Posts Tagged ‘facebook’

3 Fan-Busters Every Organization Should Avoid

by Elena Berger | Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

Don't kiss your fans goodbye.Mashable reported yesterday that John Mayer shut down his Twitter account, leaving 3.7 million followers high and dry. The reason? He was only using Twitter to promote his recent tour; otherwise, he mostly communicates through his blog.

I’m so glad to hear that Mayer is committed to blogging. However, the Mashable folks and I had a very similar reaction to his Twitter reneg: Seriously? You’re never going to have another tour again?

It seems insane to purposefully say goodbye to a fanbase of any size. But strangely enough, I’ve seen lots of advocacy folks doing basically the same thing. Maybe they’re not shutting their accounts down (though some of them are), but they might as well be.

So what’s the fan-busting equivalent of the delete button?

  • Creating Facebook and Twitter accounts for each individual advocacy campaign instead of using one organizational brand to promote multiple campaigns. There are times when this is not true, of course. For example, if the campaign is run by a coalition of organizations, or it’s a long-term project that is significantly different in theme and scope than your organization’s original mission. But what if your project basically boils down to a single action alert, well within bounds? Why not keep your brand–and your fanbase–intact?

  • Creating an account for a brief offshoot campaign before or instead of an organizational account. What happens when that campaign ends? Do you really think your fans will follow you to your website, a different Twitter handle or a more generic Facebook page? Brand as broadly as possible to get the most fans as you can, and then set about categorizing them by interest by which of your action alerts they take.

  • Creating an account for one purpose but then using it for another when you run out of things to say. This is pretty much like the previous example, except you’re taking the new topic to your fans instead of taking your fans to the new topic. Maybe people will stick around, maybe they won’t. I wouldn’t. I don’t like to get spammed on Facebook any more than I like it on email.

Again, there are exceptions to every rule. But advocates are by definition fan-getters. It’s important at least to start with a long-term mindset, trying not to go more specific than you need to so that you don’t wind up “eating your young.” (Sorry for the mental image, but now you’ll never forget my point, right?)

Let’s face it, John Mayer’s concerts will still sell out, so he can probably get away with some bad social media choices. You can’t.

Why popularity matters…in Facebook ads, that is

by Elena Berger | Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Your ad is your campain's cheerleaderIn a recent post on e.politics, Colin Delaney outlines a potential pitfall in Facebook’s ad model that some advertisers may not know about: namely that Facebook charges more per click if an ad is underperforming, and skews cheaper if an ad is doing well.

Though you might cry foul (or FAIL!), this cost-per-click model is really nothing new. Google Adwords works the same way. The lower your ad quality is calculated to be, the more you’ll see your investment affected by higher costs per click. Ad quality may be determined by several factors, including whether users view your ad as relevent to their search. In this way, the system pretty much punishes you for not thinking about and A/B testing for variables like audience, keywords and copy.

Back to Facebook. In Colin’s example of a recent ad campaign, he saw the most clever and creative ads do badly and therefore cost more, while the more generic ads skyrocketed. This is another bizarre and often frustrating fact about advertising. What YOU think is a good ad may not actually translate to the average user. Why this is true we may never know. But this is why we always say TEST, TEST, TEST. Create a spectrum of ad copy running from bland to snarky. Choose a variety of images – including ones you wouldn’t click on yourself…because the people you want to reach are not you.

And here’s my most important advice for someone about to test Facebook ads: separate your ads into individual campaigns. Why? If you have one ad in particular that is doing terribly, it will bring your campaign’s average click-through rate down, and your high-performing ads may suffer the consequences. So different ads and different target settings get split into different campaigns, to save your good ads the embarrassment of being seen with their less popular counterparts.

It’s a harsh truth, but in this case, popularity wins every time. Is it so far off-base to call your most winning ads your “cheerleaders”?

Facebook By The Numbers: The Congressional Leadership

by Kevin Reid | Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

After doing a quick tally of Facebook stats for the top Congressional leaders, I have two things to say: #1) someone at Congressman Boehner’s office is doing something right (although keep reading… there is room for improvement) and #2) WTF? Is this really the best Congress can do? 

While the Facebook pages of political superstars like Obama and Palin have larger followings than most major newspapers in this country, the other household names within the political universe barely register on the scale. The lone wolf is Rep. John Boehner, the Republican Leader, who is way ahead of the pack with over 100,000 followers compared to Pelosi’s 20,000.  Reid, Hoyer and McConnell are left in the dust. 

Facebook Counts for Congressional Leaders

Scratching a little further, the numbers change things around. While there is nothing wrong with a lot of followers, another key metric – engagement – tells a slightly different story. 

Reid has posted 54 updates to his page this month.  McConnell has posted 24 updates. Boehner has posted five. Hoyer has posted three. The Speaker has only posted one!  So, Reid is updating his followers about 3 times a day on average while Pelosi is updating her followers once every two weeks.  Everyone else is somewhere in between.

Ha! But, Reid is being sneaky… he has hired someone who knows what an RSS feed is and is actually just having blog posts from his campaign site reposted on his Facebook page. “Cheater!” you say. Not so fast. By using technology to distribute his posts beyond his campaign website, he is being smart. He is simply using one of his networks to get his message out. He is sharing.  He is being social.

But guess what? Boehner has a blog. Pelosi has a blog. Hoyer has a blog. Why aren’t they republishing their blog posts on Facebook? (And, yes… I did check and those blogs are official blogs, not campaign blogs.) Somebody get on the phone and give them a call!

And, what about McConnell? It looks like he had an active blog for the 2008 election, but hasn’t updated it since. That’s OK. He’s on YouTube and posts his videos to his Facebook page. In fact, he has posted something to his Facebook page 24 times so far this month. And, these are not RSS generated re-posts of content.  These are real status updates and comments. So, of all of them, McConnell’s Facebook page is probably the most genuine.  

In my opinion, Boehner and Reid are performing the best out of the bunch even though there is room for improvement. But, with a little effort, Pelosi, Hoyer and McConnell could easily jump to the front of the line.  I will check back in a month and let everyone know. But, in the meantime, I will start looking at the Twitter accounts.

For more on this, see also “Capitol Hill Democrats and Social Media: The Sky is Not Falling,” on epolitics.com

[Note: Steny Hoyer has a personal page, a politician page and a “government official” page.  I used the government official page (which has the lowest number of followers) because it seems to be the most active (his politician page hasn’t been updated since February).]

The Lowdown on Facebook Ad Success

by Elena Berger | Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Sample Facebook AdWith Facebook’s community growing every day, and an advertising platform that is built for its social atmosphere, advocates and corporate brands are both figuring out the same thing: This is for me.

Facebook ads offer a low-risk, pay-per-click opportunity to start reaching out to new audiences. Within an enormous pool of potential new contacts,  you can target a large swath of people, or a very specific group—say, all people who live within 25 miles of Washington, DC, are women between the ages of 18 and 25, and list “hiking” as an interest. That’s about 2,100 people, by the way.

And according to a new report from Nielsen—as well as Amplify’s years of experience—these ads work when done right. Ads can be effective during a one-off campaign, even if you haven’t developed a Facebook presence. But if you’re really interested in cultivating a following that will be there for all your future campaigns, you should start out with ads that attract people to your fan page, taking some time to get them acquainted with your organization.

Nielsen’s report, Understanding the Value of a Social Media Impression, analyses the results of over 125 ad campaigns and 800,000 Facebook users . It concludes that, just as with traditional PR, a combination of paid media and earned media will reap the biggest rewards.

  • Paid Media. For paid media in this case the report recommends starting with “Homepage ads” – the Facebook social ads that ask you to become a fan (or “Like” you, as is now the case)—combined with the more personal version of these ads in which a friend who’s already a fan is listed in the ad—suggesting the endorsement of someone the reader trusts. In branding terms, this adds up to a substantial increase in ad recall, brand awareness and purchase intent.
  • Earned Media. Of course, more people taking action means more “earned media”—in this case, the story showing up on people’s Facebook feeds (as well as being actively shared)… what we call the “networking effect.” This is harder to quantify, but it’s clear that what earned media lacks in reach, it makes up for in how effectively it zeroes in on future fans.

The same branding recommendations hold true with advocacy groups. This is all a fancy way of saying that before you can expect people to do something, they should already know who you are and like what you do. This is far more likely to be the case if your message catches their attention, and if their friends will vouch for you.

The main takeaway is that it’s the time spent cultivating your fans before your next big campaign, and not the campaign itself, that will make all the difference. Your message could be the most important information in the world, but if nobody’s looking, it doesn’t matter.

To learn more about how Amplify can help you leverage Facebook, email Elena Berger.

Facebook Poll: Email Use in Decline

by Blogger Relations | Thursday, November 1st, 2007

We ran an experiment this last week using Facebook Polls.  We ask users if they primarily use email to communicate with their friends. The survey targeted three specific groups*:

  • age 13 to 17
  • age 18 to 24
  • age 25 to 34

We had a pretty good idea ahead of time of what the results would be.  We have all seen the statistics that show fewer people using email, opening email and responding to email. Our Facebook experiment appears to support these findings. People are not relying on email as much as they used to. Here are the results we got:

Email_chart_2

The time is now to begin investing in alternative means of communicating with your constituents. Consider integrating a blog into your next campaign. Start up a Facebook Group or MySpace page around one of your popular issue areas. Get a Twitter account. Email isn’t going away. As a matter of fact, it’s still the workhorse of most online campaigns. But, you can’t deny that changes are taking place. Start experimenting with these tools now.

*We surveyed 100 people in each age group.  Facebook does not verify the statistical significance of response data.   

- Kevin