Archive for May, 2010

Facebook Fan Page Marketing

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

In this video, you will learn a technique for connecting with strangers on your Facebook Page. Enjoy.

To be continued, your comments are welcomed…

Al Hanzal


Why I Love Facebook Fan Page Marketing!

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Why do I love Facebook Page Marketing? Facebook is hot with over 500,000 million participants. 250 million active users spend 25-50 minutes per day on Facebook. That’s a lot of potential eye balls to see my business. I have a better reason for my love affaire. Facebook Page Marketing tools match the way people buy. In this post, I will identify the Facebook Fan Page marketing tools and how you can put them to work for your small business. Enjoy and prosper.

Facebook Fan Page Marketing Tools

I believe Facebook Pages offers unique ways to market your business. These tools match the changing way people want to buy in today’s ecommerce.

A shift from one way marketing to interactive marketing. Today’s prospects want to tell you what they think about your industry, products, services, articles, etc. Facebook business Pages allow for this Fan interaction. (Facebook Comments, Discussions)

A shift from 3rd person marketing to first person marketing. People are tired of sterile corporate speak. They want to know the person behind the business before they make a purchase. Facebook Pages encourage personal expression. (Facebook Status Updates)

A shift from static websites to getting found on the internet. Google gives immediate indexing of Status Updates. This gives you the opportunity to get your business to the top of search engine rankings. (Google Indexing)

A shift from text to video marketing. Video marketing engages people. Facebook Pages makes it easy to share videos with your fans. (Facebook Videos)

A shift from selling to sharing. Sharing information is the heart and soul of the new commerce. People want to share and connect with others on line. Everything on Facebook Pages is build on this model of viral sharing. (Facebook News Feed, Facebook Links)

A shift from mass marketing to target marketing. Mass marketing is dead. Facebook Fan Page marketing allows you to precisely target the people you want for your business. (Facebook Ads)

A shift from individual marketing to community building.   By its very definition, a Facebook Fan Page is a community of people who share a common interest. Today’s buyer wants to know what other people think and experience before they buy. (Facebook Fans)

A shift from mass numbers to loyal followers. Loyal customers have always been the key to long term business success. Loyal Facebook fans are part of this success tradition. (Facebook Fans, Facebook News Feed)

A shift from clever marketing to making connections. Marketing is no longer about being clever. It’s about making genuine connections with people. Facebook Fan Page marketing promotes these connections. (Facebook Applications)

Conclusion

When you use Facebook Fan Page Marketing tools, you market the way people what to buy in today’s ecommerce. The more you learn how to use these tools, the more you will fall in love with Facebook Fan Page marketing.

To be continued, your comments are always welcomed…

Al Hanzal

If you need help with your Facebook Fan Page, email me at al@hanzal.com


Have you made the Facebook Fan Page Paradigm Shift?

Monday, May 24th, 2010

In the posts on Facebook Fan Page marketing, I will share practical strategies and Facebook tools you can use to connect with your fans. They will show the unique opportunities Facebook Fan Pages offer for small business marketing.

Facebook now offers business Pages for you to use for your business. It would be a mistake to see this as just another place to use traditional marketing practices. To be successful with these tools, you must have a different mindset, a new framework, a marketing paradigm shift. When you read the next two posts you will see why this is true.

Paradigm Shift                            paradigmimages thumb1 Have you made the Facebook Fan Page Paradigm Shift?

Facebook Fan Page marketing calls for a paradigm shift. The new framework rests on two key pillars: (1) giving up control; (2) consistent participation. Let’s look at the control pillar.

Interruption Marketing

The traditional model of marketing and advertising is an interruption model. Ads, phone calls and advertising messages come from every direction asking us to buy their products. Even the more sacred places are no longer private! The interruption model often manipulates people into buying with new claims bigger than the last claim. “We are going out of business. Everything must go. Prices reduced by 50%”.

People no longer believer these types of marketing. People have fought back with Do not call lists, spam filters, TiVo’s and other mechanisms to stop the interruptions and the advertising noise.

Web 1.0 Marketing

Web 1.0 has its own form of marketing control. Most websites and email marketing efforts are one way conversations. Whether a hard sell or a soft sell, they still put the website owner in charge of the process telling the visitor about their products.

With the advent of social media sites, people have shifted from one way marketing. They want customer interactive rather than product pitches. Many major companies send customers to their Facebook Page rather than their websites. They understand the shift customers have made with Web 2.0.

Facebook Fan Page Marketing

Facebook Fan Page marketing demands that you give up the traditional marketing hat—“I am in charge!” You are an invited guest, like other participants on any social media program. You come as a guest to participate with others not to manipulate or control them. No one is in “charge”.

You can be an influencer on your Facebook Fan Page. Your primarily skill is listening. You listen for what people are saying. You make contributions. You make suggestions. You ask questions. You provide valuable insights from your expertise.

As odd as it sounds, you essentially give up marketing control over your Facebook Page.

In the next post, I will talk about the second pillar in this paradigm shift— consistent participation.

Your comments are welcomed,

Al Hanzal


What is a Facebook Connecting Experience?

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

Face book images (2) Facebook Fan Page marketing is all about connections.  As I suggested in my last video post, I invite you to identify an experience where you personally connected with a stranger. How did it happen when so many similar experiences go unconnected?

Here’s my experience. My wife, Pat, and I were golfing in Florida. We were teamed up with a retired couple from Nashville, Ann and Walker. Over the years, we have played golf with many couples. They were nice experiences, pleasant, enjoyable. However, very few stand out as a connecting experience. So what was different about this golfing experience that caused my wife Pat to said, “By the third hole, we had already made a connection!” Here’s my analysis on why it happened:

My Experience

  • We shared a common love for golf. We play golf at the same level of skill.
  • By asking questions, we learned about each other’s families and children. The women were much better at this than the men. Men tend to focus on the game (the business at hand) women focus on relationships.
  • Ann and Walker were interesting people. We learned they were personal friends of the real people behind the popular movie, The Blind Side. They share information about their friends that was delightful. We have since told many of our friends about what we learned.
  • We admired them. Ann and Walker are retired and spend three months in Florida. Someday we hope to have that same reality, wintering in a warm place.
  • I learned that Walker had gone to the navel academy with John McCain and they were still friends.
  • Walker and I shared our various businesses experiences, the highs and lows. Walker had created several businesses which he sold for very nice profits. He has been a very successful business person.
  • At one point in the conversation, we moved into the political area—always dangerous. Walked asked “What do you think about the health care debate” (in March is still the hot topic). I shared my thoughts and we found we had connected on a deeper level. We share some common beliefs and values.
  • During the round of golf we complimented each other on good golf shots as well as encouraging each other when we made bad shots.
  • At the end of the round I promised to play with them again later in the week.

Here’s my summary on why this was a connecting experience:

  • Doing something we both loved
  • We were at the same level of skill
  • There was admiration
  • Not all talk about business
  • Personal focus was just as important
  • Interesting people
  • Walker’s credibility
  • Non-judgmental
  • Follow up
  • Use of simple questions
  • Compliments and encouragement
  • We discovered we have shared values and deeper beliefs

Conclusion

I would suggest the ingredients that made this experience a connection, are the same ingredients we need to apply in making connections with Fans on Facebook.

To be continued, your comments are welcomed…

Al Hanzal


Facebook Fan Page Marketing–A Unique Opportunity

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Here is the first in a series of posts to illustrate the unique ingredients in Facebook Fan Page Marketing.

To be continued, your comments are welcomed…

Al Hanzal


The Real Viral Power of a Facebook Business Page

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

As a participant in Facebook, you are familiar with its viral power, connecting and reconnecting with friends.  In this post, I will show you how a Facebook business or Fan page gives you twice the viral power to attract more potential customers to your business.  Enjoy and prosper.

Let’s compare viral power with word of mouth referrals.

Referrals verses Viral

A word of mouth referral is one person taking the time and effort to mention to another person, something favorable or unfavorable about your business.  For a word of mouth referral to happen, you must rely on another person to make it happen.  It doesn’t happen automatically.

When you think of a virus, you think of germs spreading from one person to another, usually without people realizing they are spreading the virus.  The flu virus is a good example.  No one consciously makes an effort to spread the germs, it happens automatically.  Facebook has an automatic viral feature.

The Viral Nature of Facebook

The viral nature of Facebook comes from its Newsfeed.  When you log on to Facebook, you immediately see what your friends have been saying or doing on Facebook.  This is called the Newsfeed.  This is an automatic feature of Facebook.  If you do any activity on Facebook, all of your friends will see what you have done in their Newsfeed.

How does Facebook Profiles Differ from Facebook Fan Pages?

Facebook Profile

You have “friends” on your Profile. You are allowed maximum of 5000 friends.  You can use your “What’s on My Mind”, videos, photos or comments to communicate with friends.  They will see these communications through their Facebook Newsfeed.  You are not allowed to do commercial activity on your Facebook Profile.

Facebook Business Pages

You have “Fans” on a Page.  (Currently changing to “I like it”).  You can have an unlimited number of people liking your business Page.  You can use your Status Update, videos, photos, Notes and other activities to communicate with your Fans.  Your communications appear in their Fan’s Newsfeeds.  You can do commercial activities on your Page.  You also can purchase paid social ads to be used on Facebook.

What is the Viral Difference between A Facebook Profile and Facebook Page?

Facebook Pages adds a second viral feature over and above a Facebook Profile.   Like a Profile, the first viral effect is to do a Status Up, share a video or photos, add a note and all of your Fans will see this action.  This is the same viral effect when you do any activity on your Profile.

The second viral effect is when anyone of your business fans interacts with something you have done on your business Page, their comments or interaction automatically goes into their Newsfeed.  This means all of their friends will see what they have said or done on your business Page.  This gives you automatic exposure to many other people who are not currently part of your Fan base.

For example, you have 100 business fans, each of whom had 50 friends on their Facebook Profile.  If each of these 100 fans made a comment or participated in a discussion on your business Page, their activity on your business Page automatically appear on each of their Newsfeeds.  You now reach a total of 5,000 participants. (100 x 50)

If a new person becomes a fan of your business Page, that action is automatically send to this person’s Newsfeed and all of their friends are notified that he or she has became a fan of your business Page.

A Fan Page gives you twice the viral power of a Facebook Profile.

Conclusion

Word of mouth referrals are powerful and yet they rely on others consciously taking action for you.  The double viral power of a Facebook Fan Page happens automatically as soon as someone interacts with your Page.  News about your business spreads as quickly as the flu bug!

To be continued, your comments are welcomed…

Al Hanzal


Creating a Facebook Opt-in Box

Friday, May 14th, 2010

You are familiar with an Opt-in Box. Opt-in boxes are the feature on most websites where you provide your email address to receive on-going information from the business. You can also add an Opt-in box to your Facebook Page. Why add an Opt-in Box if your visitors become a Fan of your business?

The answer is simple.

You don’t own your Facebook Fans. Facebook owns them! If you get banned from Facebook or Facebook changes the rules, you could lose all your Fans. If you want to use targeted email marketing to promote your business, you need to have your Fans on your email list.

Creating a Facebook Opt-in Box

With FBML, Facebook allows you to create an Opt-in box. In the same way you create an Opt-in Box on your website or blog, you can create a Opt-in box on Facebook. The easiest way to do this is to use one of the Opt-in forms supplied by email providers such as A-Weber, I-Contact, Get Response or other email services. Each has a process for customizing an Opt-in box.

Why use such a service? First, they create the code you need for an Opt-in box. Second, you can use their sequential responder to send additional emails to move your Fans closer to becoming a customer.

A Free Gift

It is customary that when you ask for a visitor’s email name and address, you give the something in return. Quid Pro Quo. You give them something if they give you their information. The more value the visitor sees in your gift, the more likely they give you their email address. On Facebook, a gift is a great way to start a relationship with a new Fan.

FBML (HTML) Code

Once you have customized your Opt-in Box, use the FBML tool to create a box on your Facebook Page. (See http://successfulinternettools.com/2010/04/22/how-to-create-custom-html-on-facebook-fan-pages/ for instructions) You can place the Opt-in Box on your Landing Page or other places on your Facebook Page. (Click on the Application Settings link on your newly created Facebook Box to specify where you want to place your Opt-in Box.

Example

In my Angell Aire example, I placed the Opt-in Box on the left column of the Page instead of the actual Landing Page. I did this to keep the Landing Page simple and also to entice Facebook participants to sign up for the email list. Here’s my example.  (See the actual Box here http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Burnsville-MN/Angell-Aire-Heating-and-Cooling/313052125756?ref=sgm)

Create an Opt-in Box for your Facebook Page.

To be continued, your questions and comments are welcomed…

Al Hanzal


How to Apply Ad Skills to Your Facebook Landing Page

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

In the more recent posts, I wrote the purpose of a Facebook Landing Page is to get visitors to like you and become a Fan. In short, think of your Facebook Landing Page as an Ad to sell your business to a visitor.

Fanpagelikeit

Effective ads have three primary ingredients.

First the heading. The heading grabs the reader and makes them want to read the rest of the ad. Combining images with text helps grab your visitor’s attention more quickly.

Second the benefit. You must give the visitor one or two benefits they will receive by becoming a Fan. How will their life be better by becoming a Fan of your business? Choose your biggest benefit. Ideally, it will be a benefit they cannot receive from another business.

Third the call to action.  Every ad needs a Call to Action. On your Facebook Landing Page you are inviting the visitor to become a Fan. Give them specific instructions on how to become a Fan of your business.

In the next post, I show how to put an Opt-in form on your Facebook Landing Page.

To be continued, your comments are always welcomed…

Al Hanzal


Angell Aire Landing Page

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Based on the discussions in the last several post…
http://successfulinternettools.com/2010/04/26/seal-the-deal-10-tips-for-writing-the-ultimate-landing-page/
here is my first draft on the Angell Aire Landing Page.  I am already considering changes to this first draft.  Your comments are welcomed on this draft.

Why become a Fan of Angell Aire?

You will learn ways to improve the heating and cooling comfort of your home…

You will learn how to save money on your home energy costs…

You will learn ways to contribute to a better use of our natural resources…

Become a Fan and get weekly high tech and low tech ways you can save dollars and make a difference. Click on the Like Button on this page to get your weekly tips.