Author Archives: Fawn Weaver

About Fawn Weaver

Fawn Weaver is the USA Today and New York Times bestselling author of Happy Wives Club: One Woman's Worldwide Search for the Secrets of a Great Marriage, adopting the same name as the Club she founded in 2010. The Happy Wives Club community has grown to include more than 1 million women in over 110 countries around the world. She’s an investor in real estate, tech sector and lifestyle brands. When she’s not writing or working, she's happily doting over her husband of twelve years, Keith (and sometimes manages to do all three simultaneously).

The Greatest Gift of Marriage Can Be Most Clearly Seen in Tough Times

The Greatest Gift of Marriage Can Be Most Clearly Seen in Tough Times

Yesterday, I sat balled up on the couch, nauseous, and wanting nothing more than to go to go to bed and remain there all day.

It was a tough day.

Hormones pumping through my body, a combination of Clomiphone and estrogen.  Our third fertility treatment would happen tomorrow so excitement abounded.  But first, I needed to get through the nausea of the day.

As always, there he stood.  My knight in shining armor.  My best friend in this life.  There he was to encourage me, to hold me in his arms.  To remind me that everything happens for a reason and although our journey to parenthood has been a long and windy road, it’s all been worth it.

We’ve grown from the challenge.  With every failed pregnancy test, we’ve reassured each other that if it is meant to be it will happen.

When we weren’t sure if having children on our own was possible, we decided to adopt.  When we met the pregnant mother of our soon-to-be adopted daughter, joy filled our hearts.  

Months later -after the baby’s room had been painted a beautiful shade of jasmine yellow, plush carpet we’d spent time rolling on in the store was installed, and the sturdy hand-me-down baby crib from our godson was brought- the child’s mom decided to keep her child at the last moment.  

We were stunned.

We all drove to San Diego -Keith, me and Keith’s parents- to go to the doctor with the woman who was carrying our soon-to-be adopted child.  We were excited to see the ultrasound of the baby we would soon be taking home.  Instead, we returned to Los Angeles with empty hearts, following a call from the agency to advice that the mom had decided to keep the baby.

It was her child to raise.  We respected her decision.  And then resumed our attempts of conceiving with the help of a fertility doctor.

Now, a couple of failed attempts later, I sit on the couch writing this post full of hope.  I am hopeful that the child I’ve longed to have for more than 16 years, has been conceived.  When the doctor looked at all the healthy eggs my ovaries released today (thanks to the added hormones), he assured us that we’ve got a great chance of a child coming alive in my stomach this month.

I don’t know what will happen.  I won’t know for several weeks if this fertility treatment worked.  What I do know is no matter what happens, Keith and I will just keep trying.  And while we’re trying, we will continue loving.

We’re a team.  Sometimes we win.  Sometimes we lose.  But whatever we do, whatever we experience, we do it together.  Every desire, every hope, every dream – they are ours to desire, hope and dream together.  And if we weren’t meant to have children -that is God’s decision to make not ours- we decided long ago that we would be perfectly happy with our family of two.

There are many wonderful things about marriage, but this remains my favorite: having a partner on this road called life.  This is, I believe, the greatest gift of marriage.  And although tough times may cause us to grapple with some loses, as long as we do it together, we will prevail in the end.

The journey is, at times, full of ups and downs, twists and turns, winding roads and potholes.  But we’re on this journey together.  We are a team.  We will win together.  We will lose together.  And in the end, if we can remain a team, we will be victorious.

If we can remember that two are better than one and a team in sync will always win, child or no child, we will succeed. In the end, for those who stay the course, you always win.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day! 

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THE BOOK For other secrets of couples happily married, and how you can be too, make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club book.  I traveled to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to figure out what makes marriages happy.  It’s a marriage book line none other you’ve read before. I guarantee it.

The Day I Almost Yelled At My Husband (How the Law of Acceleration in Marriage helps to keep your emotions in check)

The Day I Almost Yelled At My Husband

The speed of my feet was no match for the flood of thoughts rushing through my mind. I walked quickly up and down the residential hills of our community.

“How dare he do that? After I opened my heart and our home so his parents could be comfortable, how could he be so thoughtless?”

Keith and I were in our early years of marriage and it had only been a few months since his parents moved in with us. When we extended the invitation, I made one very important request.  Please, no junk food in the house.

Ten years prior, I’d spent six months slowly losing 25-pounds and had maintained the loss.  One of the bedrocks of my weight-loss success was not keeping junk food in the house.

A few months into our new living arrangement, I woke up to the aroma of freshly baked pies and just about hit the roof.

The smell had been wafting through the air-conditioning vent of our bedroom for hours. After not being able to sleep because my sweets-loving body wouldn’t allow it, I finally got out of bed and went in the kitchen. 

To my dismay, Keith’s Mom was happily making homemade pies – lots of them.

I could feel the anger rising inside of me.

I returned to our bedroom, anger directed at Keith, “This isn’t right. It’s not right. I’ve done everything I can to make them comfortable…”  I was upset with him because I’d asked him to address the issue on an earlier occasion and he didn’t.

I knew if I stuck around for even two more minutes, I would be embarking upon the first argument ever with my loving husband. So I bolted.

I threw on my tennis shoes and decided to walk until all the angry voices in my head quieted down. For the first hour, those voices got louder and louder.

“You have every right to be mad!” one voice said. “You should call Keith and give him a piece of your mind!” another one jabbed.

What was going on at that moment was an example of what I like to refer to as the Law of Acceleration in Marriage.

In 2010, Toyota drivers began reporting incidents of their cars accelerating while they were pressing on the brakes.  One Toyota owner shared his story with a local paper.  For thirty miles, he swerved in and out of traffic, pounding on his brakes, at one point narrowly missing a big rig.

A police officer responding to the driver’s 9-1-1 call pulled up beside him and instructed him to hold down the brakes with his full might while engaging the emergency brake.  Finally, the car came to a halt.

What Toyota drivers were experiencing is what so often happens to us when our spouse hurts, disappoints, or makes us sad. Rather than sticking with the original emotion—that place of vulnerability—we allow the voices in our head to cause us to accelerate.  When we zoom ahead, we go from being hurt to angry, from disappointed to frustrated, and from sad to mad.

The day of the “junk food incident,” I knew if I didn’t get out of the house—right then, right there—I was going to lose control. So I kept walking.

I was gone for six hours (only stopping twice, once to leave a message for Keith letting him know where I’d gone and once at a diner to get something to eat). By the time I returned home, I’d completely silenced the voices and was able to share my hurt from a place of vulnerability.

We talked about it. I expressed why I was hurt. He expressed his difficulty in trying to make me happy while wanting his folks to feel comfortable in their new place.

Keith saw my side and I saw his. We decided not to say anything to his folks so they could continue feeling comfortable in their new home. Instead, we designated a “junk-food cabinet” and I simply stayed out of it.

In reading this, you might think I lost this battle. But I can assure you the outcome was completely worth the loss. The moment I returned from my walk, Keith’s eyes met mine, he pulled me into his arms, embraced me, and told me he was sorry.

In that moment, I understood firsthand the law of acceleration in marriage and how to put the brakes on my thoughts to ensure we could communicate heart-to-heart rather than head-to-head.  

Until Monday…make it a great day!

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

 

THE BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club bookI had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book like none other.

Standing Up For What Is Right For Your Family (No Wife Bullies Here)

Standing Up For What Is Right For Your Family

There has been a lot of talk lately about teen bullying, for good reason.  The increased suicide rates due to cyber bullying are alarming to say the least. 

But what happens when the person doing the bullying is a grown woman?  Didn’t realize that was happening?  It happens more often than you think.

In Monday’s post, Bronnie Ware shared with us the 5 regrets she’s heard most often from those in the final days of their lives.  

She spent several years caring for the dying in their homes and their number one regret?  ”I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.”  

Last week, after writing an article entitled What is the Role of the 21st Century Wife, I knew I’d get some interesting emails. 

I was, after all, suggesting couples choose for themselves what their roles should look like in their households and not allowing others to influence what they know to be right for them. 

What I didn’t expect, however, were women declaring my desire to continue working outside of the home after having children “disgusting” or emails like this one:

“Please DO NOT have a child if you don’t want to raise it. Why would you bring in someone to your life and then turn around and dump it on someone else to raise, minute and instill values in them? That is abandonment and neglect. NO ONE can love your child like you will. How dare you be so selfish?

“Why bother having a child if they are going to get shoved aside for your career…your career could have to change tomorrow if you became disabled in someway…yet that baby will ALWAYS depend on you as it’s mommy. You preach all this loving your husband crap, but toss the baby (that is formed in your body!) out because you don’t want to be inconvenienced. That disgusts me. 

“Feel judged? I don’t care. You hurting a child by abandoning them for someone else to raise sickens me.”

So if I understand this, my desire not to be a stay-at-home mom –which is supported and encouraged by my husband- is not only selfish but the equivalent of “dumping” my children?  I am not able to love my child infinitely, and care for them at the highest level, if I work outside of the home?

My baby sister Christy Joy, on the other hand, is a wonderful stay-at-home momma of three.  She’s living the life of her dreams.  Being a stay-at-home mom from the beginning was not only something her husband supported, but encouraged.  Yet, somehow, that was not enough for many of the women around her. 

At times, she’s been made to feel less than by women who’d determined being a stay-at-home mom was outdated.  Her decision was treated like she’d just single-handedly reversed all the strides we’ve made as women to be treated as equal.

But isn’t that equality at its best?  Having the ability to choose for yourself what you want out of life?

After Christy Joy’s third child, she began a thriving online fitness community, PregnantNotPowerless.com.  She wanted to contribute to the income of her household while not giving up on her dream of being a stay-at-home mom.

My sister and I are a lot alike in many areas, but in this area we’re different. She thrives off of being a stay-at-home mom and wife.  I thrive off of being a serial entrepreneur who dotes over her family nonstop.  Both of us told repeatedly by other women what is best for our families

The fortunate thing for both of us is we have always been strong in our conviction for what works in our household.  We decided early on that we owed explanations to no one.  God and family…then everything and everyone else.  We remain confident we are doing what is right…for our families.

So to the wives who have felt bullied: Stand your ground.  Make decisions based on your family and your faith alone.  The opinions of others (or their interpretation of fact) are just that.  They may be valuable, but only inasmuch as they line up with your own values.  If opinions thrown your way are contrary to what you and your husband have decided are best for your family, in one ear…out the other.

And to the wives who didn’t realize what you are doing is the equivalent of bullying: Grace to you.  Now, is a beautiful time to change.  With marriages falling faster than flies, wives around us don’t need wife bullies, they need our support.  They need to be built up; not torn down.

QUESTION: Have you ever felt bullied by other wives and/or moms?  If so, how did you handle it?  

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What is the Proper Role of a 21st Century Wife?

What is the proper role of a 21st Century Wife

Differences…that’s what makes us all so beautiful.

“My dream is to be a stay-at-home mom and wife.”

Those were the words uttered to my loving husband more than ten years ago.

His response?

First, laughter (and I mean the gut-wrenching belly laugh type).  Then, a look of utter confusion.

“Honey, I’m not trying to be funny but you’re not built to be a stay-at-home mom.  Every day, I’d come home from work and the kids would run up to me, ‘Daddy, please save us from mommy!  She’s trying to turn us into another one of her projects!’”

The pure horror expressed on his face while pretending to do what he envisioned our children would do instantly flipped a light switch on in my head.

He was right.  OH SO very right.  I would likely drive our children insane as a stay-at-home mom.  

I know this, in part, because early into our marriage my one attempt at being a stay-at-home wife quickly went down in flames.

It happened in 2004, shortly after an abrupt resignation as the business manager of an award-winning restaurant.

Following my decision to give back my minority ownership stake, Keith thought it would be a good idea if I took off a few months before returning to work.

That sabbatical was short lived.  (Keith jokes it was so quick it’s like it never happened.)  Within weeks, I was consulting on various projects and working to free a death row inmate in Texas I’d stumbled across online. (long story…)

Before the end of the month, I’d hired private investigators, consulted defense attorney Tom Mesereau (who happened to be thick in the middle of a trial defending Michael Jackson), began giving the defense attorney instructions, and in less than 12 months that young man was off death row.

Within the first week of my so-called sabbatical, I realized being a stay-at-home anything is simply not the way I’m wired.  At least not then (and even now, a decade later).  Somewhere along the road of life, I’d bought into the notion that I’d be a better wife and mom if I remained at home.  My husband freed me from that thinking and encouraged me to embrace the woman God created me to be.

My friend, Courtney Joseph, author of Women Living Well, absolutely LOVES being a homeschooling stay-at-home mom and wife with sole responsibility of domestic duties.  It’s been her desire since she was a little girl and she’s now living out that dream.  The first time I met Courtney, I found it incredibly refreshing to see the pure joy in her eyes when she talked about being a stay-at-home mom and wife.  

The same excitement I feel when teaming up with my husband to flesh out a business idea or start a new company is what Courtney feels when she’s cooking, cleaning and serving her family full-time.

Courtney is the perfect example of the proper role of a 21st century wife.

And so am I.

What’s beautiful about being a women in the 21st century is the power of choice.  Courtney can choose to be a stay-at-home mom and I can choose to be in the corporate workforce.

Courtney loves her life and is the perfect wife for her husband, Keith.

I love my life and am the perfect wife for my husband, Keith.

(Yes, we really do have husbands with the same name who both love, honor, adore and respect us.)

Radical feminist have long tried to define the role of wife.  So have conservatives, liberals and the media.  When I released my book, Happy Wives Club earlier this year, media across the pond pounced on it and said I was returning women to the 1950s. (Clearly, the press in the UK had not actually read the book.)  

So what is the proper role of a 21st century wife?  Whatever you want it to be.  Whatever brings the most joy to you and your spouse.  

You are beautiful.  You are wonderful.  You are unique.  So don’t make your role as wife look like a cookie cutter image of anyone else.  Don’t allow anyone outside of your home to define the roles within it.  

Free yourself from the judgement of others.  Follow your passions.  Don’t be afraid to dote over your spouse or to give everything to your marriage.  There are only two people in this world who should define the proper role of husband and wife in your household: You and your husband.

QUESTION: How do you define your role as wife?

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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The Definition of a Happy Marriage

The Definition of a Happy Marriage

The Definition of a Happy Marriage

On numerous occasions over the past couple months, I’ve been asked three interesting questions:

What is a happy wife?  

What does a happy wife look like?  

What is a happy marriage?

I’ve always found it difficult to answer those questions because, in my mind, there could be no universal answer where complete subjectivity is required.

Then I stumbled across a post on ModernMarried.com (its creator, Maggie Reyes, is one of my absolute favorite marriage bloggers) entitled The Definition of Modern Marriage.

For a reason I’m not quite sure, while reading her post, every place where she wrote the phrase “modern marriage,” I changed it in my head to “happy marriage.”  

For the first time, I soon realized, I was reading the answer to those three subjective questions in a universal way.

Ladies (and some gentlemen), I introduce you to the beautifully simplistic words of my wonderful friend, Maggie Reyes.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Let’s start with a scandalous declaration shall we?  The definition of a happy marriage is…there is none.

There isn’t one way to fold sheets, or climb mountains, or be a wife.  There is only your way.  And my way, and his way and her way.  There is no wrong way either.

What’s absolutely perfect for me – blogging, making travel plans with the hubs, having an alarm that says “kiss your wife” on his phone that makes us laugh every night – has nothing to do with what is perfect for you.

And that’s okay.

We cause ourselves so much pain by thinking and believing that we have to live up to our (divorced) Auntie’s idea of marriage or my great grandmother’s ideal relationship.

We really don’t.

What we need to do is find what happiness and integrity means to us.  And then do that.

Define what love means to us.  And then be that.

Brenè Brown says vulnerability is your greatest strength.

I say marriage makes you vulnerable and strong. It brings out the best and worst in you and then it changes you in ways you could have never expected.  For the better.

I tell everyone I know we need to re-define marriage.  Together as a society.  Individually as couples. Every day.

Nate Bagley with Loveumentary.com asked me recently if I could only give one piece of advice and never write another article ever again, what would I say. 

My answer?

Question your assumptions. 

Leave yourself open to interpretation.  Let life surprise you.  Question your assumptions.  So you can learn.  And teach.  So your mind can be broken open and your heart can overflow with awe.

Question your assumptions about what your husband should or should not do or what your marriage should or should not be.

Listen with love.

Question your idea of who you should be.  What is a wife?

It’s whoever you say you are.  It is your husband’s closest friend and confidant.  It is who you need to be for him, God and yourself.

Savor the freedom of knowing that if you didn’t like the wife you were yesterday, you can start again today.

And tomorrow.

And the next day.

You can make your marriage sacred.  And soulful.  And funny.  And kind.

You can choose every day to look for the love.  And find it.

Marriage is a choice we make every day.

Choose to make it your own.

Whatever that means.

And declare it wonderful.

Or at the very least – custom-made.  Just for you.  Everyday.

Like a Love-Latte. 

The definition of a happy marriage is, there is none.

What is your definition of a happy marriage?  Please share in the comments.

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Happy Wives Club Book

 

 

THE BOOK: It’s been described as, “Like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage.” Make sure to check out the Happy Wives Club bookI had the great honor of traveling to 12 countries on 6 continents, interviewing couples happily married 25 years or more, with 1 mission only: to find out what makes marriages happy…and keeps them that way.  It’s a marriage book line none other.

Top 10 Facebook Best Practices (How My Fan Page Grew to 700,000)

Top 10 Facebook Best Practices

NOTE TO FACEBOOK REPS: If you happen to stumble across this post, which I’m sure you will, please don’t ding my Facebook page for sharing a “how-to” on building and engaging on your site.  Your algorithm is brilliant and I promise not to pretend to know it (especially, because you’re likely tweaking it as we speak).

For most of you who aren’t familiar with my Facebook page, it is aptly titled Happy Wives Club, and has officially crossed the 700,000 mark.

For those who visit this site often, you know I exclusively write posts related to shining a positive spotlight on marriage around the world.  

Never have I ventured into writing about things like social media or building a Platform and after this post, I will happily return to writing articles on my passion: Inspiring marriages to go from good to great and from great to extraordinary.

But after studying Facebook for more than 2,000 hours over the past several years, and being asked by more bloggers and authors than I can remember to share my tips on building and engaging a Facebook community, I decided it was time to write this post for them.

A couple weeks ago, I was speaking at the SITS Girls Bloggy Boot Camp in San Diego, and a professional blogger came up to me afterward pretty excited.

She said she’d heard me give tips on building a Facebook page at the same conference in Dallas months before and her page went from less than 30,000 likes to 117,000 in less than 3 months.  

She applied the principles I mentioned in my talk and wanted to thank me.  When she first approached me to share this news, I had to think about when I’d spoken about Facebook because I couldn’t recall giving a talk on that subject.  Then I remembered someone else at the conference was speaking on the topic and saw me in the room and said, “Fawn Weaver with Happy Wives Club is here and she probably knows more about Facebook than any of us,” and asked if I had anything to add.  

I casually spoke for less than 5 minutes on the topic and from that 5 minutes, this blogger more than quadrupled her community. 

There are three major social networks I use consistently: Pinterest, Twitter, and Facebook.  I am a believer in doing one or two very well rather than trying to figure them all out (learned that from Michael Hyatt’s book, Platform, which I highly, highly recommend for building and engaging a like-minded community) so I manage Twitter and Facebook myself and have a community member manage Pinterest.

Pinterest is amazing because we can upload a post written 4 months prior (like this one and this one) and have it go viral, being shared more than 1,000,000 times.  No other social network can, as consistently, take old content and make it new again.

I love Twitter because I have connected with some of the most amazing people through that social network. Many of which are highly influential and unlikely to have reached out to me any other way.  They followed me, I followed them back and then a relationship began being built.  I connect with bloggers most often through this social network and find their smart phone app to be the easiest, by far, to use.

That being said, my absolute favorite social network is Facebook. (Pinterest and Twitter reps: please don’t ding me for this…I love your networks too!!)  The reason Facebook is my favorite is that is how I connect daily with this beautiful community of more than 800,000 women.  I’m wordy (as you can tell by this post) so 160 characters or less is really tough for me to create a meaningful dialogue.

Yes, Facebook is constantly making algorithm changes that drive me a little batty at times because I have to spend two weeks trying to figure out what changes were made and how to adjust my posts to ensure the Happy Wives Club community sees them.  But it’s worth it.

Facebook is my number two driver of traffic and when I was releasing my book, Happy Wives Club, it was one of the main ways I shared it with the world.  My Facebook page has continued to grow at an average rate of between 1,000-2,000 a day for the past year.

Of course, there are anomalies when my Facebook page absolutely explodes, like the week Glennon Melton with Momastery.com answered on her blog a question I posed to her as a part of the blog tour for my book.  Instead of using my website, she included the link to my Facebook page and then Huffington Post picked up that blog post.  

On top of that, because of the launch of my book, #HappyWivesClub was the #1 hashtag trending worldwide on Twitter.  All this made for amazing growth.  More than 16,000/day were hitting “like” on my page and my engagement sky rocketed to 300%.  But as I said, this is an anomaly.  Most of the growth on my Facebook page has been good old fashioned hard work and a desire to build an engaged community.

Now, I know for most brands and bloggers, Facebook is the most frustrating social network.  I’ve heard every complaint under the sun.  Some of them are valid but many of them simply aren’t accurate.  What I’ve learned is if you just go with the flow and try to see each change as an improvement, you’ll find something great in each change (this is the same principal for a happy life, by the way ;) ).

Here are the most common complaints I’ve heard and my thoughts on each one:

COMPLAINT #1:  Facebook only shows my posts to a very small fraction of my community.  I worked hard to get those likes and they won’t even show my posts.

MY RESPONSE: Thank you, Facebook!  It’s not that I don’t want to hear from the pages I “like” but take off your brand, author or blogger hat for a moment and look at it from your community’s viewpoint and see how it would feel if Facebook actually took your suggestion and showed all of the posts, from all the pages you “like,” to you.  

Take me for example.  I have 260 pages on Facebook that I “Like.”  If each of these pages put up 4 posts a day (which is MORE than enough, in my opinion, and I’ll tell you why later), I’d be looking at more than 1,000 posts a day from people who are not my “Friends.”  So when my friend in New York announced she was pregnant by posting the ultrasound picture on her Facebook page, I missed it because I was getting hundreds of posts in my timeline from the hundreds of bloggers and brands whose pages I follow.  

Yes, I absolutely LOVE sites like The Dating Divas and enjoy going to their Facebook page often, but do I really want to see each and every post they put out?  No.  Why?  Not because I don’t adore their posts but because I want to know my girlfriend in New York is three-months pregnant.  Does that make better sense when you take off your brand or blogger hat and put on my “fan” hat?  If not, give it some time…it will.    

COMPLAINT #2: Facebook forces me to pay for anyone to see my posts!

MY RESPONSE: Put up better posts.  And stop putting up so many.  Listen, I won’t pretend to fully understand the Facebook algorithm. Those folks are way too smart (shout out to Sheryl Sandberg who was kind enough to contact me within a couple days of receiving a copy of my Happy Wives Club book and who, likely doesn’t know, my book and hers have been placed right above one another in Targets around the country for the past couple months) and my brain only attempts to partially keep up.

This time, take off your blogger or brand hat again and put on your “fan” hat.  If you, like me, have liked 260 pages and want to read certain things they post, don’t you want to read their best?  Seriously.

As a follower of many bloggers on Facebook, some of the stuff put up is just junk.  It’s not well thought out, regurgitated filler from another page.  Speaking of which, if you are taking graphics from other Facebook pages without giving credit, stop it.  Karma is no joke and if you want your page to grow, I assure you this is not the way to go about it.  

Someone took the time to create a graphic, and put a watermark on it or a URL, so leave it there.  Why?  Because that is what is going to also help you grow your page (more on that in my Best Practices section below).

Create content people want to see and more will see it.  If you put up a post and Facebook shows it to 50 people in your community and 25 “Like” it, guess what?  Facebook shows it to another 100.  And if 50 of those like it, Facebook shows it to another 500 and so on (these aren’t the exact numbers, because I don’t know Facebook’s algorithm, but you get the gist).

Here’s an example of the reach for a couple recent posts of mine:

How I got 700,000 likes on Facebook - post reach

 

As you’ll notice, the post on the left was seen by close to 2,000,000 people.  But you’ll also notice the post has a share-to-like ratio of more than 1-to-1.  This is important.  Not only how many people “Like” your post but how many think it worthy enough to share.

The post on the right was only liked by 365 people and shared by 23 people so Facebook only showed it to 50,000 people (which likely equates to less than 5% of my community size because some of those who saw this were friends of those who follow the Happy Wives Club community page).

If I were to guess how Facebook weights these things, posts that are “shared” would be considered more valuable than those simply “liked” and thus will be shown to more people.  At least, that has been my experience.

COMPLAINT #3: Facebook doesn’t refer traffic to my site.

MY RESPONSE:  Again, put up better content.  Use images as often as possible, even when putting up blog posts that contain links.  Putting the blog link in your comments and then writing in the status update to “see link in the first comment” is hurting you.  I know you think you’re getting around Facebook’s algorithm with this “trick” but I assure you they are smarter than you.  They really are.  They’re smarter than all of us and the sooner we accept that the better.

For those accessing your Facebook page via their mobile (which is more than 50% of those who come to the Happy Wives Club site from Facebook), by not making the link easy to access, you have just lost hundreds, if not thousands, of people who would have been interested in reading your post had you made it easy for them to get to.

As I said, Facebook is my #2 referrer of traffic and there have been times when it has moved into the #1 position.  If you post great content, and people click through, Facebook will show that content to more people.  Promise.

Now, that we’ve talked about the top 3 complaints I hear.  Let’s move on to the top 3 mistakes I see most often.

MISTAKE #1: You determine you don’t have time to engage on your Facebook page so you outsource it.

MY RESPONSE: Bad move.  Facebook’s calling card is authenticity.  People know when you’re being fake on that social network.  And they know when it is not you putting up the posts.  The Obamas have it right when they decided they would sign their posts “BO” and “MO” when it’s them so people know when they are engaging directly with them.

You’re not fooling anyone.  If you have someone else running your Facebook page…your community knows it.

I am the only person with access to my Facebook page.  I have no other admins.  If someone is engaging on Facebook as Happy Wives Club, it is me.  The reason is no one else can replicate my voice…or heart.

When I first began my Facebook page, I outsourced it to a social media company.  They were wonderful.  They really were.  My Facebook page jumped to 10,000 likes pretty quickly.  BUT, and it’s a big but, the engagement was in the toilet.  People were clicking “like” but could care less about the mission of Happy Wives Club.

So I took over the account and engagement rose.  Prior to Facebook’s recent algorithm change, which seems to have impacted pages with over 500,000 likes the most, my engagement was usually between 100-150%.  That made it one of the most engaged non-celebrity pages on the web.  Right now, my engagement is somewhere around 60% and it will probably take me a couple weeks to figure out what message Facebook was trying to send in this most recent algorithm change and responding to it in a way that gets my page back to 100% engagement.

Facebook is not free.  It will take your time and energy but is worth it if you truly want to engage with your community.  

If you choose to hire an outside firm to manage your Facebook account, still be engaged.  Give them the content to post on your page.  People did not follow you or your brand to hear from an outside firm.  They followed YOU and you need to continue to deliver that if you are to not only grow your Facebook community but to increase your engagement.

MISTAKE #2: Using third-party apps to post on Facebook.  

MY RESPONSE: Wowzers!  Stop that.  I love BufferApp but not for Facebook.  I think Hootsuite is wonderful.  But again, not for Facebook.  If you aren’t posting live, make sure to use the Facebook scheduler if you want your posts to be seen.

I know, I know, it’s more convenient to post to all your social networks at one time.  But again, I ask you to take off your blogger or brand hat for a moment and this time put on the Facebook hat.  Why in the world would they want to show something on their site you haven’t even taken the time to post there?

Create content for Facebook that is specific to what your Facebook community wants and desires from you (which is oftentimes different than what your Twitter and Pinterest communities want from you).

MISTAKE #3: Not proactively looking for those on the Facebook site who your message might resonate with and should know you exist. 

MY RESPONSE: There are few things in life where the motto, “If you build it they will come” is applicable.  In most cases, that is not the case with Facebook.  As of October 2013, there are more than 1.25 billion Facebook users.  If you want to reach them, I recommend three things:

1. If you have a website, make the Facebook button visible and at the top.  Don’t make it difficult for those who have already found you through other means to find you on Facebook (or your other social networks for that matter).  Many only include the “Share” buttons on their pages.  I highly recommend including the “follow” button in a visible place everywhere you are on the web that will allow it. (If you look at my side bar, you’ll see the button at the top and then again midway down on the sidebar using a different design.)

2. Create quote memes or attractive graphics with your URL at the bottom.    If I were to guess how most find the Happy Wives Club Facebook page, it is because of the quote memes I post (I recently hired someone to help me with this because art truly is not my gift so it was taking me far too long).

There are tons of services out there that can help you create the best graphics.  When I first began, I created them all in Powerpoint because I didn’t know how to use Photoshop.  And then I found sites like PicMonkey that make it easy for folks like you and me to be able to create great graphics for free. 

When I’m traveling and don’t have time to create a new quote meme (and my new graphic designer doesn’t either), I have a handful of like-minded sites I visit with similar missions and I’ll share their graphics with my community.  This way, my community continues to be encouraged each day, even while I’m traveling.  

But whatever you do, do not rip them off of other sites and add your URL.  Bad juju.  If you do that, others will likely do that to you in return.  This is something I know first hand as people crop my URL off all the time and post the meme on their own pages.

To create great quote memes, consider getting a monthly account with an image source (or taking your own photos, something I’m not skilled at so I buy them).  I use ThinkStockPhotos.com which is a royalty-free images service by Getty Images.  Then find the right quotes, add your URL to the quote meme (preferably designed into the image – which is what I do now to protect my images from having the URL cropped off) and voila – you’re on your way to getting your URL shared around the web!

3. Set aside a Facebook budget to find new community members.  Of the 1,000 “likes” the Happy Wives Club currently gets on average a day, less than 30 of them are paid.  Yes, you read that right.  The percentage of organic likes on my page is 97%.  

How I got 700,000 likes on Facebook - Jan 2014 paid likes

I spend between $2-5/day on Facebook ads and have run the exact same ad since 2010.  It’s simple, not tricky (like using a Dr. Oz picture and pretending he has anything to do with your page), and tells women about this Club.  The ad simply invites them to join a club for women like them.  

Figuring out the ad thing takes some time and can be expensive initially.  The reason is you have to figure out where your core audience resides and that takes some time.  For me,  I created a separate ad campaign for every English speaking country around the world (I told you I’ve spent a lot of time on this).  I used the same ad but created a new campaign for each so I could see the performance of each one.

I quickly discovered I was spending more than $1/per like in the US and Canada and less than $.10 in the Philippines.  So I adjusted my ad spend for each of those countries.  I knew I had a worldwide message so it didn’t make sense to limit it to the US.  Even still, US residents account for more than half of my Facebook community because they have seen posts from my Facebook page on their friend’s pages, as well as Facebook recommendations.

I wish I could give you the best advice here but all I can say is test out a number of things.  I personally prefer PPC (pay-per-click) ads but PPI (pay-per-thousand-impressions) might make more sense for you.

Facebook has a lot of options.  Try them out but make sure to stay within a budget that allows you to maintain the campaign in the long term (not just the short term) because it might take someone seeing your ad and then seeing three of their “friends” share something from your page before a person actually clicks through.

People sharing my posts on their page and Facebook suggestions, not ads, is how most find my page.  Only a small number of people actually click through the ad (a part of that is the graphic is really bad because I created it before I had any idea how to design) but them seeing it and then seeing the name Happy Wives Club again and again on their friend’s pages cause intrigue.  They come to the Happy Wives Club page, see what we’re all about, and decide for themselves if they want to join.

How I got 700,000 likes on Facebook - Jan 2014 Likes Origin

I’ve seriously just written an eBook here (maybe I should have thrown this in a PDF and sold it for $1.99?  Oh well…) so I’ll just wrap this up with this: 

Top 10 Facebook Best Practices:

1. Engage yourself.  If you want to hire a social media person, go for it.  It’s your money.  But make sure you are continuing to engage and stay connected because people are following your voice and your heart, not a social media company.

2. Use graphics.  Lots and lots of them.  The rule of thumb is those on Facebook are incredibly visual.  You will get more likes and shares if you use more graphics.  And something as simple as image size makes a larger difference than you might think.

Stick to the best Facebook sizes.  Of course, the best sizes could change but as of today, the ideal size for quote memes is 403px X 403px.  This size displays well on mobile devices, as well as in your timeline.

When you upload links, my recommendation is not to use the image they pull from the site as it is inevitably reduced to 400px X 209px.  What I do is take whatever my post graphic size is (which is usually 403px X 605px – the latter number doesn’t matter as long as it is a vertical image and isn’t too much longer than 600px) and crop the portion of it that will make the best image at that reduced (400px X 209px) size.  Then I click on the hyperlink below it that says, “Upload Image.”

*NOTE: BufferApp gives different Facebook size recommendations than I use and they are much savvier than me so maybe try both sets of sizes and see which one works best for you.   

3. Don’t over post (I generally post 2-4 times a day at my peak times).  Just like TMI is not good in all other areas of life, it’s not good here either.  I spent months figuring out what time was best to post.  I would post on one day at 5am and then the next day at 5:30am and then the next day at 6am and so on.  I did this for two months to figure out what time the HWC community was engaging online.  

Lucky for you, Facebook now has a nifty tool that does this for you.  Just go to the Insights tab and then click on the Posts tab and you’ll see your best times to post there.  Now, you’ll still want to test out what times work within an hour of the times Facebook shows because I can tell you my most engaged time each day is about an hour off from what Facebook says.  But then again, they’re having to gather info for 1.6 billion pages so narrowing it down within an hour sounds good to me.

I found the 4 times when the majority of my community is online and engaging and I only post during those times.  This ensures all my posts get solid engagement and Facebook rewards you for that by showing your posts to more of your community because they know you are only posting what your community wants to see (no spam, please).

4. Figure out what your community wants most and give them nothing but that.  If I post something and it’s a miss with my community, it is unlikely you’ll ever see anything like that on my page again.  

Google Analytics is great for your site (love them!) but I wonder if you ever take the time to actually look at your Facebook Analytics?  This is going to, by far, give you the most accurate and detailed information.

How I got 700,000 likes on Facebook - Post Analytics

The above is a recent post of mine.  Here I can see how many people not only clicked “Like” or shared this post but I can also see how many clicked through.  This is one of the best ways to see what your community wants from you.

5. Do not copy my brand page.  I say this partly out of selfish reasons and partly because it simply won’t help.  Your community is different from mine and what yours wants and needs is different from mine.  You can look at mine and others with high engagement for inspiration, but ultimately, you need to figure out what your community shares most (because that is how others find you) and keep giving them things they’re inspired to share with their friends.

6. Put in the time or bow out.  Listen, if you don’t have the time to figure out what your Facebook community wants from you, then don’t even waste your time.  Some social networks are good for those with no time.  Facebook is not one of them.  Either make the time to engage or find a different social network that suits your needs.

7. Don’t be afraid to expand your community beyond North America.  I recently received an email from a Happy Wives Club member who was sharing my Facebook site with a friend.  That friend then told her about a YouTube video about buying “likes” and concluded because my top city was Quezon City, I “bought” the fans.  Nope.  But I do get a lot of “likes” from the Philippines.

As a matter of fact, because the Filipino community has been so engaged on the Happy Wives Club Facebook page and blog, I traveled to Makati City and Quezon City -both in the Manila metro area- to interview happily married couples for my book.  Time Magazine just named Makati City the “selfie” capital of the world because they post more selfies on Instagram than any other city.  

So if you have a message that will resonate with Filipinos worldwide, I’d actively look for a way to engage them.  I’ve found them to be the most grateful, wonderful, fun-loving people, who are also highly engaged on social media.  Not to mention, most of them have tons of friends and family members living in the US so when they share your posts on their Facebook pages, they are being shared to a large number of people on both sides of the Pacific.  

Top 10 Facebook Best Practices - breakdown of audience

 

Top 10 Facebook Best Practices - breakdown of audience engagement

Although I don’t target those in the US with ads, you will notice in the screenshot above that my number one country in “fans” and engagement is, by far, right here at home.  My top cities are all in the Philippines because they are densely populated and have tons of people on Facebook.  But as you can see, that doesn’t represent the full picture.  

By ignoring potential community members in other countries, you miss a great opportunity to introduce your mission/brand to not only them, but their friends and family in North America and Europe (the two areas with the highest Facebook ad prices).  

Keep in mind, this is not limited to the Philippines.  You might find your message resonates in Fiji or South Africa or many other places around the world.  Bottom line is the US is only a small portion of the rest of the world so if your message can reach beyond our borders…go for it!

8. Don’t buy Facebook “fans.”  They’re not real.  I got an email a couple days ago from someone who seemed very genuine and said she was listed by Forbes as one of the Top 50 social media folks in the world.  The odd thing is she was selling me on a company she suggested I use (and according to her email was not being paid to promote) to buy “real” Facebook likes.  She said she was suggesting it because she’d looked at my Facebook page and thought I could use it.

My response was simple.  Nearly 1K new likes a day, less than 30 of those are via ads…I think I’m doing okay.  But I have to tell you, her pitch was strong and if I’d received it several years ago, I probably would have been interested.

As a matter of fact, I tried buying a small number of fans back in 2010 -before Facebook explicitly banned the practice- and realized very quickly that it’s no way to build an engaged community.  Although the company claimed these were all “real” fans with genuine interest in my page, when I looked at the makeup of those who actually clicked “like” on my page, almost all of them were men from the Middle East. I’d say it’s pretty unlikely any of those guys had a “genuine interest” in the Happy Wives Club.  

I learned then the only way to do it is through intentional learning and serving, and for the 4 years that followed, I’ve done just that. 

9. Facebook parties are great…but not for engagement.  Okay, so here’s the deal with the Facebook parties where you partner up with a ton of other bloggers and those on your page “like” their pages and vice versa.  I tried this once a couple years ago and my experience led me not to participate in one again.

The reason is my engagement dropped tremendously.  Now, my posts were being shown to people who could care less and only followed me because of the prize we were promoting.  I gained 20,000 or so followers, lost about 30% but my engagement went into the toilet.  I also began receiving rude comments for the first time on the page…ever.

We’re a positive community, no judgement at all, so snarky comments are very rare.  But immediately following the one Facebook push (aka party) I participated in, my engagement dropped and the number of rude comments went through the roof.

That being said, I know many who have found success with these Facebook pushes, but for the most part, those who participate in them see their engagement percentage dramatically decrease in the weeks that follow.

10. Recognize you have a community not “fans.”  Unless you’re a celebrity, it’s unlikely people are following you just to know about you.  Build a community.  Take the time to get to know those in it.  Find out why they are following you and how you can serve them.

Facebook is a very powerful tool and if you use it to be of service to others, you will find it is incredibly rewarding for you and for those within your community. 

That’s all folks!  I just wrote this post off the top of my head, without writing anything down first, so I’m sure I’m missing a few key points, and hopefully it explains like it sounds like one giant run-on sentence.  When I sat down to write this, I had no idea it would be so long.  Sorry about that…  

As time goes on, if I think of things I forgot to add here or if Facebook makes any major algorithm changes that impact my engagement or page growth, I’ll put it in a section below entitled “Update” so you can see it.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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(Quick plug: I traveled around the world in search of the universal secret of a happy marriage, and all the amazing details are in my USA Today® and New York Times® bestselling book, Happy Wives Club.  The executive editor of Brides Magazine described it this way, “It’s like Eat, Pray, Love but not down on marriage!” I think I like that description.)

**UPDATE**

1. Of course, the day after I post this, the number of people “talking about” my Facebook page dropped to 290,000 – the lowest percentage in as long as I can remember.  It’s a great thing this happened though because it reminded me of a best practice I forgot to include: Stay Calm…and just keep serving your community.  With every Facebook algorithm change -or times of crazy busyness when you can’t engage like usual- you are likely to see a significant drop.  No worries!  It’s only the engagement for that week and you always have the current week to return your engagement to normal levels (exactly what I’ll be working on the next couple weeks).

Update on my “talking about this” stat.  As soon as I posted the above update, I went to my Facebook page and clicked on Insights > Posts to see if the peak times and days of the week my community is engaging had changed.  And guess what?  It had.  So I adjusted the times I posted and within 36 hours, my “talking about this” jumped up to 399,759 people.  Within a week, that number had increased to 682,200. 

Facebook engagement overview - Top 10 Facebook best practices

Facebook Talking About This Stat - Top 10 Facebook Best Practices

 

Again, the only significant change I made to achieve the above results was adjusting the post times to match the newly listed times in my Insights>Post page.  The engagement pattern of my community changed and so I needed to quickly adapt.   On Facebook, the smallest tweaks can make a major difference.

2. Here’s a tip I forgot in the post: I don’t recommend status updates when posting quote memes or graphics (unless you’re introducing a post link).  The reason is you might get alot of “likes” but will likely lose some shares.  For instance, if I post a quote meme that says, “I love my life as your wife,” and write in the status update, “Love you, sweetheart,” all those who call their husbands, “Honey” or “Baby” or whatever pet name they choose will not share that graphic.  You’ve just personalized it for you…and taken away their ability to personalize it for themselves.  Test this out.  All those I know who have made this switch have seen their “shares” increase tremendously.

3. I have a feeling I’m going to be adding a lot of updates in the days ahead.  Just thought about another important point.  ENGAGE with your community.  Don’t just set up posts through a scheduler and then never go back to engage with those who posts comments.  Even if you only engage with a few people per post, every time I respond to someone in my Facebook community, they get a notification that says, “Happy Wives Club likes your comment” or “Happy Wives Club just responded to your comment.”  It lets them know that they matter and are actually engaging with someone real.

4. October 8, 2015 update: I was sending this link to a colleague so I hopped on to see if there was anything in this post from 18 months ago I’d change. Nope. Ironically, even with the addition of so many new social networks, not much has changed. My engagement doesn’t look much different than it did when i wrote this post. So as long as you adjust with Facebook’s algorithm changes a few times a year, rather than giving up, you will win with this social network. My Facebook like count as of today is 936,000 and my post engagement for last week was 8 million (it usually hovers closer to 4 million when I am engaging as mentioned above…but it’s a bit spiked this week…not sure why just yet but will study more and let you know).

Why Most Celebrity Marriages Don’t Work (And Yours Does!)

Why Most Celebrity Marriages Dont Work

**This is an excerpt for an article I wrote this week for Popsugar.com.**

I must admit, my heart broke a little bit when Khloe Kardashian filed for divorce from Lamar Odom. I’d sent her an advanced copy of my book to her home, Happy Wives Club, just days before the news broke of his infidelities. Talk about bad timing!

And still, even though the guy clearly had issues and put her through the wringer, there was a part of me that hoped he’d get his act together, come back begging, she’d accept him and all would once again be well in the Odom household.

When Brad and Jennifer broke up (I know, I’m reaching back pretty far), I proudly staked my claim with Team Aniston. But in my heart, I hoped Brad would come crawling back and they’d reconcile. A sentiment, for some odd reason, I held on to for . . . ahem . . . nearly a decade.

I’ve got a soft spot for celebrity marriages and if I could keep them all together I would for one simple reason. When every magazine splashes across their front cover the demise of another celebrity marriage, there are “regular” people who are holding on to their marriage by a thread, who at that very moment choose to give up.

We see ourselves in the lives of those we admire and if their marriages can’t work — with all the glitz, glamour and fame — how can ours?

It’s simple. Most celebrity marriages aren’t built to last. But here’s the good news. You and I aren’t celebrities so we’ve got a much greater shot at creating our very own happily ever after.

Most celebrity marriages don’t work because of this very simple fact: The spotlight melts any and everything that gets in its way. We build them up, place them on pedestals, and then watch in amusement as they attempt to live up to the lives we’ve created for them.


Couples like Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson or Michael J. Fox and Tracy Pollan (both married 25 years) are rarer in Hollywood than a bankable movie star these days. But in watching and listening to them, we can learn a lot about what it takes to make a marriage work (even under the most strenuous circumstances).

**Please join me at Popsugar.com today where I had the honor of writing the remainder of this article.

Until Monday…make it a great weekend!

Happily married Is My Reality

Happily Married Is My Reality…And I Won’t Apologize For That

Happily married Is My Reality

It’s quite a fascinating thing to comprehend.  Over the past couple of weeks, I have been featured on more than 30 news, radio and online media outlets following the release of my debut book, Happy Wives Club.  

From Huffington Post to Popsugar to Essence and Brides Magazines.  From Good Morning Chicago to Sunrise in Australia. And in nearly every interview I seem to be answering, implicitly or explicitly, the same underlying question:

Are the women of this Club, and me in particular, really telling the truth about being happily married?

Some, like one major newspaper in London, have flat out questioned my “lack of realism.”  And following each interview, I’d pause and reflect, “Can they possibly believe all those who say they are happily married are lying?”

This beautiful online community has grown to include over 700,000 women in more than 110 countries around the world.  And even still, interview after interview, the term, “happily married” continues to be questioned as if it’s some sort of mythical god.

In an interview this morning, it all came to light. 

The wonderful host of the show said something to the effect of, “I don’t want this to be a negative interview.  I really don’t.  But what about reality?  The reality of marriage is that it’s not always going to be happy.  Things aren’t always going to go right.  So where is the reality in this?”

Interestingly enough, that same host also began the interview by proclaiming she was happily single.  So my response to her was simple.  Just as it is possible for her to be happily single with all the ups and downs, twists and turns, and bumps and bruises of life, it is just as possible (and realistic) for every married person to have that same opportunity.

What I love most about being married is I have someone in the car with me while I drive that sometimes long and windy road called life.  I have with me, my best friend and trusted confidante, who at times is the driver and other times is the passenger.  He is there to hold my hand, encourage and support me, and to help me along this sometimes rocky road.

Just as the interviewer this morning, and so many others like her who love their lives as single women (11 years ago, I’d been counted in that number too), I’m enjoying the heck out of my life as a married woman.  This doesn’t make me unrealistic.  It doesn’t call for a questioning of reason.  I’d never question a person’s ability to be happily single.  I’ve had the pleasure of living that life too.

Happiness was not handed to me on a silver platter.  If you’ve read my book, it probably threw you for a loop -as it did many of my closest friends- that I’m the survivor of two suicide attempts earlier in life.  I left home just shy of my 16th birthday and spent my 18th birthday in a homeless shelter (the first of many I temporarily called home as I made the uncomfortable transition from youth to adult).  

Creating a life a happiness, and a marriage like the one I have the great fortune of enjoying, did not come naturally.  At one time, misery consumed my life…literally, almost until death.  And now, joy and happiness does the same.

So to the question of, “Am I really telling the truth about being happily married?” the answer is unquestionably, undoubtedly, unabashedly Yes.  This, no matter how difficult it may be for some to believe, is my reality.  And I’m grateful for it each and every moment I have the honor of living it.

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Girlfriends’ Guide to a Great Marriage: 3 Easy Ways You Can Strengthen Marriages Around You Every Day

Girlfriends Guide to a Great Marriage

Throughout my travels this past week, to meet with women from the Happy Wives Club community, one thing quickly became abundantly clear.  We are increasingly becoming the silent majority.

Yes, forty-seven percent of marriages end in divorce.  But the larger percentage remain together until death do them part.  That is not to say all of them are happily married, but my goodness, certainly a larger number are happy than we would be led to believe.

I thought about this while on a call with an editor for Brides Magazine yesterday.  I was sharing with her how throughout my travels I’ve discovered those who are happily married generally remain silent while in groups where women are complaining about their husbands or marriage.

Maybe it’s because we don’t want to come across as know-it-alls, haughty, judgmental, disconnected or fake.  We want to be able to relate to our friends and in many occasions, we’ll poke fun at our husband’s flaws –even when they don’t really bother us- just to be a part of the conversation and feel connected with the group.

As I was sharing this with an editor at Brides Magazine yesterday, she said what she’d found worked in their offices is when someone begins complaining about their husband or marriage, someone else will quickly point out all the things that are positive in their spouse or the amazing gift of having a lifelong partner. 

Because they all know each other’s spouses, they make sure to highlight all that is wonderful and positive about one another’s husbands so when one does something that seems thoughtless or inconsiderate, they all remind that person of all the thoughtful and considerate things he’s done over the years.

“That’s really worked for us here when one of us starts complaining about our husbands,” she said.  “I have a feeling I’ll be turning this conversation into a blog post,” I told her.  And so it is.

When thinking about a Girlfriends’  Guide to a Great Marriage, there were three things that instantly came to mind that my girlfriends and I do for each other when it comes to our marriages.  Every one of my closest girlfriends have pretty awesome marriages (four of them are founding members of this club) and I think it’s because we encourage one another on one end, and like iron against iron, we sharpen one another on the other end.

If you’re not already doing this, here are 3 things you can do to help your girlfriends have great marriages too:

1. Help them stay focused on the positive.  Your girlfriend had 7 billion people in the world to choose from and she chose her husband.  Why?  What was it about him that was so special she decided to pledge ‘til death do us part’?  Remind her of those things.  In that moment when she’s frustrated and wants to focus on everything her husband does wrong.  Lovingly listen to her and then remind her of everything he does right.  All the things she’s shared over the years about what makes him great.  Sometimes marriage is like being too close to the trees to see the forest.  You can help remind her of what beauty is in the forest all around her.

 2. Help them change their thought that marriage is “hard work”.  Most of us are underpaid and underappreciated for the work we do.  When you call marriage “work,” you subconsciously tell yourself you are giving more than you are receiving.  But when you use words like “effort” or “investment,” there is an expectation there will be a reward.  The more effort you put in the more reward you will get out.  The more investment you put it, the larger the dividend that pays out.  By helping your friend change her phrase, “marriage is hard work,” to “marriage takes effort,” you have just changed how she sees her marriage. 

3. Remind them that flaws and mistakes don’t make the person.  We all have husbands who make mistakes, who are flawed and make seemingly thoughtless decisions at times.  The funny thing, is we often forget that we have flaws and make mistakes too.  By lovingly reminding your girlfriend that she is flawed, just like her husband, she can gently be reminded that we’re all a little crazy.  And having someone willing to put up with our craziness is worth the effort.

I haven’t written a blog post in weeks…aaaaah, it feels good to be back in the saddle. I hope you’ve enjoyed all the guest writers over the past few weeks and I look forward to sharing encouraging thoughts with you in the days ahead.

QUESTION: What other “tips” would you add to a Girlfriends’ Guide to a Great Marriage?

Until tomorrow…make it a great day!

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Meet Fawn & Happy Wives Club Members in Your City This Month!

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Did you know today marks the 4th anniversary of the Happy Wives Club?  No kidding.  When I set the audacious goal of finding 1 million happy wives around the world, and then joining us together to shine a positive spotlight on marriage, who knew it would become such an amazing journey?  I sure didn’t.

Four years later, HappyWivesClub.com has twice been named Top Marriage Site by Readers.com.  Nearly 5 million people have visited this site.  We are now a community of nearly 750,000 women.  And when my book, Happy Wives Club, released a few weeks ago it debuted at #3 on the New York Times® Best Sellers list.

Through all of this, one of my greatest hopes has remained that I would one day meet you.  My dream is local chapters of the Happy Wives Club would spring up around the world.  Women coming together to support each other in community and to lift up one another’s marriages.  We need that, don’t you think?

As our Club has continued to grow, the task of launching local chapters has overwhelmed me.  I can’t quite figure out the best way to do it (**feel free to leave any brilliant ideas you have for this in the comment section :) **) but I know I want to connect with you and my heart’s desire is to connect you with each other.  

So when it was time to release my debut book, I met with my publisher and proposed going on a 12-city tour.  It would give me the opportunity to meet you face-to-face and to also introduce you with other Happy Wives Club members in your area.

Now, of course I can’t do this in every city across the globe.  My heart is truly at home and anything more than a couple days makes me home sick like crazy.  But I can do it in a few places and my hope is if I travel to your city, you will come out and meet me.  Then collectively, we’ll figure out how to replicate these sorts of gatherings around the world.  

So without further ado, I’m excited to announce…

In just a couple days, I’m hitting the road and would love to meet you along the way!

Bring your married girlfriends and join me and other women from the Happy Wives Club for a cup of coffee and great discussion.  And if you bring your copy of my newly-released book (now a New York Times® bestseller), I’ll be honored to autograph it.  You can also grab a copy at each event location.  Book or no book, I’m excited to connect with you and to connect you to other women in this community. 

Dates and locations are below.  Can’t wait to meet you!

2/6: Barnes & Noble, Phoenix, AZ
21001 N. Tatum Blvd. 7:00 p.m.
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/7: Barnes & Noble, Dallas, TX
7700 West Northwest Hwy 7:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/8: Books-a-Million, Katy, TX (Houston)
5000 Katy Mills Circle 2:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/9: Barnes & Noble: Atlanta, GA
2900 Peachtree Road NE 2:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/10: Books-a-Million, Chicago, IL
144 S. Clark Street 12:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/18: Walmart, Seattle, WA 
743 Ranier Avenue 6:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/21: Barnes & Noble, Glendale, CA
210 Americana Way 7:00pm
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT!

2/15 3/8:  BookBar, Denver, CO* 
4280 Tennyson Street 5:30pm 
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT! 
(*This event was rescheduled due to severe weather conditions during my first scheduled date.)

2/12 4/10: Barnes & Noble, Edina, MN (Minneapolis)* 
3225 W. 69th Street 7:00pm 
RSVP FOR THIS FREE EVENT! 
(*This event was rescheduled due to severe weather conditions during my first scheduled date.)

TBA:
New York, NY

TBA:
London, UK

TBA:
Sydney, Australia

Happy Wives Club Target Promotion

Limited & Exclusive Offer – 72 Hours Only!

Happy Wives Club Target Promotion

I am SO excited about this offer I am sharing with you today.  But first I have to give you the back story so you know why it’s so important.

As you know, a couple weeks ago the Happy Wives Club book was released.  And if you saw the New York Times on Sunday, you likely know the book debuted at #3 on their Best Sellers list.  

It also debuted on the USA Today Best Sellers list.  This is just amazing and I am so appreciative of this remarkable community of supportive book buyers.  Thank you!

What you probably don’t know is the week of the launch was incredibly challenging for me.  Life throws you curve balls and usually I can manage, but this time they were just knocking me out.  

Keith and I flew to New York for what we expected to be a media tour surrounding the book.  But very little seemed to go right and we spent most of the time in our hotel room…waiting.  

I have to admit, I concerned myself with a feeling that perhaps no one would respond and questioning what it all meant.

On the morning of the launch, Keith and I decided to put the media situation behind us and go enjoy seeing my book in a retail store for the first time.  Without going into details, if we thought the media situation was bad, this was even worse.

It rocked our day.  We’d previously understood the book would have premium placement, but it was buried in the very last row of the first store we visited (and not even on the shelves at all in two more we went to – sitting in the back in a stockroom).  Perhaps I shouldn’t say this, but I was heartbroken. 

Fast forward to the end of the week, after a tough time in New York, I began getting notes on social media from those who saw the book in Target, purchased and had begun reading it.

Although my first “store experience” wasn’t great, we decided to brave one more attempt – this time at Target.  I’ll admit, I was a bit trepidatious when entering the store.  

Keith on the other hand was optimistic (or at least put on a brave face for me) and entered with excitement.  He quickly led the charge to the book section.  Walked down two rows and didn’t see the book.  Would this be deja vu?  But that wonderful man of mine didn’t give up.

He turned down another row, headed toward the Best Sellers section and slowly turned toward me grinning from ear-to-ear.  There it was, my labor of love two years in the making, in the row above books like Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean in and Giada’s new cookbook and below all the Duck Dynasty books (there’s a lot of those, my goodness).

We left that Target and went to another.  Same experience.  We enjoyed the experience so much, the following day we went to another Target.  Purchasing one book at each store.  

In an instant, Target redeemed what had begun as a very challenging week for me.  All that didn’t come together the week of the book launch no longer mattered.  One of the largest retailers in the world stood up and said, “We believe in the Happy Wives Club movement!”  And I am grateful beyond words.

That’s why I’ve been dying to do something special for them for the past few weeks.  And I think my publisher and I came up with something pretty amazing!

If you go to Target this week and purchase the Happy Wives Club book (it’s 20% off!), my publisher will send you a second copy for one of your closest friends – for FREE!.  

Then, at the beginning of next week, both you and the friend or family member you chose to join you on this journey, will receive a private Facebook invitation from me inviting you to an exclusive book club where you can ask me any and all questions about the book.  I will personally answer every question.

So here’s how it will work:

1. This week, go to your local Target store and pick up your copy of Happy Wives Club in the Best Sellers section for 20% off.

2. Take a picture with the book either in the store or right out front.

3. Share your picture on social media (Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram).

4. Fill out the short form below (make sure to include the best email address to contact you).

5. Get a FREE copy of Happy Wives Club for someone you know that needs encouragement in their marriage, simply needs to believe happy marriages still exist or someone who is already happy in their marriage and would love to celebrate it.

You’ll then receive an email from us on Monday to obtain the name and address of the person you would like to have receive the book (it can go to you too).  That’s it.  Voila!  What do you say?  Will you join me in helping say “Thank YOU” to Target for their amazing support of Happy Wives Club.   

First Name*    Last Name*

Email Address*

Social network URL where you shared your picture*

Would you like to receive an invitation to Fawn's private book club?

*Sale has been extended one day through the close of business on Sunday, February 2nd.

National Husbands Day

National Husband’s Day {700,000 Strong, So We’re Sponsoring It!}

National Husbands Day

When I boldly declared on November 22,2013 that in three short months this club would be sponsoring a new national holiday, I missed one critical component: Time.  

My lack of it and a need for more of it to be dedicated to lobbying for a holiday set aside to celebrate our amazing husbands.

Following my initial meetings with a planning committee about this special day, my thought was, How hard can it be?  There’s National Peanut Butter Day, National Noodle Day and even National Sock Day.  

Surely, it would be easier for a community of nearly 700,000 women to get a holiday named after husbands around the world.  

Then I realized something.  All those “Days” are recognized by few other than the brands and marketing teams promoting them.

Growing up, I remember my excitement every year as we got closer to June as I knew we’d be celebrating Children’s Day.  It was circled on my calendar and I was beyond overjoyed each year when that day finally arrived.  

Although our parents poured an extra heaping of love and encouragement on us that day, what I really loved about Children’s Day was the candy.  In our household, health food reigned supreme.  But on Children’s Day, there was no shortage of candy for this sweets-loving body of mine.

So as I began researching how to make National Husband’s Day a reality, I looked a little closer at the origins of Children’s Day.  Did you know, for instance, that it dates back to the 1800′s and proclamations observing the day have be made by government leaders around the world for the past 200 years?  Children’s Day even predates Mother’s and Father’s Day.

The more I thought about it, the less I wanted National Husband’s Day to be some rushed and made up “holiday” with nothing behind it but a great marketing campaign.  Our husbands deserve better.

With so many negative connotations associated with the role of husband these days, we want to celebrate the true stand-up men around the world.  So I hope you don’t mind, but as the founder of this club, I made a decision on behalf of our community.

The HWC team will work extremely hard in the coming year to lobby various government officials until we can find at least one who will proclaim the January 22nd National Husband’s Day.  Then we will all work together to create a day incredibly special; one that recognizes a minority sector of the population who truly deserve our admiration.

So if you are in support of us moving full steam ahead with sponsoring a national holiday celebrating our husbands, print a copy of this certificate, sign your name and give it to your husband.  Let him know that next year, when National Husband’s Day is recognized as an official day of celebration, it will be because of how well he’s loved you.

His love is what made you join this community.  His honesty, integrity and character is what makes you want to stand up and celebrate him.  And because of him, and so many others like him, we are joining together to make sure husbands around the world are recognized.

Are you in?

I’ll keep you updated over the next six months as to our progress and come this time next year, I’m looking forward to seeing lots of confetti – at your house and mine. 

Until tomorrow…make it a great day! 

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