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B Y D A V I D G R I N E R C O N T E N T S T R A T E G I S T
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T Y P E - A P A R E N T C O N F E R E N C E 2 0 1 3 A T L A N T A , G A .
S P E C I A L T H A N K S T O : K E L B Y C A R R , T Y P E - A P A R E N T F O U N D E R
M E L A N I E N E L S O N , T Y P E - A P A R E N T P R O G R A M M I N G D I R E C T O R
C O V E R P H O T O B Y R E T O F E T Z / F L I C K R C R E A T I V E C O M M O N S
Originally presented at
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• About 20% of referral traffic to major content publishers is driven from
Facebook • Twitter is around 6%
• That said, it varies wildly by site
First off, how important is Facebook?
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Source: ChartBeat/Alexis Madrigal, The Atlantic, 10/12/12
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How important is Facebook?
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Overall traffic sources for YearOfAlabamaFood.com:
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When your post does go viral on Facebook, you’ll want to make sure you’re ready to make the most of it
And you never know when things might blow up
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Oh, hey there.
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1. Organic content 2. Promotions (Giveaways, contests, etc.)
3. Advertising and promoted content
So how do you build a Facebook audience?
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1. Better images 2. Better coding on your site
Part I: Organic Content Two ways to grow audience
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Recently, Facebook changed the way it displays photos in post links.
The change is good, if you adapt to it.
1. Better images
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It used to work like this:
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So publishers started doing this:
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Facebook compromised
with this:
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Which is great, unless you end up with this.
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• Go horizontal. (Specifically, Facebook uses a 1.91:1 aspect ratio.)
• Recommended minimum size is
600 px x 315 px
• Ideal is 1,200 px x 630 px or more
For ideal Facebook images
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No worries.
Now you can upload custom photos when you’re posting.
Doesn’t work with your blog layout?
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Huzzah!
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Welcome to the super duper boring part of blogging.
But it’s pretty important.
2. Better coding on your site
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Facebook Open Graph (OG) tags
can have a big impact on your
site’s shareability and fan growth
Let’s get OG
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They’re built into the metadata of your site in the same way that your post titles
and summaries are.
OG tags tell Facebook lots of info about your site and your posts.
How OG tags work
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OG tags in their natural environment
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Woo, it’s gettin’ hot in here.
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OG tags you already know
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OG:Title – Post headline OG:Site_name – Name of your blog OG:Description – Post summary (Facebook recommends 2 sentences or more, btw) OG:Type - Designates your content as an article, opening up other tag options (WordPress plugins typically cover all this.)
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Other tags you SHOULD know
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Article:author – Lets you identify the Facebook URL of the post author, which will trigger a “Follow” button on posts (Good for multi-author blogs.) Article:publisher – Identifies the Facebook page of your blog, which will trigger a “Like Page” button on posts. (This one’s super important.)
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Effect of Author and Publisher tags
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Right now, lots of blogs and even mainstream media outlets are behind on these new Facebook formats and options.
Taking advantage of them now can help set your site apart and make the most of
your content being shared.
Subtle, but important
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As you probably know, Facebook has eased up its restrictions on giveaways and contests, but there are still lots of rules to
know about.
Part II: Promotions
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Until August 2013, Facebook required all promotions be hosted on third-party
applications, usually in the form of “tab apps” on your Facebook page.
Now Facebook has dropped this rule, allowing pages to host giveaways that can be entered by
Liking or commenting on a post.
The big change
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Hosting a promotion in an application still has a lot of benefits.
But just because you CAN doesn’t mean you SHOULD
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Why still use an app?
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Using an app for your giveaway or contest makes it easier to gather contact information, sign up participants for future emails and embed rules.
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• The ability to measure analytics • Fan-gating to require visitors Like the
page before entering • Lots more design/image flexibility
A few more perks of promotion apps:
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• Your attempts to contact winners privately can get caught in their “Other” inbox or
blocked outright by privacy settings • You’ll still have to include the line, “This
promotion is in no way sponsored, endorsed or administered by, or
associated with, Facebook.”
If you do a giveaway on your Facebook page…
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• “Personal Timelines must not be used to administer promotions”
• That means you can’t allow entries via sharing a post on a user’s own wall (or a
friend’s) • Try to avoid violating this when running
giveaways on your blog, as well.
Giveaways on your wall also include one big restriction
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If you’re going to be doing several smaller giveaways, create a Facebook tab app that
makes it easy for winners to enter their contact info. It can also include your rules
and disclaimers.
Then you can simply link to one app when you announce giveaways or notify winners.
Here’s a good compromise
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A few promotion tools I recommend
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Shortstack
Woobox
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When used in conjunction, promotions and Facebook ads are the single most
effective way to build audience.
Part III: Advertising and Promoted Content
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Daily fan growth example
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Daily fan growth example
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Giveaway w/ advertising & email blasts
Contest w/ email blasts (no advertising)
Giveaway w/ advertising
& email blasts
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Daily fan growth example
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Giveaway w/ advertising & email blasts
Contest w/ email blasts (no advertising)
Giveaway w/ advertising
& email blasts
Despite strong daily engagement, fan growth between promotions was essentially flat.
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Advertising on Facebook comes in a lot of flavors, but the two you should care most
about are:
• Like ads (Sponsored Stories) • Promoted Posts
Facebook ad options
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If your site is well known, Like ads can be an effective way to generate new fans.
Plus….
Like ads vs. Promoted Posts
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Daily fan growth example
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They are literally the cheapest ads on earth.
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But if your content is your strong suit and your name recognition is low, go with
promoted posts.
Like ads vs. Promoted Posts
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1. Create a budget and timeline, then tell Facebook to promote your newest post
2. Manually promote your posts for any dollar amount on any schedule
Remember: You can target your promotion to any location, demographic
or fan base.
Two ways to buy Promoted Posts
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If you’re promoting content, first be sure any image you’re promoting contains less than 20% text. Otherwise, Facebook will
reject your post.
Beware ‘The 20% Rule’
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The 20% Rule in action
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Facebook’s ‘Grid Tool’ lets you check
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While many people focus on complying with the 20% rule, they don’t realize that
promoted posts also must abide by Facebook’s lengthy ad guidelines.
So many rules
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“Ad text must include proper grammar and the use of all symbols, numbers, or
letters must adhere to the true meaning of the symbol.”
(Bless you for this one, Facebook.)
More Facebook ad rules you should know about
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More Facebook ad rules to know
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• Can’t “position products or services in a sexually suggestive manner.” • “Ads may not contain content that exploits political agendas or ‘hot button’ issues for commercial use.” • Can’t imply the audience’s gender, religion, age or sexual orientation • “Ads may not promote the sale or use of weapons, ammunition, or explosives.”
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Keep an eye out
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Facebook is currently overhauling its entire approach to ad units, scheduled to roll out “this fall.”
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As frustrating as Facebook’s ever-changing options can be, it’s worth
experimenting and adapting your approach to audience growth.
(But you still have a Constitutionally protected right to complain about it.)
How to keep growing on Facebook
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David Griner
Twitter: @Griner Email: [email protected] Linkedin.com/in/Griner
Thanks for your time
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