4 Facebook Tips for Small Biz from the Top 10 for Big Biz
Last week I caught a great blog entry from Social Media Examiner – “Top 10 Facebook Pages and Why They’re Successful” written by Amy Porterfield. The top 10 pages are pretty amazing, but they are all professionally done by big brand companies with marketing budgets most of us small business owners don’t have. However, after further review, I filtered out these four things that you can do with no budget, just some time and creative thinking!
Note: The fan pages I present as examples are managed by individuals who are running their own business. Nothing fancy, but they consistently use techniques that support one of Amy’s points with no cash budget, something we can all appreciate and learn from.
Know Your Audience!
Amy highlights for Red Bull and Jone’s Soda
As you work through your social medial plan for the month, think about what your Facebook audience wants to hear – what will capture their interest?
Susan Jacobs – Assist2Sell Real Estate
Susan is a real estate professional, great networker and a former Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce. Her audience is the network she has built over the last 20 years in the community. Knowing this audience she places a lot of emphasis on chamber and community events, using links and pictures when possible so that posts can be easily shared. Like most small business owners her personal life is very close to her professional life, so there are some content ties between her personal and business profiles that help build on the personal relationships she uses for referrals. Great Job Susan!
Use Pictures and Video
Amy highlights for Burt’s Bees (mentions in multiple others)
For anyone with a visual product or service this is the first recommendation that I make! It’s not too difficult once you set up your process, it adds a ton to each post and it enables the all important “share” link to the bottom of your post. I really wish my business was more photogenic!
Dorsey Signs and Designs
Stevi is one of my new small business Facebook Heroes because of her daily posts! Most of them include a picture and show three things: a different type of “sign and design”, the quality of her work and a mention of the business or organization highlighted.
Garden Muse/Ideascapes
I love the way Fabienne presents the stories of her work. She provides before and after pictures with little write-ups on different jobs that really make us a part of the process. Don’t you want a landscape designer who can look at your before picture and really “muse” about the possibilities, then make it happen.
Get Fans to Engage and Act
Amy highlighted in at least 7 of the 10 pages!
So do you think this is important? Amy provides several great examples – asking people to post pictures, contests, Facebook Stories, etc. Most of these are pretty cheap but take some time and planning to really get them set up and going right. What I would like to focus on here is using the content of your posts and campaigns to engage your audience.
Great Harvest Warrenton
Great Harvest in Warrenton is a place I want to visit every morning when I see their daily picture post of fresh baked bread! Pablo and his staff do a great job of engaging their audience with pictures and headlines, as well as their participation in the community. I especially like the “campaign” he started this week relating to ‘80’s music. First, it identifies with his primary demographic (those who remember the ‘80’s). Second, popular music gets people engaged. People are likely to comment and share a post for a bread called “Tainted Love”! Third, those of us who have visited the store know there is always a familiar tune in the background. I really hope Pablo leverages this campaign! BTW, Great Harvest Warrenton is a great place to cash in on your Foursquare efforts – I got a free cup of coffee Friday!
Use Campaigns
Amy’s highlight for Oreo
Every month I have my clients fill out a form with events, activities, projects and products they want to promote in the upcoming month. Then I put together a media calendar where I can lay out all the different posts for these events and activities. Once we have the big picture I look for the gaps and connections where we can use a campaign. A campaign is a grouping of messages under a single name or brand, where the name or brand catches people’s attention, ties together a couple key messages and engages your audience. When done right, like the OREO Back to School campaign, it provides a steady stream of great content. Guide your campaign ideas around the general value you bring to customers or something your audience will identify with, like Back to School or ‘80’s Music.
Thanks to Amy for a great post that really opened my eyes! Don’t dismiss the creativity, adding tabs and other things she pointed out and recommended. Most of what the big guys are doing is within your grasp as a small business, that’s the beauty of social media.
A lot of what I do is taking the success of big business and making it practical for my small business clients. My biggest recommendation in Social Media for Small Business is to start with one thing and do it well, then build on it.
- Know your audience
- Use Pictures and Video
- Get Fans to Engage and Act
- Use Campaigns
But most importantly – BE CONSISTENT! Set up a simple schedule to start and stick with it.
September 9, 2010 | Posted by Jamie Gorman 



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