Ah, the frustration. Nine hundred million
Facebook users and only a hand full are fans of your business. Worse still, no
is actively following your page or sending business your way. You decide, like
many, that Facebook is probably not an avenue to increase business or sales.
Before you delete your page or let it die a slow death through neglect, here
are some pro-active steps that can give your page, and your business a boost.
Step 1. Learn the competition. Take a look
at your competitor's page and see what they're doing right, and doing wrong.
You can find the page by going to Facebook's search engine and typing in your
customer's page. If you can't find it that way, Facebook search is still not up
to grade in some respects,,try going to your competitor's website. They may
have a link or a "like" widget that will navigate you to their page.
Once on the page, Facebook, not the website, take a look around. You want to
look for how the Cover photo and Profile photo compliment each other. Do they
make sense? Do they enhance the brand? How often does this page post? What
seems to be working for them? What kind of content are they posting? Imitation
is the highest form of flattery. Flatter your competitor.
Step 2. Learn some of the best practices.
There are no hard and fast rules to social marketing, but there are some
strategies that work better than others. Here are a few:
· Don't sell, engage. Most companies that
complain about Facebook as a business platform do so because their sales
campaigns don't deliver results. If all they're trying to do is sell, they have
a long wait. Successful brands that have thrived on Facebook don't sell to
their fans, they engage them. You can engage them by offering advice on
products and services you offer; doing surveys; asking fill-in-the-blank-type
questions. Asking fans to name a Facebook friend who uses your product or
service is a great way to engage a current fan and maybe find a new one.
· Post every day. It may seem to be
unnecessary but not all of your fans see every post. If you only post once or
twice a week, it may be quite some time before a fan sees a post from you.
· Include a call to action. It could be to
click into your website, answer a question, or participate in a survey.
Anything that encourages a fan to interact with your page is worthwhile.
· If you do sell, don't over do it. One
sales related post out of five is plenty. Beyond that and you're probably
disengaging your audience.
Step 3. Add to your page. Replace your
cover photo and profile picture on a regular basis. Create a video to introduce
yourself. Build a gallery of images that reflects your work or your product.
Add a contact or email form. You can highlight a product or service.
Step 4. Plan. Don't go about posting
willy-nilly. Have a plan for what you are going to post and when. Plan for the
short term and longer. The shorter calendar, typically a week or a month,
highlights everyday events and news. The longer view highlights sales
promotion, large events and the like.
Step 5. Consider a paid ad campaign on
Facebook. Facebook lets you build a page for free, accumulate fans for free,
and create a brand presence for free. What they won't allow you to do anymore
is communicate with all your fans for free. Facebook is in the money making
business and have realized that they can't give away the store and make money.
So to reach all of your fans, you'll have to spend some cash.
At first glance, the Facebook platform
appears similar to Google's AdWords. But there are differences. Keywords are
not important in Facebook, interests and demographics are. You can micro target
an audience to certain categories such as age or interest. Images play a key
role in the Facebook model so be sure to upload one. You can promote a post to
get it a wider audience. Promoted posts will allow you to broadcast outside
your network of fans. The cost for a Facebook ad won't bust your budget.
Facebook is an effective advertising tool when page owners realize it's not
free and sales results will be generated over time.
J.A. Moffitt is the President of Elvin Web
Marketing. Elvin Web Marketing is a full service online marketing company.
Whether it's getting on the first page of a Google search, improving your site
content, blog writing, submitting your business to online directories, or
social or email marketing, we can help! Call us at 203-882-0171. We now offer
targeted ads on national websites. Visit our webpage at
http://onlinemarketinginct.com
Article Source:
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