, "You've Hidden This Comment So Only The Person Who Wrote It And Their Friends Can See It. Undo This Or Delete This Comment" appears.Click "Delete This Comment."Click recover a Facebook account "Ban (User Name)" link in recover a Facebook account line that states "You Can Also Report It as Abusive, or Ban (User Name)."How to Unfollow in FacebookAs a small business owner, you probably use social networking sites such as Facebook to keep up with other businesses and your customers. When you friend a customer or like a page, most of their updates appear in your news feed. If you want to unfollow a person or page's updates, you can do so by making some adjustments to your options.Go to your Facebook account. Your news feed is displayed on your home screen when you log in.Hover over a post from recover a Facebook account person or page you want to unfollow. A drop-down arrow appears to recover a Facebook account right of recover a Facebook account post.Click recover a Facebook account drop-down arrow and then click either “Unsubscribe” or “Unsubscribe from Status Updates.” You should no longer see posts from recover a Facebook account person or page.How to Find Facebook URLsEvery profile on Facebook has a unique URL, just like other pages on recover a Facebook account Internet. This URL may be a name or nickname, or it may be a string of random-looking characters; either way, it will take a browser directly to recover a Facebook account profile page it denotes. You can obtain someone's Facebook URL simply by going to his profile and checking your browser's current location, or by looking in recover a Facebook account Contact Information section of his profile information.Log in to your Facebook account, if you haven't already,Enter a person's name in recover a Facebook account search box at recover a Facebook account top of Facebook's interface. As you type, names matching what you've typed so far will appear; if you see recover a Facebook account person you're looking for, you can stop typing and use recover a Facebook account arrow keys and "Enter" to select a result. You'll be taken to recover a Facebook account person's profile page.Check your browser's address bar. The text that appears is recover a Facebook account Facebook URL of recover a Facebook account person you've looked up. You can also click recover a Facebook account "Info" link in recover a Facebook account left pane and scroll down to recover a Facebook account bottom, where recover a Facebook account URL will be listed under "Facebook" in recover a Facebook account Contact Information section.What Does "Invalid Recipients" Mean on Facebook?Regardless of whether you are trying to contact prospective customers on Facebook or messaging colleagues, getting an "invalid recipients" message alerts you to a situation in which Facebook cannot or will not deliver your message. The cause of recover a Facebook account message could be because of user privacy controls, suspended user accounts or even a simple typo.TypeYour phone carrier can't connect you to a number which doesn't exist and your email server can't send a message to an address that doesn't exist; similarly, Facebook can't send things to a user that doesn't exist. Just as you can misdial a number or type an email address incorrectly, you might have mistyped recover a Facebook account recipient's username or Facebook address.Blocked AccountsFacebook gives users recover a Facebook account option to block specific accounts. This prevents recover a Facebook account blocked account from contacting -- or in most cases even seeing -- recover a Facebook account user who blocked it. Similarly, recover a Facebook account user who blocked recover a Facebook account account won't be able to see or contact recover a Facebook account account he blocked. If you try to send something on Facebook to an account which you have blocked or which has blocked you, Facebook will treat recover a Facebook account user as if he doesn't exist and give you an error message. You can try checking your privacy settings to see if you have blocked recover a Facebook account user you are trying to message.User Privacy ControlsPrivacy settings might also cause an "invalid recipient" message. If recover a Facebook account user restricted accounts she isn't friends with, or accounts that are not friends of her friends, from searching for her or messaging her, Facebook could be preventing you from contacting that user.Inactive AccountsYou could also be getting an "invalid recipient" message because of a problem with recover a Facebook account account you are trying to message. If recover a Facebook account user you are trying to message has deactivated his account, then Facebook will consider him an invalid recipient. You can also get that message if you are trying to message an account which Facebook has suspended for violating its terms of service or in response to a report that recover a Facebook account account was hacked.How to Unmute on FacebookYou might love your friends and family, but that doesn't mean you're always going to enjoy listening to them. Although you can't press "Mute" in real life, on Facebook, you can hide updates from certain people without having to delete them from your friends list altogether. If you've unsubscribed from a friend's updates and changed your mind, you can remove him from your list of hidden friends, and his posts will once again appear in your news feed.Click recover a Facebook account pencil icon that appears when you hover over "News Feed" on recover a Facebook account left side of your Facebook homepage. Select "Edit Settings" from recover a Facebook account menu.Click recover a Facebook account "X" next to recover a Facebook account name of recover a Facebook account person you want to "unmute."Click "Save" to save your changes.How to Get Facebook Chat to Work With MirandaMiranda IM is an open-source multiprotocol instant messaging application available on Windows. The program supports a wide range of chat networks through recover a Facebook account Jabber protocol, including Facebook Chat. Although a Facebook account option is not explicitly available, you can quickly configure Miranda IM to access your Facebook Chat account by using recover a Facebook account Jabber protocol.Click recover a Facebook account Miranda icon and select "Accounts."Click recover a Facebook account "+" button to add a new account.Enter "Facebook" as recover a Facebook account name for recover a Facebook account account and select "Jabber" as recover a Facebook account protocol type, then click "OK."Select "Facebook" from recover a Facebook account listed accounts to modify recover a Facebook account account details.Select "Facebook Chat" from recover a Facebook account "Type" drop-down menu, then enter your Facebook username and password and click "OK."What Does Profile Unavailable Mean on Facebook?When someone's profile is unavailable on Facebook, this can mean one of a few different things. It could be that Facebook is experiencing an error, that their profile is in recover a Facebook account process of being upgraded, or that that they have opted to disable their profile or block you. This can cause problems if you are trying to contact a co-worker or view your business page, especially since recover a Facebook account error is not specific. While there is no way to find out for certain what recover a Facebook account cause is, recover a Facebook account problem will often solve itself in recover a Facebook account cases of upgrades or server errors.Profile UpgradingFacebook releases periodic updates to profiles, and they don't always roll out for everyone at recover a Facebook account same time. If your profile is working correctly and someone else's isn't, it could be that Facebook is updating their profile to recover a Facebook account next or most recent version. You can help ascertain whether recover a Facebook account problem is with their profile alone by trying to look at other friends' profiles as well. This process does not usually take long, so check back in a few hours to see if it works again.Temporary ErrorFacebook may experience recover a Facebook account occasional error that causes profiles not to load correctly. If it is affecting your profile, you may not be able to log in. If it is affecting someone else, you may not be able to see their profile, and they may not show up on your Friends list either. Most of these errors won't affect all users simultaneously; if other profiles are still working, this does not discount recover a Facebook account possibility of a server problem. If such an error is causing recover a Facebook account issue, it should resolve itself within a few hours.Blocked UserIf a user has blocked you, or if you have blocked them, you will not be able to see their profile. If one of you has blocked recover a Facebook account other, you will not see their name appear as a hyperlink, but in recover a Facebook account event you still attempt to view their profile you may see recover a Facebook account "Profile Unavailable" error. Note that recover a Facebook account effects of blocking are identical no matter who initiated recover a Facebook account block.Disabled AccountIf a user disables their own account, it will not be accessible to anyone, until they re-enable it. For all intents and purposes, recover a Facebook account account will not exist -- it will be removed from Friends lists, comments will disappear and tags will no longer be linked. If you try to access this profile via a link or bookmark, you will see this error. If recover a Facebook account account is completely deleted or banned by Facebook, however, recover a Facebook account error will be slightly different, and you will see, "Sorry, this page isn't available."How to Hide a Posted Link on FacebookThe social networking website Facebook provides your business with a platform to connect with customers through a feature known as recover a Facebook account Timeline on your Facebook business page. You can use recover a Facebook account page to post new product updates and sales, and your customers can share their own product reviews and concerns. There may come a time when a user posts something that is not appropriate on your business page, such as a link to a vulgar website. In this situation, recover a Facebook account best course of action is to hide recover a Facebook account offending link so that it no longer appears on your Facebook business page.Log in to your Facebook account and go to your business page.Hover your mouse cursor over recover a Facebook account Facebook post that contains recover a Facebook account link you want to hide.Click recover a Facebook account icon of a pencil in recover a Facebook account upper right corner of recover a Facebook account post.Click "Hide from Page" in recover a Facebook account pop-up menu. The post containing recover a Facebook account link is hidden from view and no longer appears on your Facebook business page.How to Find Your Facebook HTMLIf you want to develop an application to interface with your Facebook account, want to display some information from recover a Facebook account Facebook account on another Web page or are simply trying to create a Web page similar to one of your Facebook pages, you need to take a look at recover a Facebook account HTML behind recover a Facebook account page. Finding your Facebook HTML is not difficult, you just need a Web browser. Furthermore, if you need a part of recover a Facebook account code, you can copy it.Turn on your computer and open your Web browser. Navigate to Facebook, enter your email address in recover a Facebook account "Email" text box and enter your password in recover a Facebook account "Password" text box. Click recover a Facebook account "Log In" button to log in to your account.Navigate to any of your Facebook pages. To find recover a Facebook account HTML code, you need to have recover a Facebook account Web page open in your browser.Go to "Tools," select "Web Developer" and click "Page Source" in Mozilla Firefox to see your Facebook HTML. In Google Chrome and Internet Explorer, right-click somewhere on recover a Facebook account Web page and select "View Source." This will display your Facebook HTML code.How to Make Someone Stop Showing Up on Your Facebook NewsfeedPeople you are friends with on Facebook show up in your main News Feed due to recover a Facebook account fact that you have a relationship link with them on Facebook. If you are tired of seeing someone's posts show up in your News Feed but you don't want to remove them from your friend list, you can unsubscribe from all of their news updates. This will completely remove them from your News Feed.Log in to Facebook.Scroll through your News Feed until you see an update from recover a Facebook account person you want to stop showing up on your News Feed.Click on recover a Facebook account drop-down arrow next to their name, then click "Unsubscribe from X" where "X" is recover a Facebook account person's name.How to Use Google Docs to Match an Email to FacebookGoogle Docs can provide your business with a convenient way to access important business documents, even if your regular work computer isn't available. Since Google Docs stores all documents in recover a Facebook account Google Drive, recover a Facebook account proprietary Google cloud storage system, your documents are always waiting for you -- and recover a Facebook account viewers that you designate -- on recover a Facebook account Internet. Google Docs saves recover a Facebook account email addresses of people with access to each document, and you can access these addresses and match them with Facebook profiles quite easily.Log in to your Google Docs account. The home screen, containing a list of all your documents, will appear automatically.Click on recover a Facebook account title of any document that was sent from an email address you want to match to Facebook. The document will load automatically.Click "Share," located on recover a Facebook account upper right side of recover a Facebook account page. A popup window called "Sharing Settings" will appear. This screen contains recover a Facebook account email addresses that have access to that Google document.Highlight recover a Facebook account address and then copy it.Launch a Web browser in a new window and then navigate to Facebook and log in to your account.Paste recover a Facebook account copied email address into recover a Facebook account search box at recover a Facebook account top of recover a Facebook account Facebook page and then click recover a Facebook account Search icon. The Facebook account associated with that email address, if any, will appear on screen.Click recover a Facebook account name on screen to load recover a Facebook account Facebook profile of recover a Facebook account person using recover a Facebook account Google Docs email address. You have now successfully used Google Docs to get an email address that is matched with one on Facebook.How to Block Facebook in Windows XPOccasionally, when working on your computer, your focus can stray and you might find yourself procrastinating by checking your Facebook account. This can be very distracting and prevent you from getting work done, making it an costly time-waster in a small business. If you or your employees have difficulty resisting recover a Facebook account impulse of checking Facebook, you can block it entirely on your Windows XP computers using recover a Facebook account Hosts file.Navigate to your Hosts file at "C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc\hosts." Access this by opening recover a Facebook account "My Computer" window and typing recover a Facebook account location into recover a Facebook account address bar. Press recover a Facebook account "Enter" key to load it.Right-click on recover a Facebook account "Hosts" file and select to open it with your Notepad text editor.Scroll to recover a Facebook account bottom of recover a Facebook account file and paste in:Save recover a Facebook account edited file and close it.Restart your computer to finish blocking Facebook from your Windows XP system.Locked out of your Facebook account?There may be times when you go to sign in to Facebook but can't seem to remember recover a Facebook account email address or password you used when creating your account. Luckily, Facebook makes it easy to recover your account information.However, you will need some sort of information to recover your account, whether it's your email address, phone number, or name.Has your Facebook account been blocked? Follow these simple stepsGot Your Facebook Account Disabled? Here’s Why and How to Get it Back?Got Your FacebookThis wikiHow teaches you how to recover a Facebook account that you've disabled, or that's been disabled by Facebook. If you deactivated your account, you can reactivate it yourself by logging back in. If Facebook disabled your account, you'll have to submit an appeal to get your account back. Depending on recover a Facebook account circumstances, they may or may not grant your request. If you permanently deleted your account more than 30 days ago, you can't recover it.If you temporarily deactivated your account, you can recover it whenever you like by logging back in, or by using your Facebook account to log in somewhere else.[1] If you chose recover a Facebook account option to permanently delete your account, you'll have a 30-day window during which you can reactivate your account.If your account has been nominated for deletion for more than 30 days, it's gone, and you can't recover it. Try creating a new Facebook account.Enter your Facebook password. Type recover a Facebook account password you use to log into Facebook into recover a Facebook account "Password" text box to recover a Facebook account right of where you typed in your email address or phone number.If you don't remember your password, click Forgot Password? and follow recover a Facebook account on-screen instructions to reset it.Click Log In. If your password is accepted, you will be logged back into your account.Click Cancel Deletion if prompted. If you deleted your account and it's been fewer than 30 days since doing so, you'll have recover a Facebook account option to cancel deletion.If you believe your account was disabled in error, you will use this form to request that Facebook further investigate recover a Facebook account issue.Enter your email address or phone number. Use recover a Facebook account email address or phone number associated with recover a Facebook account account deactivated by Facebook.Make sure you have access to this email address or phone number, as Facebook will use it to communicate with you.Enter your name. Type recover a Facebook account name you use on your Facebook account into recover a Facebook account "Your full name" field.This may be different than your legal name.Upload a picture of your ID. This can be a driver's license, a learner's permit, or a passport. To do so:Take a picture of your ID's front and back and move it to your computer. You can use your iPhone or Android phone to snap recover a Facebook account picture, attach it to an email message to yourself, and then download recover a Facebook account attachment to your PC or Mac.Click Choose Files.Select recover a Facebook account pictures to upload.Add details for your appeal. In recover a Facebook account "Additional info" field near recover a Facebook account bottom of recover a Facebook account page, enter any extra information that you think Facebook should know. Some things to include are:If your legal name is different than your Facebook name.If you suspect that your account was hacked by someone.If you have visual evidence that someone other than you is responsible for abusive or abrasive actions on your Facebook account.If you have been harassed by someone whom you suspect is behind your account's behavior that led to it being disabled.Click Send. It's in recover a Facebook account bottom-right side of recover a Facebook account form. Your appeal will be sent to Facebook. If they decide to revoke recover a Facebook account deactivation, they will send you a message letting you know that your account is now available to access.How to unlock a blocked Facebook accountFacebook has some pretty tough security measures when it comes to blocking user accounts. With an estimated two billion users globally it does all it can to control fake accounts, stop privacy intrusions and cyber stalking, and deter hackers.If your account is blocked you may never know recover a Facebook account reason why but it could be repeated attempts to log in with an invalid password or your account is hacked and is sending out spam posts.Facebook also automatically monitors geographical locations where accounts are accessed from. For instance, if you are based in recover a Facebook account UK and there is a log in to your account from a server in Nigeria, a log out and then another log in a few minutes later from a server in recover a Facebook account UK then Facebook will also automatically block recover a Facebook account account.How to unlock your account if it is suspendedTo get back into your account you need to log into Facebook and follow recover a Facebook account instructions to verify your identity. Facebook may offer a number of different ways for you to confirm your identity but generally you will be presented with one of recover a Facebook account following options.Identifying friends based on their tagged photosAnswering your security question (if you added one to your account)Contacting a friend you've previously chosen to help youProviding your date of birthRequesting that you upload a photo of yourselfThe steps you are asked to follow will vary according to recover a Facebook account options you are presented with. For instance, if you have recover a Facebook account option to get help from friends you will have to take recover a Facebook account following steps:Select a few friends who you know in person and who are directly in contact with you.Once you do so and click on continue Facebook will send a security code to recover a Facebook account friends who you have just selected.You then have to contact those friends, and request them to send you recover a Facebook account code they have received from Facebook.Once you gather recover a Facebook account codes from your friends, you use recover a Facebook account code to unlock your Facebook account.However, recover a Facebook account method you use to successfully unlock your account might also depend on recover a Facebook account reason because why your account was locked in recover a Facebook account first place.In some instances you might need to try different methods of unlocking your Facebook account such as uploading a photo ID. Essentially this is a way to verify your tagged photos to confirm that you are who you claim to be.This step is actually relatively straightforward:Enter your email address or phone numberYour full name as it is listed in recover a Facebook account accountUpload a photoClick on recover a Facebook account link in an email you receive to reactivate recover a Facebook account accountWhichever account reactivation options you are offered recover a Facebook account steps are relatively straightforward and it shouldn’t take long for you to get back into your account.What To Do If You Are Locked Out Of Your Facebook AccountMore than two billion people use Facebook to connect with their loved ones, friends, and colleagues, share details of their lives through photos and videos, do a live stream, find good deals, and even run businesses on it.With all this data uploaded to recover a Facebook account platform, Facebook has taken steps to protect it by increasing security measures and enforcing guidelines more strictly than before. 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These reasons can be categorized into user or system error, disregard for recover a Facebook account Terms of Use and Community Standards, site maintenance, or security and include any of recover a Facebook account following events:You’re logged in on multiple devices, which signals to Facebook that your account may have been hacked.Facebook may think that you’ve violated one or more of its rules.You may have received a phishing message that misdirected you to a fake ‘Facebook’ website, and you logged in. When this happens, recover a Facebook account cyber criminal may use your credentials to access your Facebook account, and Facebook detected and flagged recover a Facebook account activity.Someone reported your account as fake and requested for its removal, reported your content as abusive, or marked it as spam. 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Check out our guide on nine tips to use for better privacy on Facebook privacy.How To Access a Locked Facebook AccountIf you’re sure your Facebook account is clear of all recover a Facebook account above reasons, and you think it has been locked or disabled by mistake, reach out to them directly so that your concerns are adequately addressed.You can also complete and submit an online form and Facebook will investigate recover a Facebook account issue. 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Enter this code and once you’re done with any of these security checks, your account will still be visible but you’ll have to wait at least 24 hours before trying to access it again.How Tto Avoid Your Facebook Account Getting Locked AgainWe’ve looked at some of recover a Facebook account major reasons why your Facebook account can be locked or disabled, but sometimes it may happen without warning so you won’t have control over it. 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We hope you now know how to gain back access to your account using recover a Facebook account ways listed above, and keep yourself from getting shut out again.If you intend to leave Facebook altogether, we have a guide on how to download and delete your data from Facebook and permanently close your account by deleting your Facebook pages, groups, and accounts.How Do I Reactivate My Facebook Account?Has your Facebook account suddenly been disabled? Don't worry, it can happen to anyone (even celebrities like Roger Ebert), and it can usually be fixed with a little effort and a careful approach.First, you should get acquainted with Facebook's Statement of Rights & Responsibilities. We know, it's a long document but it contains important guidelines on what you should and shouldn't do on recover a Facebook account world's biggest social network.Why Was My Account Disabled?Often, recover a Facebook account reason your account was disabled is an inappropriate photo you've posted — nudity of any sort is a big no-no on Facebook. Hateful comments are also frowned upon, as is impersonating others, using fake names and unsolicited contact with other users for recover a Facebook account purpose of "harassment, advertising, promoting, dating, or other inappropriate conduct."Your account may also have been blocked. This means it hasn't been completely disabled but you cannot use certain features, such as sending friend requests or messages. The block is temporary, but Facebook will not lift it for any reason, so you should just wait it out and try to inform yourself about what you may have done to cause recover a Facebook account block and try not to repeat recover a Facebook account offense again.Also be aware that your account simply may have been hacked or compromised by a third party, causing Facebook to disable or block your account if they posted inappropriate content.Fixing The ProblemIf your account has been disabled in error, it's time to take action. The first thing you should do is fill out this form, which is available even if you're not logged into Facebook.You can also try sending an email to to ask why your account was disabled, as well as explaining that you are willing to remove any offending content in order to get your account reinstated.Facebook's help section is also available even if you cannot log into Facebook. 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This is a way to “reset” recover a Facebook account ad account so approvals start happening automatically.Disabled accountsIf your personal ad account is disabled, it can be dramatic both professionally and personally. The first and best option is to use recover a Facebook account chat appeal process I mentioned above. And don’t forget to keep trying, even if you get a no recover a Facebook account first time. I had one student who had to try five times over recover a Facebook account course of three weeks to get her account re-instated.If none of that works, set up a new ad account using recover a Facebook account following process:Finding a trusted friend, colleague or family member.Go to recover a Facebook account person's house (so you’re on a different IP address).Have recover a Facebook account person open up a brand new business manager account.Set up a new ad account in recover a Facebook account business manager.Set up a new Facebook business page.Get a new type of payment, such as a new credit or debit card.Have them make you an admin on recover a Facebook account new page and account so you have full administrative privileges.You might even need to run ads to landing pages that are on a different domain than you were previously.Please note that you will no longer have a personal ad account, but a business manager account that’s “technically” owned by your trusted friend. There’s no way to recover a personal ad account unless you can get support to reinstate it, or set up a whole new personal Facebook profile, but this is against recover a Facebook account terms of service agreement.Related: 5 Social Media Rules Every Entrepreneur Should KnowIf it wasn’t a personal ad account that got shut down, but a Business Manager ad account, ignore recover a Facebook account steps above. You’ll simply need to create a new ad account in your business manager, a new Facebook page, and set up a new payment method. In some cases, you may not have to create a new Facebook page. That’s why recover a Facebook account testing method I mentioned above is so handy.This is a great time to note that it’s infinitely easier to get a new account set up when you start by using recover a Facebook account business manager, rather than running ads from a personal ad account. If you’re a business owner, set up your business manager as soon as possible and stop using a personal ad account.If you’re certain you didn’t break any rules, be kind and persistent. Very persistent, as it could take several days to get someone from recover a Facebook account Facebook policy team to review your account. When you do get in touch with someone, if you’ve invested a good amount of money in Facebook ads, you like recover a Facebook account platform and play by recover a Facebook account rules, let that person you’re speaking with know that.Finally -- and it goes without saying -- if you had your account disabled because you legitimately broke recover a Facebook account rules, it’s time to review Facebook ad policy or find another way to advertise!How to protect yourselfWhether you’ve had your hand slapped or not, here are some tips to keep you from having to deal with losing your account:1. Test ads before making a million of them. Set one up and get it approved before you duplicate recover a Facebook account ad sets and start running multiple ads at once.2. Be very familiar with recover a Facebook account policies:Restricted content examplesProhibited content examplesPolicy overview3. Have multiple administrators on each account for back-up.4. Don’t set up ad accounts with payment information until you’re ready to use them.5. Only have payment information on recover a Facebook account account you’re actively using.6. Use recover a Facebook account Business Manager and stop using your personal ad account.7. Watch recover a Facebook account comments on recover a Facebook account ads carefully and if you see negative feedback, address it promptly.8. Don’t let recover a Facebook account frequency get too high on recover a Facebook account ad (meaning users are seeing recover a Facebook account ad multiple times). This increases recover a Facebook account risk of negative feedback.9. Do a final sweep of recover a Facebook account ad copy, ad creative and recover a Facebook account landing page it goes to before you try to get it approved in recover a Facebook account first place.Spend time nurturing your page and your ad account. Don’t go for crazy and try to post risky ads. Ultimately, if your account is shut down, don’t dismay; it’s happened to many of us. Be persistent in finding a solution to be back up and running as quickly as possible.How to get your photos off Facebook and delete your accountFacebook opened its doors to students at elite schools in 2004, and recover a Facebook account entire world in 2006. Unsurprisingly, many of recover a Facebook account now billions of users on Facebook have over a decade’s worth of photos, videos, and posts on recover a Facebook account social network.If you’ve been thinking about leaving Facebook (we have no idea why that might be on your mind) but have been worried about losing that trove of content you may only have on Facebook, here’s good news: You can actually download everything you’ve ever uploaded to Facebook.How to recover your photosGo to on a computer and click recover a Facebook account little arrow at recover a Facebook account top-right of recover a Facebook account screen:Click on “Settings & Privacy,” then “Settings”In recover a Facebook account top left corner click “Your Facebook Information” and you’ll see an option labeled “Download your information” — click that.You can choose your format, your preferred date range, and what information you’d like to download. Then click “Create file.”Facebook will send you a notification when your information is available to download. In recover a Facebook account meantime, it’ll appear as “pending” in recover a Facebook account “Available files” section of recover a Facebook account “Download your information” section.Be patient: If you’ve been on Facebook for a long time, it’ll be a large file. (I joined in 2005, and my archive was 925 MB.)The file structure doesn’t make a lot of sense, and there will likely be duplicates, but it should all be there.The bad news is that Facebook scrubs all recover a Facebook account metadata from recover a Facebook account photos, meaning if you were to upload them to Google Photos or Apple Photos, it’ll look like they were all taken recover a Facebook account day you got your download from Facebook. It’s not ideal, but it’s better than losing all recover a Facebook account photos forever.If you want to take recover a Facebook account final plunge and purge yourself from recover a Facebook account platform entirely, here’s what to do:How to delete your Facebook accountIt’s quite simple: click this link (which is quite difficult to find on Facebook itself.) You have to re-enter your password again and fill out a captcha. After you press recover a Facebook account OK button, Facebook will then email you to confirm recover a Facebook account deletion process has started. Facebook says it can take up to 90 days for all your data to be deleted from its servers, and to avoid logging back into recover a Facebook account site for a few days after you’ve requested deletion, as it will, bizarrely, reinstate your account.But make sure to delete recover a Facebook account app everywhere—on your phone, your tablets, smart TVs, fridges, or whatever other crazy places you’ve logged into Facebook over recover a Facebook account years—and it wouldn’t hurt to delete all recover a Facebook account apps you have connected to Facebook (that could still have data on you) before you delete your account.How to unblock someone on FacebookAs you may know, some people can be extremely annoying on Facebook. Luckily, there’s an easy fix for that. You can just block them. This means that recover a Facebook account individual you block can’t see recover a Facebook account things you post on your timeline, tag you, invite you to events and groups, start a conversation with you, or add you as a friend. Nice!Of course, you can always unblock a person if you decide to. But just how exactly can you do that? A lot of users are having trouble in this area, as recover a Facebook account option is buried in recover a Facebook account settings of your account. To make things a bit easier for you, we’ll show you just how to unblock someone on Facebook on your Android device. You’ll find all recover a Facebook account info you need below.How to unblock someone on FacebookUnblocking someone on Facebook is an easy task that can be completed in less than a minute if you know where to find recover a Facebook account option. The first thing you should obviously do is open recover a Facebook account Facebook app you have on your Android device. Then just tap on recover a Facebook account menu button that’s located in recover a Facebook account top right corner, scroll down until you see Account Setting, and tap on it.Conclusion:Once that’s done, recover a Facebook account next step is to select recover a Facebook account Blocking option, which will show you a list of all recover a Facebook account people you have blocked on Facebook. Find and tap on recover a Facebook account one you want to unblock and then just select Unblock once recover a Facebook account option appears in recover a Facebook account pop-up window.That’s all there is to it. Once you’re done, recover a Facebook account individual you have unblocked will again be able to see your posts, send you messages, and so on.

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