Does your company have a Facebook page?

Does your business have a Facebook page?

  • Yes

    Votes: 28 84.8%
  • No

    Votes: 5 15.2%

  • Total voters
    33
L

Liam Weston

I'm launching a social marketing app that integrates with Facebook and I am interested to know how many businesses have a Facebook for Business page. Please cast your vote.

Thanks!
 

fisicx

Moderator
Sep 12, 2006
46,673
8
15,372
Aldershot
www.aerin.co.uk
Business Facebook are mostly vanity pages. The number of leads they generate are tiny compared to other marketing methods. If you want to engage with people twitter is far better for business.
 
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fisicx

Moderator
Sep 12, 2006
46,673
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www.aerin.co.uk
All the experts will tell you they have 5 million likes but won't be able to attribute a single conversion to any of those likes.
 
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T

Tier1Logistics

I use to have a business page had 3000 odd likes and out of that I had 2 customers, didn't see the point and got rid of the page. In fact I no longer have a Facebook account.

As people above have said, twitter seems to do better for business.
 
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Twinkle Toes

Free Member
Feb 21, 2015
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All the experts will tell you they have 5 million likes but won't be able to attribute a single conversion to any of those likes.

So true, Facebook is good for paid for ad's that apparently use your Google searches between posts. But it still is a social medium, with targeted paid for advertising, rather than a selling platform. And Facebook know this.....
 
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M

myfairworld

Horses for courses I reckon. While I've found it very hard to build up followers on our Facebook page, a lot of those following are actual customers or likely potential customers of the business and the page seems to give them some sense of belonging/loyalty to the business/interest in the business.

I've found building up followers on Twitter ultra easy and we've got umpteen more followers than on Facebook but as far as I can see 70% of them are people hoping to sell my business something, 25% are businesses or organisations in the same sector and whom I follow in turn - we have a happy time exchanging ideas and this is very useful but only a long term and very indirect route to increasing sales. I'd doubt if more than 5% are simply and straightforwardly customers/potential customers.

But every business you talk to seems to find that the equation works out differently.

Instagram seems to be the current big scorer for many but I find it too difficult to produce so many high quality photos so often. I suppose if I was thoroughly convinced it would be a great marketing tool I'd find a way to do it but at this stage I'm not so convinced...
 
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Paul Murray

Free Member
Nov 24, 2011
656
189
Manchester
Used to, zero point anymore. My target market aren't using it for a start, but even if they were, I don't have the time to faff about with it (and Facebook UX is terrible, they don't make anything easy to do). Add to that, the fact that I'd have to pay to have my content seen and it's a big fat "no".

I'd take everything I read from these self-titled "experts" with a huge pinch of salt. Empty vessels make the most noise.
 
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BustersDogs

Free Member
  • Jun 7, 2011
    1,579
    353
    Essex
    Yes, I get a lot of work through facebook. Most of it is networking, which doesn't need the page itself as the page can't post in the groups, but it gives people a place to go to check me out and my style of dog training. Some of my dog walking customers have followed me on facebook before signing up, although it's mostly training. It's also getting my name known out there which I really need as I'm trying to write a book. (ha! if I ever get time). The last dog training event I did, two thirds were customers of another service and the other third came from facebook posts.
     
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    fisicx

    Moderator
    Sep 12, 2006
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    Dog walking and similar are where FB can be very useful because it's all about a personal service. If you were selling kitchen cupboards a facebook page is pretty pointless.
     
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    14Steve14

    Free Member
    Business Listing
    May 18, 2010
    861
    1
    150
    Dorset
    www.railwayscenics.com
    A few years ago someone advised me to have a facebook page. I was new so took their advice. After working at it a bit, but throwing only my time at it, I now dont bother and am seriously thinking of getting rid of it. Too few likes and not one sale from it as far as I know.

    I then started a group and told all my customers about it via email newsletters and do so every month. It has just under 100 members,which is small, and gives me a sensible place to push my products and chat to my customers answering their questions. Does it bring in any sales - to be honest I have no idea, because I never check. What it does give me is somewhere to interact with a few customers, and thats about it. Numbers are growing slowly. Being an online only business I have to get to my customers some how and this sort of works, but is not the best.
     
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    L

    Liam Weston

    Lots of interesting responses. My take on it is that the value of Facebook for a business is not in the business's Facebook page, as that relies on consumers finding it. Your business can have a fantastic, professional Facebook page with lots of regularly updated content but unless people are looking for your page you are shouting into an abyss.

    The real value of Facebook is the connection between friends and the holy grail for a business on Facebook is for satisfied customers to be posting good things about the business on their own Facebook timeline, where their entire social network will see it. A study from Nielsen (a leading global provider of information and insights into what consumers watch and buy) states that 92% of consumers around the world say they trust recommendations from friends and family above all other forms of advertising.

    The app I have developed provides a mechanism for a business to send an endorsement request to a customer and for the customer to post an Endorsement to their timeline, with a business card type attachment. When their friends see the endorsement and click through it takes them to a profile page with details of the business, the services it provides and showing all the endorsements it has received.

    A business doesn't even need a Facebook page to realise the marketing opportunity that Facebook offers.

    Do you think this is a marketing approach that could benefit your business?
     
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    fisicx

    Moderator
    Sep 12, 2006
    46,673
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    www.aerin.co.uk
    The app I have developed provides a mechanism for a business to send an endorsement request to a customer and for the customer to post an Endorsement to their timeline, with a business card type attachment. When their friends see the endorsement and click through it takes them to a profile page with details of the business, the services it provides and showing all the endorsements it has received.
    While this may work functionally the business it generates will be tiny. People just don't use FB this way and the chances are FB won't even show the posts on your timeline.

    Are you using the app? Are you getting endorsements? Are people clicking on them?
     
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    C

    Charlotte Barnes

    Facebook, and social media in general, may not bring in the high conversions that some people expect but that doesn't make it a waste of time.

    If you are looking to build up your business in terms of authority, engagement and trust, then social media can be a very useful tool. Granted, for some businesses, Facebook can lead to sales and revenue, but it can also open up avenues for networking and communication with your customers. Some people feel more comfortable engaging with businesses via social media rather than by phone or email.
     
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    R

    Reshad Bashir

    For me, Facebook is another way to stay in touch with my customers. It is not a way to get new customers, but a way to stay in touch with the customers you already have. I like to keep them posted on news and developments and a good way to do this is through Facebook.
     
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    Opinion87

    Free Member
    Jul 1, 2015
    707
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    Facebook is one of the main ways we communicate with customers.

    We have 4,312 "Likes". Our total reach thus far this week is 39,786. Our Total Engagement is 3,001; broken down... 943 "Likes", 72 "Comments", 40 "Shares" and 11,329 "Post Clicks. We post once per day, six days per week. Most posts we'll Boost for £10.00.

    (B2C, no B2B.)

    Edit: We get far better engagement from Facebook than Twitter. In order- Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Pintrest
     
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    fisicx

    Moderator
    Sep 12, 2006
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    How much revenue has this generated? Or are you just using it as a communications tool.
     
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    Opinion87

    Free Member
    Jul 1, 2015
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    How much revenue has this generated? Or are you just using it as a communications tool.

    In general I couldn't give you an exact figure, that would be impossible, but it's certainly a revenue generator. We have plenty of customers that come to the business that say that came down because of something they saw on our Facebook. We also sell tickets online and use Facebook to direct customers to the likes of WeGotTickets and it's a very cost effective way of getting sales.
     
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    Opinion87

    Free Member
    Jul 1, 2015
    707
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    my missus says there are visitor stats for business facebook pages - is this true? Judging a facebook pages effectiveness by the number of likes seems a bit hit and miss to me.....

    She is correct. The "Insights" on Facebook are quite in depth. Examples;

    Page and Tab Visits
    Broken down by: Timeline, Events tab, Photos tab, Info tab, Others)

    External Referrers
    Broken down by website (handy if you're advertising on 3rd party sites)

    When Your Fans Are Online
    Broken down in to hourly intervals so you know the best time to put your posts live and/or Boost them.

    Very detailed stats on each post
    "Likes", "Likes on Post", "Likes on Shares of Post"
    "Comments," "Comments on Post", "Comments on Shares of Post"
    Etc.

    The People who Like Your Page
    Broken down by; Sex and Age
    Example of our currently...
    44% of "fans" female, 13% between ages 18-24, 16% between ages 25-34, 9% between 35-44
    55% of "fans" male, 15% between ages 18-24, 20% between ages 25-34, 11% between 35-44

    I can see how many fans/"Likes" by country, city and language.

    My Page has 4,329 "Likes." I can see what parts of my page they're clicking on, I can see when they're looking at the page and when they're not; I can see what they're Liking, Commenting and Sharing (and likewise I can see what they're Hiding), I can see exactly where they're coming from and what language they're speaking (as an example we occasionally put out a post in Polish, because we can see exactly how many of our "Likes" have their language set to Polish. As another example, we currently have 5 set to "English (Pirate)" I can see that this week our posts appear to have be received better by males over females- 44% of our "fans" are female but this week we've only engaged 28% of them. 55% of our "fans" are male but this week we've engaged 72% of them

    Facebook is VERY, very effective for us- BUT, we know how to use it. I'm not intentionally going to insult certain people on here by telling them they aren't using an extremely powerful tool correctly, but to be perfectly honest, they aren't. Everything in this post is fact and comes from the fact that we invest some time and some money on our Facebook presence. And I would hope from this post people will realize what they're potentially missing out on.
     
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    MOIC

    Free Member
  • Nov 16, 2011
    7,398
    1
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    myofficeinchina.com
    Having read this thread, it seems like I have an "anti social" business!

    As a B2B company, perhaps it serves my existing customers better not to be active on social media.

    Most companies want to keep their suppliers secret and would prefer that their competitors know little of who they use to purchase their products.

    Do I have a responsibility to my customers?

    Yes.

    Will they prefer me to be "not active" on social media?

    Probably yes.

    Will being active on social media benefit my company?

    Unsure . . . . Will it?
     
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    Ali Cort

    Free Member
    Sep 22, 2015
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    Depending on your industry, Facebook might not send as many new customers as other channels but it could be useful in showing a more personal side of your business. Perhaps if you think of it as a recruitment tool to show the people in the business, rather than to acquire new customers, it might have a better purpose. All social media channels should be treated uniquely and have their own unique objectives. Always use Google Analytics to see how many people make it back to your own site via Facebook too - a like on its own isn't a lot of use!
     
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    Ashley_Price

    Free Member
    Business Listing
    Well, we cover the whole range:

    1/ Facebook Page
    2/ Twitter Account
    3/ Linkedin Company Page (set up yesterday).

    I treat social media as another "window" or "contact point" to our business. Okay, so someone might not buy just because we have a FB page, but, I look at it as just another reminder to people that we are here if they need us. As I have just taken these accounts over, I am now going to make sure they are updated regularly. People like our FB posts and so that gets shared on their timeline, so even more people hear about us.

    How long does it take me to keep these updated? About 10 minutes a day.

    On Thursday evenings on Twitter there is the "#SussexHour" where people & businesses in Sussex can chat using the hashtag. Last night I forgot about it until 9:15pm, so only had 15mins left before the hour was up. In that 15mins I got chatting with someone who runs a small charity and was interested in our stationery, etc. so will be following that up today.

    When I used to run the call answering service, not only did I get clients through both Facebook and Twitter, but some of current clients would send us Twitter DMs or FB Messages to update us on what they were doing, rather than call or email us.

    I want people to buy from us, and I try and make it as easy as possible - they can contact me through any of this media, as well as phone or email.
     
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    Ashley_Price

    Free Member
    Business Listing
    No I don't, if a small business has time to piss about on social media, which will usually be directed at a couple of hundred followers at best, then they probably aren't worth buying from.

    Social media is just that, "social" and not business.

    Yet, you're on UKBF - have made 341 posts, chatting with others and discussing stuff, yet you don't consider that "pi**ing about" and "social"?

    What is the difference between chatting with people on this forum compared to on FB, Twitter, Linkedin...?
     
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