Facebook for Small Business Level 2 is for Facebook users who wish to set up and successfully manage a Facebook page for their small business.
Packed full of simple, practical tips and information, this slideshow provides a walkthrough on setting up a Facebook page, managing your page settings, tips on what to post on Facebook, the basics of analytics or Facebook Insights, and paid advertising on Facebook.
There are also links and further resources available at the end of the slideshow. This slideshow was used for a workshop run through the Small Business Centre East Metro in the Swan Valley, Western Australia, by Sasha Wasley of Razzed Communications.
2. About Me
• I do content creation and strategic communication
• My sites and profiles:
– www.razzedcommunications.com.au
– +RazzedAuCopywriter
– @RazzedComms
– facebook.com/RazzedCommunications
– Linked In: Sasha Wasley or Razzed Communications
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3. About You
• Are you on Facebook?
• Is your business on Facebook?
• What do you expect or want from getting your
business onto Facebook?
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6. Inappropriate Goals for Facebook
• Make money directly and immediately
• Get thousands of likes as fast as possible
• Tell customers how great we are
• Do a hard sell to customers
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17. Building page information
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Add as much information as you can to give users the best possible
chance of finding what they need.
18. Page Roles for team members
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There are various levels of page administrative access you can assign to other
page managers, including editor, analyst and admin. Admin is the highest.
19. Invite your friends
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Invite friends for whom your page will have relevance and interest. This ‘seeds’
your community.
20. Growing your Facebook community
• Invite your friends by email
• ‘Like us’ advertising (your newsletter, website,
ambient)
• Patience – it’s quality not quantity!
• Content is king (add value for your users)
• Pay for it!
• Network and ‘like’ other pages
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21. To like another page as your page
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Visit the other page and click the 3 dots. Select ‘Like as your page.’ This allows you
to interact with the page as your page, not just as your personal profile.
22. What to post?
• Keep sight of your goals
• Be Social. No more than 10-20% sales focused posts
• Check out competitors and your favourite brands
• Mix it up:
– How often? 1 up to 4 times a day is safe
– Value add – inform
– Entertain and amuse
– Create events if relevant
– Consider your timing (see insights)
– Sometimes use calls to action eg “I am running a 2-for-1
one deal on whisky. Tag a friend who also enjoys a scotch.”
or “Visit our website to see why our vegetables are safest
for your family.”
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23. Interaction is a Two-Way Street
• Interact with your community when they take
time to respond or share.
• Show your love (reward with special
Facebook-only deals).
• Show respect and manners.
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24. Feedback and Questions
• Answer questions
• “Stay Calm and Value
their Feedback”
• Show you care
• Take it private if
necessary
Example of great complaint management
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25. Integrating Everything
• Add Facebook link to site or blog.
• Signs in your store.
• Add to your e-news.
• Social logos on flyers, cards.
• Integrate with other profiles e.g.
Pinterest or Instagram.
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26. Time savers
• Check daily! (prevent banking up).
• Set up notifications (see next slide).
• Facebook scheduling (see slide
ahead).
• Use scheduling apps like
Hootsuite/Buffer, etc.
• Share the page admin role.
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29. Measuring and Analytics
• Facebook Insights – you can export into
reports for sharing
• Question, review, revise – don’t obsess!
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30. Insights
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You can find out:
• When your audience is on Facebook.
• Demographics.
• How many likes, shares, comments and
interactions you’ve had.
• How individual posts have performed.
• Where Facebook referrals have come from.
• Organic and paid reach.
• Liker growth.
• And much more.
31. Measuring and Analytics
• You can also use external platforms e.g. Simply
Measured, Hootsuite, Sprout Social, Buffer,
Social Bakers ….
• Sometimes there is a cost associated.
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33. Boosting continued
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You can choose to target your boosted post to likers and their friends, or to a
specific target group. Your budget will determine how many people you can
reach. Start small and see what your results are like.
36. Page likes ad
You can alter the short description of your page manually to try to attract new likers.
You can also check the appearance of, and switch off or on the ads for mobile devices
or right hand side. Tip: RHS ads don’t currently show up on mobile or some tablet
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devices.
39. Ad Approvals
Reasons for rejected ads/
boosts:
• Too many words in a
picture (only 20% of pic
can be text)
• Not correctly age limited
eg 18+ for alcohol/
gambling.
• Relevance of ad to page.
• Inappropriate content.
• Exploitative of current
affairs or celebrities.
• Inaccurate (e.g. links go
elsewhere).
• Inappropriate ad targeting
to demographic.
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40. Resources
• Sasha’s blog:
www.razzedcommunications.com.au/blog
• Facebook page help
http://www.facebook.com/help/pages
• Facebook ad guidelines
https://www.facebook.com/ad_guidelines.php
• Social Media Today website
• Social Bakers website
• Business to Community website
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41. My other slideshows
• Linked In for Small Business
• The Bold New World of Content Marketing
• Facebook for Small Business Level 1 (basic –
some repeated content)
• 7 ways to make your web content AWESOME
Feel free to share them!
Sasha Wasley www.razzedcommunications.com.au
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Notas del editor
Notifications
scheduling
Behaviours eg page admins, business owners, mobile users, etc.
Inappropriate targeting eg to provoke or incite hate. Exploitative ie of a current event