Six Big FACEBOOK Tips For Small Organizations

Courtesy of www.smallbizsurvival.com.

SIX BIG FACEBOOK TIPS FOR SMALL ORGANIZATION
Courtesy of www.smallbizsurvival.com.

Tip 1: Create a fan Page, not a personal Profile, for your business. Fan pages are the best way for small businesses to interact with customer and potential customers on Facebook. If you don't have a Facebook account yet, create one in your own name. Then go create your Facebook page.

Tip 2. Build your page with your purpose in mind. Start with the little box that appears under your photo. Put something meaningful about your business in there, because that is the first place most people look on your fan page. Then fill in all the other basic information about your business, and put up a friendly welcome message.

Before we had fan pages, lots of businesses and associations created profiles of their business, just like their business was a person. Unfortunately, this is against Facebook's terms of service, and it is enough cause to have your profile deleted. Now Facebook is cracking down on these profiles. So that leads us to...

Tip 3. If you have a Profile for an organization, start converting to a fan Page right now.
Slowly ramp down the activity on your old Profile, as you continue to direct people over to the new Page. You can use the Notes feature, and tag the people you want to notify about the new Page. As you start collecting Fans of your Page, you want to convert them. There are two types of conversion:

Convert them into consumers of your information.
Convert them into clients who pay.

Facebook is better at making people consumers of your info. Then over time, they can become your clients. Since people are becoming consumers of our information, how do we know what type of information people will want to consume and share on Facebook? Ah! Now we've come to a killer secret about using Facebook for small business...

Tip 4. The number one reason people get on Facebook is to showcase their own identity.
If you want to reach people, then tap into this reason. What does your brand say about your customers? How does it look on their profile when they fan you or share your content? Do they like that connotation?

For example, if you live in Alva, Oklahoma, how does it look if you become a fan of Allen's Liquor Store? How is that different that being a fan of the Candy Bouquet? It's all in how your fans you want other people to see them, and how you play a part in that.

Tip 5. Facebook is the ultimate tool for sharing success stories. You were wondering how you were going to fill all that blank space on your Page, weren't you? Well, talk with your customers about how you've helped them. Get permission to share their stories, and start posting them to help others.

 

 

Newsletter - February 2010

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