This Oracle white paper provides an 8-step process for determining an effective social media mix. It advises analyzing current social media channels used, content distributed, and subscriber sizes. Channels should then be organized by formality and frequency of content. Overlapping channels should be consolidated. Gaps in reaching parts of the community should be identified and filled. A prioritization tool can help determine high-priority new initiatives. Finally, a content flow sketch maps how content moves across channels. Following this process allows optimizing the social media mix.
Top Five Metrics for Revenue Generation MarketersC.Y Wong
This document discusses key metrics that B2B marketers should track to measure revenue generation. It recommends tracking:
1) Number of leads produced, close rate (new customers/new leads), and revenue per new customer to understand lead generation, nurturing, and quality.
2) Adding metrics like average time to close and cost per new customer.
3) Breaking down the buying process into stages and tracking movement through each stage via funnel reporting.
Combining Knowledge and Data Mining to Understand SentimentC.Y Wong
This white paper examines different approaches for sentiment analysis and summarizes the key benefits and drawbacks of each:
1. The data mining approach represents documents as numeric vectors and applies machine learning techniques to discover patterns for predicting sentiment. While capable of discovering complex patterns, it does not maintain important contextual information and provides little insight into model predictions.
2. The natural language processing (NLP) approach uses linguistic rules defined by domain experts to determine sentiment polarity. It can better capture context but requires more time to develop rules and annotate training data.
3. A hybrid approach combines the two by using data mining to discover patterns for rule development in NLP models or by incorporating linguistic features into machine learning models. This takes advantage
GraphLab Conference 2014 Keynote - Carlos GuestrinTuri, Inc.
This document introduces GraphLab Create, a machine learning toolkit that aims to help data scientists unleash the power of data science from inspiration to production. It highlights key features of GraphLab Create including scalable data structures that allow analyzing big data on a single machine without running out of memory, robust machine learning algorithms, and tools for deploying predictive applications and services to production environments from the same code used for prototyping. The document provides examples of using GraphLab Create for tasks like recommender systems, fraud detection, and deep learning. It emphasizes that GraphLab Create allows users to be productive on a single machine, at scale, and in production.
Haiku Deck is a presentation tool that allows users to create Haiku style slideshows. The tool encourages users to get started making their own Haiku Deck presentations which can be shared on SlideShare. In just a few sentences, it pitches the idea of using Haiku Deck to easily create visually engaging slideshows.
The document provides best practices for improving digital customer experiences. It recommends analyzing web, mobile, and operational data to find opportunities for improvement. It also suggests conducting expert reviews of digital touchpoints to identify usability issues. Additionally, the document stresses the importance of incorporating customer feedback to understand customers' needs and preferences when making design decisions. The goal is to deliver digital experiences that are useful, easy to use, and enjoyable for customers.
1) 91% of B2B marketers use content marketing, spending an average of 33% of their budgets on it. The use of tactics like research reports, videos, and mobile content are increasing.
2) Producing enough content is now the top challenge for B2B marketers, replacing producing engaging content which was the top challenge in previous years.
3) The most effective B2B content marketers allocate a higher percentage of their budget to content marketing and use more tactics and social platforms than less effective marketers.
This document discusses how content marketing has become critical for most organizations' marketing strategies. It outlines how paid, owned, and earned media are blurring together in an evolving digital landscape. Content marketing, especially using online video and social media, can help integrate these different types of media across the customer lifecycle to increase impact and ROI. However, managing content across multiple online channels and platforms poses challenges around cost, time-to-market, and measurement. Cloud-based content services can help address these challenges by enabling efficient video delivery, app development, and cross-platform analytics.
This Oracle white paper provides an 8-step process for determining an effective social media mix. It advises analyzing current social media channels used, content distributed, and subscriber sizes. Channels should then be organized by formality and frequency of content. Overlapping channels should be consolidated. Gaps in reaching parts of the community should be identified and filled. A prioritization tool can help determine high-priority new initiatives. Finally, a content flow sketch maps how content moves across channels. Following this process allows optimizing the social media mix.
Top Five Metrics for Revenue Generation MarketersC.Y Wong
This document discusses key metrics that B2B marketers should track to measure revenue generation. It recommends tracking:
1) Number of leads produced, close rate (new customers/new leads), and revenue per new customer to understand lead generation, nurturing, and quality.
2) Adding metrics like average time to close and cost per new customer.
3) Breaking down the buying process into stages and tracking movement through each stage via funnel reporting.
Combining Knowledge and Data Mining to Understand SentimentC.Y Wong
This white paper examines different approaches for sentiment analysis and summarizes the key benefits and drawbacks of each:
1. The data mining approach represents documents as numeric vectors and applies machine learning techniques to discover patterns for predicting sentiment. While capable of discovering complex patterns, it does not maintain important contextual information and provides little insight into model predictions.
2. The natural language processing (NLP) approach uses linguistic rules defined by domain experts to determine sentiment polarity. It can better capture context but requires more time to develop rules and annotate training data.
3. A hybrid approach combines the two by using data mining to discover patterns for rule development in NLP models or by incorporating linguistic features into machine learning models. This takes advantage
GraphLab Conference 2014 Keynote - Carlos GuestrinTuri, Inc.
This document introduces GraphLab Create, a machine learning toolkit that aims to help data scientists unleash the power of data science from inspiration to production. It highlights key features of GraphLab Create including scalable data structures that allow analyzing big data on a single machine without running out of memory, robust machine learning algorithms, and tools for deploying predictive applications and services to production environments from the same code used for prototyping. The document provides examples of using GraphLab Create for tasks like recommender systems, fraud detection, and deep learning. It emphasizes that GraphLab Create allows users to be productive on a single machine, at scale, and in production.
Haiku Deck is a presentation tool that allows users to create Haiku style slideshows. The tool encourages users to get started making their own Haiku Deck presentations which can be shared on SlideShare. In just a few sentences, it pitches the idea of using Haiku Deck to easily create visually engaging slideshows.
The document provides best practices for improving digital customer experiences. It recommends analyzing web, mobile, and operational data to find opportunities for improvement. It also suggests conducting expert reviews of digital touchpoints to identify usability issues. Additionally, the document stresses the importance of incorporating customer feedback to understand customers' needs and preferences when making design decisions. The goal is to deliver digital experiences that are useful, easy to use, and enjoyable for customers.
1) 91% of B2B marketers use content marketing, spending an average of 33% of their budgets on it. The use of tactics like research reports, videos, and mobile content are increasing.
2) Producing enough content is now the top challenge for B2B marketers, replacing producing engaging content which was the top challenge in previous years.
3) The most effective B2B content marketers allocate a higher percentage of their budget to content marketing and use more tactics and social platforms than less effective marketers.
This document discusses how content marketing has become critical for most organizations' marketing strategies. It outlines how paid, owned, and earned media are blurring together in an evolving digital landscape. Content marketing, especially using online video and social media, can help integrate these different types of media across the customer lifecycle to increase impact and ROI. However, managing content across multiple online channels and platforms poses challenges around cost, time-to-market, and measurement. Cloud-based content services can help address these challenges by enabling efficient video delivery, app development, and cross-platform analytics.
Inbound marketing is the process of helping potential customers find a company through helpful content before they are looking to purchase. It relies on creating high-quality, non-promotional content like articles, videos, and whitepapers to engage and educate prospects. When done effectively, this approach generates better results than interruptive traditional marketing by building relationships and allowing buyers to come to the company when they are ready to buy. Content must be relevant to target personas and address their challenges. Common inbound tactics include search engine optimization, social sharing, blogging, and social media engagement to spread content and visibility.
This document provides an overview of search engine optimization (SEO) best practices for getting started with an SEO campaign. It covers topics like keyword research, on-page optimization of title tags, meta descriptions, content, headings, images and navigation. It also discusses technical SEO factors such as canonical issues, XML sitemaps, and broken links. Additional tactics covered include link building, social signals, and SEO tools.
Getting Started with Marketing MeasurementC.Y Wong
This document provides an introduction to marketing metrics for B2B marketers. It discusses the importance of measurement and analytics in today's marketing world. The summary focuses on two categories of metrics: revenue metrics that demonstrate marketing's impact on revenue and profit for executives, and program metrics that gauge campaign performance for internal use. Revenue metrics track leads and opportunities through the funnel to closed deals, while program metrics benchmark activities like email opens, website traffic, and social media engagement.
The document analyzes over 11,000 Facebook advertising campaigns to provide benchmarks on key metrics like click-through rate, cost per click, cost per thousand impressions, and cost per fan. It finds that as Facebook advertising has grown, click-through rates have decreased while costs have increased. Certain factors like age, gender, education level, and using friends-of-friends targeting can impact click-through rates. The benchmarks are intended to help brands evaluate how well their own Facebook campaigns are performing compared to averages.
The document summarizes insights from community managers in 2013 about trends, metrics, and benefits of community management. Key points include: more employees are participating in communities; popular metrics include email/ticket volume, traffic, engagement, and sentiment; emerging trends include social media adopting more community approaches and greater emphasis on growth and engagement; and benefits include cost savings, leads, faster response times, idea generation, and stronger customer relationships.
Best Practices from the Worlds Most Social BrandsC.Y Wong
This document provides guidance on how to scale a social media presence globally for large enterprises. It recommends first assessing the current situation to understand how many accounts exist and their level of activity. It also suggests ensuring readiness by having dedicated support and resources. The key steps include: 1) Identifying objectives for the social strategy and how audiences will be engaged; 2) Outlining the resources and phases needed, which typically takes 6-12 months; 3) Implementing the strategy through elements like branding, governance, and enablement across the organization. Effective scaling requires assessing the current state, having clear goals, and coordinating implementation globally.
This document provides an introductory guide on how to use Twitter for business. It begins with an overview of Twitter and common Twitter terminology. It then outlines 6 steps to setting up and optimizing a Twitter profile for business purposes, including signing up for an account, personalizing your company profile, starting to tweet, finding people to follow, getting people to follow you back, and engaging with your network on Twitter. The document then discusses how to use Twitter for various business objectives like marketing, PR, and customer service.
10 Awesomely Provocative Stats for Your Agency's Pitch Deck C.Y Wong
This document provides 10 statistics that could be included in an agency's pitch deck to make it more compelling. Some key stats include: posts receiving 57% fewer likes and 78% fewer comments when a brand posts twice daily; click-through rates on triggered messages being 119% higher than usual messages; and emails opens on smartphones/tablets increasing 80% in the last 6 months. The document aims to equip agencies with compelling data to strengthen their marketing proposals.
The Definitive Guide to Marketing AutomationC.Y Wong
This document provides an overview of marketing automation. It defines marketing automation as software that streamlines, automates, and measures marketing tasks and workflows to increase efficiency and revenue growth. The document discusses how marketing automation enables key modern marketing practices and common features of automation platforms. It also clarifies what marketing automation is not, such as only email marketing, a way to send spam, or a solution that delivers value without effort.
Strong Success Guide - 13 Cross Channel Marketing Strategies for 2013C.Y Wong
This document provides 13 strategies for cross-channel marketing in 2013. Strategy 1 discusses making email mobile-friendly and extending the mobile experience to the website. Strategy 2 recommends getting a 360-degree view of customers by collecting data from all engagement points. Strategy 3 states that attribution modeling is key to understanding how each channel contributes to success. The strategies provide tips for optimizing content, addressing auto-inbox filtering, personalizing messages, permission-based multi-channel engagement, and continuous testing.
The document discusses the six stages of the customer lifecycle: Discovery, Evaluate, Buy, Experience, Bond, and Advocate. In the Discovery stage, potential customers begin researching solutions online. The document recommends companies have a presence on social networks and a customer community to engage with potential customers and answer questions. It also discusses how customer communities can help during the Discovery stage by appearing in search results and allowing prospects to access user experiences.
1. The document provides a template for creating a digital marketing plan using the SOSTAC framework. It includes sections for conducting a situation analysis, setting objectives, developing strategies, and defining tactics.
2. The situation analysis section guides the user to analyze their customers, market, competitors, and capabilities. This informs the objective setting section, where goals and KPIs are defined based on the customer lifecycle.
3. The strategy section outlines developing strategies for targeting, positioning, the marketing mix, branding, and online presence. This leads to the tactics section which provides the details to execute the strategies.
This document provides examples of well-designed blog homepages across different industries like business, design, entertainment, lifestyle, nonprofit, and technology. Each example highlights key design elements like consistent color schemes, balanced content presentation, use of images and thumbnails, and easy navigation. The conclusion emphasizes that an effective blog design focuses on layout that allows readers to easily access content according to their needs and interests, rather than just visual graphics.
This document provides an overview of digital influence and how businesses can identify and engage influential consumers on social media. It discusses how influence is difficult to measure precisely with social media scores alone. The document outlines an influence action plan for businesses to define desired outcomes and identify the right influencers to work with. It also provides case studies of companies experimenting with digital influence programs and a guide to available influence software tools.
This document provides guidance on developing a project management methodology using a traditional phased approach. It outlines 10 steps across the initiate and plan stages, including creating a project charter, developing a work breakdown structure, and establishing plans for scheduling, budgeting, risk management, change management, communications, and procurement. Templates are provided to complete each step and develop a formal project plan. The overall goal is to help users create a customized methodology for managing projects within their organization.
Creating a One to One Dialogue Through Social InteractionC.Y Wong
This white paper discusses how developments in social media provide opportunities for companies to better engage customers and increase conversion rates. It outlines how social activities like games and contests can build loyalty and attract new fans if they appeal to egos, target the right audience, create exciting interactions, and balance freedom with control. The paper also explains how capturing basic information from engaged fans can start a one-to-one communication stream and help convert anonymous fans into customers.
PPC (pay per click) advertising allows advertisers to only pay when someone clicks on their ad. This chapter provides an overview of PPC, how it works, who uses it, and how businesses can make it work for them. Key points:
- PPC was introduced by Google in 2000 and allows advertisers to bid on keywords and only pay when someone clicks their ad.
- Many businesses of all sizes use PPC, from large brands to small local businesses.
- To make PPC work, businesses must have a clear goal in mind like getting traffic, leads, or sales. They must also choose relevant keywords and tailor their campaign accordingly.
How to Multiply the Effects of Your Inbound Marketing ProgramC.Y Wong
This document discusses how to amplify the impact of an inbound marketing program. It explains that while inbound marketing alone can drive some traffic and leads, it is not sufficient as a standalone strategy and must be incorporated into an overall marketing mix to see bottom-line results. The document outlines some common misconceptions about inbound marketing, such as focusing too widely, not reaching decision makers, and facing diminishing returns. It stresses that the right content must be shared in the appropriate places and tailored to prospects' needs at different stages in the buying cycle.
This document provides guidance on local search engine optimization (SEO). It discusses optimizing title tags, metadata, address details, phone numbers, and on-page content for local SEO. It also covers official business listings on Google, Bing, and Yahoo, obtaining reviews on Google+ and other sites, directories, social media profiles, citations, and summarizes the importance of local SEO.
Inbound marketing is the process of helping potential customers find a company through helpful content before they are looking to purchase. It relies on creating high-quality, non-promotional content like articles, videos, and whitepapers to engage and educate prospects. When done effectively, this approach generates better results than interruptive traditional marketing by building relationships and allowing buyers to come to the company when they are ready to buy. Content must be relevant to target personas and address their challenges. Common inbound tactics include search engine optimization, social sharing, blogging, and social media engagement to spread content and visibility.
This document provides an overview of search engine optimization (SEO) best practices for getting started with an SEO campaign. It covers topics like keyword research, on-page optimization of title tags, meta descriptions, content, headings, images and navigation. It also discusses technical SEO factors such as canonical issues, XML sitemaps, and broken links. Additional tactics covered include link building, social signals, and SEO tools.
Getting Started with Marketing MeasurementC.Y Wong
This document provides an introduction to marketing metrics for B2B marketers. It discusses the importance of measurement and analytics in today's marketing world. The summary focuses on two categories of metrics: revenue metrics that demonstrate marketing's impact on revenue and profit for executives, and program metrics that gauge campaign performance for internal use. Revenue metrics track leads and opportunities through the funnel to closed deals, while program metrics benchmark activities like email opens, website traffic, and social media engagement.
The document analyzes over 11,000 Facebook advertising campaigns to provide benchmarks on key metrics like click-through rate, cost per click, cost per thousand impressions, and cost per fan. It finds that as Facebook advertising has grown, click-through rates have decreased while costs have increased. Certain factors like age, gender, education level, and using friends-of-friends targeting can impact click-through rates. The benchmarks are intended to help brands evaluate how well their own Facebook campaigns are performing compared to averages.
The document summarizes insights from community managers in 2013 about trends, metrics, and benefits of community management. Key points include: more employees are participating in communities; popular metrics include email/ticket volume, traffic, engagement, and sentiment; emerging trends include social media adopting more community approaches and greater emphasis on growth and engagement; and benefits include cost savings, leads, faster response times, idea generation, and stronger customer relationships.
Best Practices from the Worlds Most Social BrandsC.Y Wong
This document provides guidance on how to scale a social media presence globally for large enterprises. It recommends first assessing the current situation to understand how many accounts exist and their level of activity. It also suggests ensuring readiness by having dedicated support and resources. The key steps include: 1) Identifying objectives for the social strategy and how audiences will be engaged; 2) Outlining the resources and phases needed, which typically takes 6-12 months; 3) Implementing the strategy through elements like branding, governance, and enablement across the organization. Effective scaling requires assessing the current state, having clear goals, and coordinating implementation globally.
This document provides an introductory guide on how to use Twitter for business. It begins with an overview of Twitter and common Twitter terminology. It then outlines 6 steps to setting up and optimizing a Twitter profile for business purposes, including signing up for an account, personalizing your company profile, starting to tweet, finding people to follow, getting people to follow you back, and engaging with your network on Twitter. The document then discusses how to use Twitter for various business objectives like marketing, PR, and customer service.
10 Awesomely Provocative Stats for Your Agency's Pitch Deck C.Y Wong
This document provides 10 statistics that could be included in an agency's pitch deck to make it more compelling. Some key stats include: posts receiving 57% fewer likes and 78% fewer comments when a brand posts twice daily; click-through rates on triggered messages being 119% higher than usual messages; and emails opens on smartphones/tablets increasing 80% in the last 6 months. The document aims to equip agencies with compelling data to strengthen their marketing proposals.
The Definitive Guide to Marketing AutomationC.Y Wong
This document provides an overview of marketing automation. It defines marketing automation as software that streamlines, automates, and measures marketing tasks and workflows to increase efficiency and revenue growth. The document discusses how marketing automation enables key modern marketing practices and common features of automation platforms. It also clarifies what marketing automation is not, such as only email marketing, a way to send spam, or a solution that delivers value without effort.
Strong Success Guide - 13 Cross Channel Marketing Strategies for 2013C.Y Wong
This document provides 13 strategies for cross-channel marketing in 2013. Strategy 1 discusses making email mobile-friendly and extending the mobile experience to the website. Strategy 2 recommends getting a 360-degree view of customers by collecting data from all engagement points. Strategy 3 states that attribution modeling is key to understanding how each channel contributes to success. The strategies provide tips for optimizing content, addressing auto-inbox filtering, personalizing messages, permission-based multi-channel engagement, and continuous testing.
The document discusses the six stages of the customer lifecycle: Discovery, Evaluate, Buy, Experience, Bond, and Advocate. In the Discovery stage, potential customers begin researching solutions online. The document recommends companies have a presence on social networks and a customer community to engage with potential customers and answer questions. It also discusses how customer communities can help during the Discovery stage by appearing in search results and allowing prospects to access user experiences.
1. The document provides a template for creating a digital marketing plan using the SOSTAC framework. It includes sections for conducting a situation analysis, setting objectives, developing strategies, and defining tactics.
2. The situation analysis section guides the user to analyze their customers, market, competitors, and capabilities. This informs the objective setting section, where goals and KPIs are defined based on the customer lifecycle.
3. The strategy section outlines developing strategies for targeting, positioning, the marketing mix, branding, and online presence. This leads to the tactics section which provides the details to execute the strategies.
This document provides examples of well-designed blog homepages across different industries like business, design, entertainment, lifestyle, nonprofit, and technology. Each example highlights key design elements like consistent color schemes, balanced content presentation, use of images and thumbnails, and easy navigation. The conclusion emphasizes that an effective blog design focuses on layout that allows readers to easily access content according to their needs and interests, rather than just visual graphics.
This document provides an overview of digital influence and how businesses can identify and engage influential consumers on social media. It discusses how influence is difficult to measure precisely with social media scores alone. The document outlines an influence action plan for businesses to define desired outcomes and identify the right influencers to work with. It also provides case studies of companies experimenting with digital influence programs and a guide to available influence software tools.
This document provides guidance on developing a project management methodology using a traditional phased approach. It outlines 10 steps across the initiate and plan stages, including creating a project charter, developing a work breakdown structure, and establishing plans for scheduling, budgeting, risk management, change management, communications, and procurement. Templates are provided to complete each step and develop a formal project plan. The overall goal is to help users create a customized methodology for managing projects within their organization.
Creating a One to One Dialogue Through Social InteractionC.Y Wong
This white paper discusses how developments in social media provide opportunities for companies to better engage customers and increase conversion rates. It outlines how social activities like games and contests can build loyalty and attract new fans if they appeal to egos, target the right audience, create exciting interactions, and balance freedom with control. The paper also explains how capturing basic information from engaged fans can start a one-to-one communication stream and help convert anonymous fans into customers.
PPC (pay per click) advertising allows advertisers to only pay when someone clicks on their ad. This chapter provides an overview of PPC, how it works, who uses it, and how businesses can make it work for them. Key points:
- PPC was introduced by Google in 2000 and allows advertisers to bid on keywords and only pay when someone clicks their ad.
- Many businesses of all sizes use PPC, from large brands to small local businesses.
- To make PPC work, businesses must have a clear goal in mind like getting traffic, leads, or sales. They must also choose relevant keywords and tailor their campaign accordingly.
How to Multiply the Effects of Your Inbound Marketing ProgramC.Y Wong
This document discusses how to amplify the impact of an inbound marketing program. It explains that while inbound marketing alone can drive some traffic and leads, it is not sufficient as a standalone strategy and must be incorporated into an overall marketing mix to see bottom-line results. The document outlines some common misconceptions about inbound marketing, such as focusing too widely, not reaching decision makers, and facing diminishing returns. It stresses that the right content must be shared in the appropriate places and tailored to prospects' needs at different stages in the buying cycle.
This document provides guidance on local search engine optimization (SEO). It discusses optimizing title tags, metadata, address details, phone numbers, and on-page content for local SEO. It also covers official business listings on Google, Bing, and Yahoo, obtaining reviews on Google+ and other sites, directories, social media profiles, citations, and summarizes the importance of local SEO.
2. Facebook Pages: Creating, Optimising & Analysing
Creating a Facebook page.............................................................................................. 5
Optimising your Facebook Page: .................................................................................... 7
Accessing your Facebook page: .................................................................................11
Understanding EdgeRank ..............................................................................................11
How to optimise your Facebook Page activity for EdgeRank..........................................12
Different Types of Content ............................................................................................15
Videos .....................................................................................................................15
Images ....................................................................................................................15
Responding to comments and posts: ..........................................................................15
Promotions & Competitions ...........................................................................................16
Integrate Facebook with your online marketing activity: ..................................................18
Share your Facebook page via other social media platforms: ........................................18
Evaluating your Facebook activity: .................................................................................19
Summary ....................................................................................................................19
3. A Little Bit About Koozai:
Koozai are a multi-award winning digital marketing agency.
We’re one of the UK’s fastest growing technology companies having been ranked 23rd in the
Deloitte Technology Fast50.
We help businesses connect with their customers online – providing a range of industry-
leading services from Organic Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) and Pay Per Click (PPC)
Management to Link Building, Social Media and Brand Management.
We thrive on building long-lasting client relationships and delivering true value for money.
We’re passionate about what we do - and that shows in our work.
No lengthy contracts, just world class Digital Marketing. Koozai will help you build your
brand online and achieve ROI that can be clearly measured against your bottom line.
How To Get In Touch:
If you would like to get in touch with us, please visit our website (www.koozai.com) or use
one of the methods below:
4. About The Author:
Tara West has digital account management expertise and a degree in Advertising and
Marketing Communications, giving her an excellent understanding of the social media space.
About This Whitepaper
This whitepaper will cover, in detail, how to create and optimise a Facebook account. It will
also cover the kind of content you should be posting from your page to get maximum
engagement from your fans as well as the best metrics for measuring interaction.
5. Creating a Facebook page
1. Make sure you are signed in on an existing personal Facebook account. This should be a
real Facebook account with friends. If you create a personal account and then
immediately try to set up a page, Facebook will view this as spam and prevent you from
doing so.
2. Go to http://www.facebook.com/pages/create.php
3. Choose whether the page is for
- Local business or place
- Company, organisation or institution
- Brand or product
- Artist, band or public figure
- Entertainment
- Cause or community
There is a lot of overlap between these categories but pick the one you feel best suits
your offering:
If your location is particularly important to your business or organisation then choose
“Local business or place”. This should help your content appear in the news feeds of
those who have strong geographic proximity to it and are therefore most likely to
engage.
6. 4. Choose a category and name. Again just select the one which fits your offering. When
giving your page a name avoid generic names such as ‘Shoes’ and make sure it is your
business name. Facebook may take down your page if it considers it to be too generic.
You should also ensure your page name does not contain character symbols or excessive
punctuation.
If you have chosen ‘local business’ as the type of page, you will also need to provide your
address at this stage:
5. Upload an image for your Facebook page. This will be shrunk to 180 x 180 pixels so
ensure it is this size or still looks acceptable when it is reduced.
6. Click next, where you will be asked to provide some basic information about your page.
According to Facebook, this influences your page’s performance in search engine results.
Make sure it is clear and concise, and includes the name of your brand, product or
service. Look to use terms and phrases that search engines users may use within their
queries. Make sure you fill in the area for your website and also tick that the page will
represent a real business, product or brand.
7. You will then get asked if you would like to enable ads. These are paid ads and will not
be covered within this white paper, so for this purpose we have chosen ‘skip’. You can
always create ads at a later stage.
8. The next stage is to ‘like’ the page you have just created. Be aware that this is ‘liking’ it
from the personal account which you would have been signed into originally.
9. You will then be prompted to invite your friends. It is recommended that you leave this
step until you have finished completing your Facebook page and have some content on
it. You can just click ‘skip’.
7. Optimising your Facebook Page:
The next steps will show you how to add content to your Facebook page:
1. Click to add a profile picture (if you didn’t do this in the set up process). Again, this will
be reduced to 180 x 180 pixels so either choose an image with these dimensions or one
that remains clear when minimised. You might want to use your logo or part of your logo
that fits this size format well.
SEOmoz make their profile picture match the background of their cover photo which
allows them to have a seamless image whilst also showing their mascot in a fun setting:
8. 2. Add a Cover photo. This should be 851 pixels wide and 315 pixels tall. It should be
striking and match the look and feel of your website so that visitors can see it relates to
your brand. Avoid including details such as your web address, email address, or any other
promotional information. It must not include any call to action such as ‘like this page’ or
‘order online now’.
Your cover image on your Facebook page is a great place to promote your brand – it’s
the biggest area of the page so it’s natural to want to make the most of it.
Instead of this kind of promotion, try using your cover image as a way of reinforcing your
brand image. New Look have done this well by using some striking images that reflect
their brand image. This does not mean including your brand name in your cover photo,
but ensuring your image reflects the style and look and feel of your brand:
9. 3. Update your ‘About’ section. This should be similar to the description you entered earlier,
but also state why people should ‘like’ your page. For example “Like us for the latest
news and exclusive offers”
You can also add your company history which Coca Cola use in a fun way:
4. Click ‘edit’ above ‘about’, ‘basic info’ or ‘contact info’ to add more details:
You should fill in as much detail as possible on the next page, as this will all help
strengthen your page and increase the likelihood of it appearing in search results:
10. 5. Add some photos to your page. This will make it look more attractive in this initial stage
until you have built up photo albums as part of your marketing activity. To do this click
‘photos’ and then ‘add photos’.
For example on the Koozai Facebook page we show photos of us speaking at
conferences:
6. Give the album a name (Click on ‘Untitled Album’ and it will become editable) and a brief
description, as well as adding the date and location when they were taken. The more
information you provide, the more likely this content is to show up in news feeds and
search results which will increase your page exposure.
11. Accessing your Facebook page:
1. Log in as normal via your personal account at https://www.facebook.com/ and then click
the little downwards arrow next to ‘Home’ on the top right-hand side of the screen. Then
select the page you want to access.
2. You can then post from your page as normal.
3. To go back to your personal account just go to the little downwards arrow next to ‘Home’
on the top right-hand side of the screen and chose your personal profile.
Understanding EdgeRank
Ever wondered what determines who sees your Facebook updates, or what you see in your
own news feed? Besides overcomplicated privacy settings, there is an algorithm that
determines these factors, known as EdgeRank.
What is EdgeRank?
Each time someone posts something on Facebook, they are creating an ‘edge’. In addition
to this, every time someone interacts with a post that has been shared on Facebook, it also
creates an edge. This could be as anything, including a photo or status update, or sharing a
link, and it could be any interaction such as a like or a comment.
The top-level concepts which make up the EdgeRank algorithm are:
Affinity
How ‘close’ are you to the person who posted the object and vice versa? For example, if
they often comment on your posts, tag you in places or photos, send you messages, or even
if they look at your wall often, they are thought to have a higher affinity score in relation to
you.
Weight
Each kind of object posted or interaction behaviour (Edge) has a weight. For example
posting a photograph creates a stronger edge than a regular text based update. This applies
to interactions too, for example commenting on someone’s status probably creates a higher
edge than just a ‘like’.
12. Time Decay
This means that the older the post or the interaction, the less important it is and the lower
the ‘edge’.
The EdgeRank algorithm determines a score for each of these factors and then multiplies
them together to create an EdgeRank. The higher the EdgeRank between two contacts, the
more likely they will see your activity in their newsfeed.
In addition to these basic ideas, there are other factors which are thought to contribute to
EdgeRank, such as how many times a link is clicked, or how many outbound links a user
clicks on.
There is also debate over whether using a third party tool or API to post to Facebook can
have a negative effect on your EdgeRank, as it is thought that the algorithm determines
these posts as not being optimised for Facebook, or being scheduled, and so being of lower
value.
How to optimise your Facebook Page activity for EdgeRank
Optimise for Affinity
Create content and posts that people will want to interact with! Don’t post rubbish.
This obviously depends on what your users find interesting, but you could try to encourage
engagement within your posts, for example Foster’s regularly create polls to engage their
users:
This kind of post is likely to have a higher weight than a straightforward text-based status
update and it also encourages interaction which will increase their ‘edge’.
You should also encourage fans to post on your wall. This could be through asking them to
share their stories. The more they interact with your page the more likely they are to see
your updates in their newsfeed.
13. Tag other pages or brands within your posts if they are relevant, for example Cosmo UK
tagged Bestival’s Facebook page in their update about festival fashion:
If your fans also like these pages you have tagged in your post, they might be more likely to
find your content in their newsfeed.
Don’t forget to interact with fans too. For example you could ‘like’ some of their comments.
There is growing belief that EdgeRank also perceives the people that you message as having
a higher ‘edge’. You could try messaging your fans individually to see if it helps increase
your ‘edge’, for example Vodka Revolutions messaged me recently:
Following this, they seemed to appear within our newsfeed more. This may be coincidence
or it may be as a result of EdgeRank.
Optimise for Time Decay
Experiment with the frequency of your posts. There are various pieces of software you can
buy to measure the levels of interaction that your page receives when you post at different
frequencies, which can give you a broad overview. It greatly depends on your industry too,
for example a gossip or news page might post more often than a jewellery ecommerce
brand. It also depends on what is happening in your industry; for example, if there is an
event you can be talking about you might benefit from posting more often. The key here is
to find the balance, but remember you won’t please all the people all the time:
14. You might want to start with a strategy where you post once to twice a day, depending on if
you have additional newsworthy stories to share of post. It is important to remember to
spread out your updates, as if you post too many in a short period of time, Facebook might
collapse your updates and only show the most recent with a message that says ‘See similar
posts’.
Optimise for weight
Give your posts weight by uploading videos and images sometimes. For example we post a
new video every week:
You could also try posting links and polls to add weight to your posts. Just remember to
keep it relevant and interesting so your audience are encouraged to interact. If you have not
got a business page but have set up a regular personal profile in the name of your business
– which is not ideal – you could also try adding a location to your post (available to personal
profiles but not business pages at the moment). This might be particularly useful if the post
is relevant to a certain location, for example the opening of a new store or an event. This
might mean it is more likely to appear to those who are in the area or have visited and been
tagged in the area on Facebook.
When you are considering all these aspects of EdgeRank for optimisation, it’s important to
think about them in conjunction with one-another, rather than as individual elements. One
really good example of a social media campaign that achieved this is when Ikea asked fans
to tag themselves in images from their catalogue in order to win them. This creates an
update with weight by uploading a series of images, it encourages a strong weight of
interaction by asking users to tag themselves, and it can help them build affinity with a
wider audience by appearing in the newsfeeds of friends of those who have been tagged.
15. Different Types of Content
The content you post on Facebook should not always be directly related to your brand. For
example if you are a fashion retailer, you can post about the latest look a celebrity has
worn, and ask your fans for their comments on the look.
Do not post exactly the same content on a Facebook update that you have posted on other
social media platforms. Users need a unique value from each platform otherwise they will
not follow you on all of them.
The richer the formats you use on Facebook, the more likely they are to appear in users’
newsfeeds and drive engagement:
Videos
Post any videos relating to your industry, for example if you are a food retailer you could
post cookery videos by professional chefs. You could then create a discussion below the post
about the best ingredients to use, which will relate the post to your brand.
Images
Post any images you have alongside regular updates to make the update more eye-catching
within the user’s news stream.
Responding to comments and posts:
Respond to comments and posts as soon as possible.
Do not delete negative comments or posts, but respond to them in a timely manner and ask
the user to email you their details so you can talk to them directly. The key is to move
negative conversations away from Facebook but remain transparent so that other users can
see you are still responding to negative feedback.
If you receive a lot of negative comments or posts about the same issue, do not respond to
them all individually but create a post which address the issue separately and then respond
to each post with a link to your main post which addresses the issue.
16. Promotions & Competitions
If you’ve ever read Facebook Pages T&Cs (and managed to stay awake all the way through)
you’ll have noticed that they are very keen to stress that they are not responsible for any
promotions which you run via their site. This is understandable, as competitions can go
wrong sometimes and Facebook do not want to be liable every time that happens.
To coincide with this, they also don’t want you to use their functionality to run your
promotions on their site. Any promotion featured on a Facebook page cannot use any of
Facebook’s own functionality as a means for entering.
So if you have ever asked your users to ‘like’ your status in return for any kind of incentive,
you are violating Facebook’s terms of use.
If you are taking users’ information as part of any promotion, you need to make it clear to
the users that they are supplying their details to you as a third party, rather than to
Facebook. Some brands get around this in a very simple cost-effective manner by asking
users to email to enter their competition. One example of a brand who use this method is
Malibu UK:
If you run a lot of promotions via Facebook you might want to consider having an App
developed from which you can manage all your Facebook promotions. The advantages of
this route are that you don’t lose users from your Facebook page when they leave to access
their email in order to enter the competition. The likelihood of them returning to your page
after entering your competition is much higher. App development can be costly if you are
looking for something customised, but there are also off-the-shelf apps available which
may be more cost-effective depending on your resources.
Giving away Gift Cards or Vouchers as prizes is not permitted in Facebook Pages T&Cs, so
you will need to make sure your prizes and promotions are for products or experiences. We
all know cash talks, but offering experiences that can’t be bought can also produce great
results!
If you often drive further interaction through your page by asking your fans to vote on who
should win competitions, you might want to consider getting them to vote for some finalists,
and then having a panel or someone within the company to make the final decision. This is
because you are not allowed to have users vote as part of any promotion using Facebook’s
17. functionalities such as ‘Liking’ or sharing in any way. This is also a good way of avoiding
controversy, as by having the final decision made internally you can always state in your
own competition terms and conditions that the decision is at your discretion and will be final.
This reduces the possibility of any discrepancies.
Information Collection
If you are taking users’ information as part of any promotion, you need to make it clear that
they are supplying their details to you as a third party, rather than to Facebook. As with any
time when you are collecting users details, it’s also recommended you familiarise yourself
with the Data Protection Act to ensure you are using their data legally. It is one thing to
break Facebook’s rules but it’s another to break the law!
Adverts
If you are running ads on your Facebook Page, you might want to take a detailed look
at Facebook’s advertising Guidelines, as these are a completely different set of rules
which your ads need to abide by.
Here is a quick summary from a recent post on Marketing Gum of some of the popular
promotions which are actually violating Facebook pages T&C’s.
Never ask the user to do the following in order to participate in your promotion:
Share content
Create their own content and post it to your page or upload it to their own page
Comment on a photo, video, status or any other post
Vote in a poll created using Facebook
Promote the page to their friends
To be safe we recommend having a good read through the official T&Cs on their site.
18. Integrate Facebook with your online marketing activity:
Facebook should be integrated within your online marketing strategy, and the following are
tips which will help you to achieve this integration:
Facebook Buttons for your Website:
Facebook should be integrated within your online marketing strategy, as such all relevant
Facebook buttons should be on your website linking to your Facebook page.
The buttons should be prominently featured on your website. Boohoo.com is an example of
how the buttons can fit into your site in a prominent position:
In particular you should implement the following as a minimum:
Like button (https://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/plugins/like/)
Page / Profile button (https://www.facebook.com/badges/)
In particular, you should consider having the Facebook ‘Share’ button on the confirmation
page after checkout if you are an ecommerce brand because often visitors are keen to post
about what they have just purchased.
There are also many other buttons which might benefit your site and can be found at
https://developers.facebook.com/docs/plugins/.
Share your Facebook page via other social media platforms:
Do not post the same thing on every social media platform. Users need a reason to engage
with you on each profile.
You should however share your Facebook content via other social media platforms. For
example, if you are running a competition which uses your Facebook page or app to enter,
share this competition and link on Twitter.
19. Evaluating your Facebook activity:
There are lots of metrics which might indicate success or need for improvement on your
Facebook page and within the content you publish, but some of the key ones you should be
analysing are:
Fans gained
Fans lost
Posts which got the most impressions (post similar things and they should gain higher
impressions too)
Number of comments on posts
Number of shares of posts
Number of conversions on your website where Facebook has been a touch point
(assisted conversions)
Number of people who visit your site via Facebook
You can get data on your fans, comments, and shares from social media tools such as
Crowdbooster https://crowdbooster.com/.
You can get data on referral and conversions assisted by Facebook within the social section
of Google Analytics (http://www.koozai.com/blog/analytics/google-analytics-social-reports-
explored/).
Summary
You should now have a good understanding of the types of Facebook pages that get shared,
content that you can create and how to get started. The best step you can make is to
register an account and get started.