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How do you achieve your Facebook likes?

eric-holmeseric-holmes Registered Users Posts: 257 Major grins
edited October 25, 2012 in Mind Your Own Business
I'm sure I'm not the only one when I say this, but a huge portion of my business comes from Facebook. I have built a pretty solid fan base but ,as always, I am looking to grow. I seem to have slowed down on the number of "likes" I receive, so I went looking for options. Apparently you can buy targeted fans from agencies who basically market you toward the market you want to appeal to. Has anyone ever done this?

So I ask you...

Are all of your fans organic? Meaning they crawled to your page on their own?
Do/Have you market with Facebook by buying ads?
Do/Have you ever bought targeted fans?
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    dlscott56dlscott56 Registered Users Posts: 1,324 Major grins
    edited June 16, 2012
    Interesting question since I just finished setting up a Facebook page and was curious about this myself.
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    orljustinorljustin Registered Users Posts: 193 Major grins
    edited June 18, 2012
    I always thought "likes" were an ego or bragging thing, or something just to use for marketing - "We've got 1000 likes!". Pretty useless.
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    jarboedoggartjarboedoggart Registered Users Posts: 270 Major grins
    edited June 18, 2012
    dlscott56 wrote: »
    Interesting question since I just finished setting up a Facebook page and was curious about this myself.

    Mine has been completely organic, the only extra exposure is the link from my site. However, I only have about 550 fans, so I should listen to others successes here to grow that number.
    -Nate
    Jarboe Doggart Photography - jarboedoggart.com
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    eric-holmeseric-holmes Registered Users Posts: 257 Major grins
    edited June 18, 2012
    orljustin wrote: »
    I always thought "likes" were an ego or bragging thing, or something just to use for marketing - "We've got 1000 likes!". Pretty useless.

    Only useless if you don't take advantage of those 1,000 likes with advertisement to draw in more business.
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    dlscott56dlscott56 Registered Users Posts: 1,324 Major grins
    edited June 18, 2012
    I thought that when someone "likes" your page it shows up in their feed? Don't really know much about Facebook, but, if that's true then don't all of their friends also see that they did that? Which could result in more traffic? Again, I don't really know anything about how business takes advantage of Facebook or if it's effective. Just curious about it.
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    chrisdgchrisdg Registered Users Posts: 366 Major grins
    edited June 18, 2012
    orljustin - In this age of social media, aside from bringing in new business, I think the number of likes is rather important (not "useless" as described above) in that some potential clients might feel validated that they are choosing (or have chosen) someone with credibility and/or clout and/or internet fame. The number of likes certainly helps solidify (or damage) that impression.

    Having said that, I don't know the answer to your question, since my new Concert Photography page is literally two days old and I only have 30 likes so far! :)

    What I do know is that people will come to your page and not realize that they should be clicking the LIKE button...so they "like" a few photos or albums and then leave, only to forget about you forever. To help avoid this, check out the little graphic reminder that I've added to the Cover Photo itself:

    facebook-photo-cover-XL.jpg


    now, admittedly, this is kind of an "edgy" area of photography audience-wise, so I can get away with being little more aggressive.


    Also, if you tag someone in a photo, you might consider putting a link to your facebook page as the caption of the photo, because that person's friends may only see the photo(s) you tagged of the subject, not the entire album/gallery from which it came, and they might not see an obvious way to get to your page. Here's a sample of what I mean about enticing viewers to visit your page via the caption
    maidens2-XL.jpg

    oh, Eric and Dave, I just liked both of your pages, so you each got one more just by talking about it here. ;)
    -Chris D.
    http://www.facebook.com/cdgImagery (concert photography)
    http://www.cdgimagery.com (concert photography)
    http://chrisdg.smugmug.com (everything else)

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    ian408ian408 Administrators Posts: 21,910 moderator
    edited June 19, 2012
    There are a variety of ways to get likes. The obvious ones are to get all your friends to like the page. Their friends should see that as well. If you Google "how to increase facebook likes", you'll find a ton of other ways to increase the number of likes.

    The other thing to do is make your web pages social media friendly. That means working with Facebook's developer pages to add "Like" button to your web page. Don't forget Twitter while you're at it :D Some photographers even gather facebook comments and bring them onto their websites too.

    Good luck!

    And Chris, I might just like that on the basis of cool. Awesome job.
    Moderator Journeys/Sports/Big Picture :: Need some help with dgrin?
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    GerryDavidGerryDavid Registered Users Posts: 439 Major grins
    edited June 19, 2012
    Running a contest that requires people to like your page to vote is a popular thing on facebook. I believe its also against facebook rules, but it doesnt seem to stop many of the photographers around here from doing it. But to me its not worth getting the page shut down. But if you are just starting up who knows. :)

    It seems most clients become a fan of my work either before or after their portrait session, then friends and family that sees their pictures may like the page.

    I post once in a while on my status info about my fan page, but that doesnt draw in to many people. Mostly its just customers or admirors of my work. Its slowly going up, im almost at 800 but ive been working at it for years.

    You could run specials, like doing a give away to a random fan of your page and promote it for a while on your personal page.

    I find personal facebook pages are more effective, you just have to add someone as a friend and then they will see your posts, you dont have to wait for them to become a fan.

    I do wish I created a second personal page for my business and kept my current personal one just for close friends and family.
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    jasonscottphotojasonscottphoto Registered Users Posts: 711 Major grins
    edited June 25, 2012
    You're not allowed to put something like that in your cover photo - it is against the facebook terms.

    From their help pages:

    Cover images must be at least 399 pixels wide and may not contain:
    Price or purchase information, such as "40% off" or "Download it at our website"
    Contact information, such as web address, email, mailing address or other information intended for your Page's About section
    References to user interface elements, such as Like or Share, or any other Facebook site features
    Calls to action, such as "Get it now" or "Tell your friends"
    Posts by Allyson, the wife/assistant...

    Jason Scott Photography | Blog | FB | Twitter | Google+ | Tumblr | Instagram | YouTube
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    JDubJDub Registered Users Posts: 171 Major grins
    edited September 20, 2012
    constant contact social marketing
    Josh Westbrook
    ---
    Atlanta, GA
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 20, 2012
    Well let me firstly qualify my useless post by saying I'm not at all into face waste and I think it's something that despite it's size will either implode on itself or become a passing fad that people will look back on and no one will ( typically and ironically) ever admit to having anything to do with.

    I think it's also a great and misleading marketing tool for the uneducated in marketing. Many seem to believe that in this day and age have a faceache page and a million friends giving "likes" ( I still find that a childish and embarrassing term) is going to give them a solid business.
    Facewaste is nothing more than anther marketing/ advertising medium exactly the same as an ad in a newspaper, magazine or phone book. You can argue the technical differences but fundamentally, ( although many will argue otherwise through ignorance) it's the same thing.

    One big difference seems to be measurement and conversion factor. With an advertisement you can and companies certainly do track their response rate and the correlation between their investment in the ad and the return. So far, with my admittedly limited interest, I'm yet to see anyone put up any numbers between the amount of likes to sales or revenue. I'm sure you can directly create numbers by having people like you to get an offer or something but otherwise, it seems more feelgood BS for the small business person rather than a concrete and viable income stream.

    And yes, there will be people that say things like my business or the majority of my work comes from face ache, just like people used to say the same thing about yellow pages 20 years ago. The reasons are still the same. If facewaste is the only advertising you do or 95% of your marketing effort goes into it, well you damn well better hope the majority of your business comes from it.
    That's not to say its the most effective avenue of promoting your business though or gives you the best return for the time invested.

    I set a mate up in a photo business at the start of the year. He's doing bread and butter low end portrait work and gets ALL his business from those Drasticly discounted "Deal of the day" websites.
    I set the whole business up to work off that one advertising medium. And it does work very nicely especially for a guy who'd photographic knowledge can be written in the top left hand corner of a postage stamp in 12 point.

    Now I can't imagine how he could have anywhere near the business he's got with Face waste. For one thing the time he'd have to invest would be magnitudes more than he does with the discount deal sites which are basicaly send the copy and sample pics we set up months back and sit down and take the calls from the people who bought the deal.
    The whole nature of these site is a call to action in a specific time for a pre-determined number of people and therefore a predetermined Minimum return. I see no way of achieving that on face waste.

    My current business would be useless to promote on facewaste. I could be liked better than free money but it would be 100% irrelevant and totally unconvertible to sales for what I'm doing. The problem I see is many people are pretty much in the same boat, they just don't realise it because they are caught up in the Hype and don't know anything better.

    If you are selling a product that is saleable around the world like rock concert pics for instance, certainly I can see the possible benifits to getting in front of a lot of potential clients. If you are a wedding and portrait shooter for instance who's product is largely localised, well it's not hard to see that a million people could Love what you do but your target market and where you earn your $$ from is still 99% going to be in your local town of Baccabuggery. IF your competitor takes out a prominent billboard ad for a year, You are going to be competeing against that and all those people likeing you in your town are going to be going to see that guy and check him out and your likes are essentially not worth that much at the end of the day.

    From what I have seen, people place too much emphasis on getting these likes and not enough attention on converting them to sales or $$.

    Everything seems to be a lot of hype about building likes for some future benefit and growth in ones business but I am yet to see an actual plan or theroy as to how those likes are going to be actually converted to real $$ and at what specific point in time. How can you grow a business without set points to realise goals but with faceache it always seems to be about the future with no given time frame as to when all this like crap will pay off.

    Facewaste should be nothing more than another marketing medium and a considered and multi pronged marketing initiative.

    When I see a formula or method for converting likes to income in a measurable and tangible way, then I'll change my ideas about face waste. In the mean time, I'll hold great reservations about the whole thing as a viable business marketing avenue.
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    GerryDavidGerryDavid Registered Users Posts: 439 Major grins
    edited September 20, 2012
    I have to disagree, facebook is a valuable tool for many photographers, but not all. ive gotten messages minutes after posting pictures from a recent portrait asking about booking an appointment. Its a free tool to advertise on and can help get you new customers. Although it is a time vampire if your not careful. Its not the only way I advertise but its the best one for me.
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    dlscott56dlscott56 Registered Users Posts: 1,324 Major grins
    edited September 20, 2012
    GerryDavid wrote: »
    I have to disagree, facebook is a valuable tool for many photographers, but not all. ive gotten messages minutes after posting pictures from a recent portrait asking about booking an appointment. Its a free tool to advertise on and can help get you new customers. Although it is a time vampire if your not careful. Its not the only way I advertise but its the best one for me.

    Yep, couldn't agree more. Free advertising, little time required, on a medium that's 'popular' right now. Can't lose on that one. No sense in injecting personal feelings about Facebook's place in the world. A smart marketer will take advantage of any medium available. And, if and when Facebook falls out of favor, you find what's next and use it to your advantage.
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    angevin1angevin1 Registered Users Posts: 3,403 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    I'm sure I'm not the only one when I say this, but a huge portion of my business comes from Facebook. I have built a pretty solid fan base but ,as always, I am looking to grow. I seem to have slowed down on the number of "likes" I receive, so I went looking for options. Apparently you can buy targeted fans from agencies who basically market you toward the market you want to appeal to. Has anyone ever done this?

    So I ask you...

    Are all of your fans organic? Meaning they crawled to your page on their own?
    Do/Have you market with Facebook by buying ads?
    Do/Have you ever bought targeted fans?

    I'll bet you $3 you did NOT get your first gig from FB. FB is another tool. If you have talent, drive and dedication, then you'll have no problem even if you shunned Fb!
    tom wise
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    GerryDavid wrote: »
    I have to disagree, facebook is a valuable tool for many photographers, but not all. ive gotten messages minutes after posting pictures from a recent portrait asking about booking an appointment.

    Right.
    An enquiry is nice and a step in the right direction but what counts is sales.
    Did the person that enquired actually come in for a session and then buy pics?
    If they did, terrific. If they didn't, then enquirys are like likes. They might give you the warm and fuzzys but they don't pay the bills.

    Do you actually know how many people have paid you to shoot for them that liked you on face waste and what their average spend has been?
    If not, then you have a lot to learn about marketing your business.

    A smart marketer will take advantage of any medium available.

    Errr, not even close.
    A smart marketer knows which mediums apply and are effective for their business and which are not both financially and time wise. A smart marketer knows where the people that want and have the means to buy their product.


    If good marketing was taking advantage of any medium, you'd see Coca cola advertising in the classifieds of every little hicktown local paper in the world and on the back of shopper Dockets.

    Smart marketers know where NOT to waste their time and money.
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    GerryDavidGerryDavid Registered Users Posts: 439 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    Glort wrote: »
    Right.
    An enquiry is nice and a step in the right direction but what counts is sales.
    Did the person that enquired actually come in for a session and then buy pics?
    If they did, terrific. If they didn't, then enquirys are like likes. They might give you the warm and fuzzys but they don't pay the bills.

    Do you actually know how many people have paid you to shoot for them that liked you on face waste and what their average spend has been?
    If not, then you have a lot to learn about marketing your business.

    90% of my senior portraits come from facebook. My senior average *not counting senior spokesmodels* is $800 at this point. My average for senior models is $215 at this point, and there should be some nice print orders come in before the school year is out unless they refer me a lot of customers then they will get a bunch of freebies.

    Sales are great, but if you dont have customers then its hard to get sales. As I said before facebook may not work for every photography market, but there are plenty of markets it will work for. And for people to know your name, you need exposure. Limiting that exposure is just plain stupidity.
    Glort wrote: »
    Errr, not even close.
    A smart marketer knows which mediums apply and are effective for their business and which are not both financially and time wise. A smart marketer knows where the people that want and have the means to buy their product.


    If good marketing was taking advantage of any medium, you'd see Coca cola advertising in the classifieds of every little hicktown local paper in the world and on the back of shopper Dockets.

    Smart marketers know where NOT to waste their time and money.

    My answer to this is: https://www.facebook.com/cocacola

    Also, I recal seeing the coca cola sign on many buildings in small towns, and have been on these buildings for 40 years giving constant exposure and advertising. They are also on the paper placemats in many resteraunts, a free or very cheap form of advertising.

    Werent you struggling in photography not to long ago until you found the swimming school niche?
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    GerryDavid wrote: »
    90% of my senior portraits come from facebook. My senior average *not counting senior spokesmodels* is $800 at this point. My average for senior models is $215 at this point, and there should be some nice print orders come in before the school year is out unless they refer me a lot of customers then they will get a bunch of freebies.

    Sales are great, but if you dont have customers then its hard to get sales. As I said before facebook may not work for every photography market, but there are plenty of markets it will work for. And for people to know your name, you need exposure. Limiting that exposure is just plain stupidity.

    If it works for you that's great.
    With something like senior portraits, I would think a more direct route would get you more work still but if face waste is your thing, terrific. If you can pull clients in that market from face waste, I guarantee I could pull in a lot more NOT using it.

    We don't have the senior thing here but isn't that pretty seasonal?
    Also, have you equated your Facewaste likes to the number of clients that come in and book because they liked you? From what I have seen everyone takes it as a more as better thing but I have never seen anyone come up with any sort of conversion rate.
    With the marketing research I have read, it all seems to say there is little to no correlation of likes to sales and that buying these likes ( however that works) is a dead loss.

    My answer to this is: https://www.facebook.com/cocacola

    Also, I recal seeing the coca cola sign on many buildings in small towns, and have been on these buildings for 40 years giving constant exposure and advertising. They are also on the paper placemats in many resteraunts, a free or very cheap form of advertising.

    That is an entirely different thing to what I said about classifieds in local papers but it is a good example of being able to recognise the difference between a good marketing avenue and one that's not.
    Some people will see the difference and would be able to market effectively to the same audience and some would think they could do the same in avenues that would lead to marketing failures.
    I think you have well illustrated how easily that can happen.
    Werent you struggling in photography not to long ago until you found the swimming school niche?

    I was struggling with my health first and foremost. That effected me in ways I am still realising and coming to terms with. I started the first school in March of this year then couldn't do any more till August because I was not near being up to it.

    Now I have my health better restored I have been taking on a variety of markets.
    The school work as a Niche for the business has well past already. I'm booked out with that for the next 6 months and have put on 3 staff and am looking for more to cover it. I have sewn up the 3 major players for that and am now talking to them about doing their interstate facilities as well. The reality is they are ready for me to start next week, I'm still trying to figure out and getting advise on how to structure the business for it. The growth has been far quicker than would I would have ever envisaged and that creates problems and potential pitfals aplenty.


    My Charity/ corporate work has kicked off again. I had a previous client come back to me to shoot a real short notice job and as soon as I did that I networked with the venue and have been picking up heaps of work from them and 2 other facilities owned by the same group.

    I'm also in the process of setting up another avenue of event work to what I did before. I got an idea for it, crunched the numbers and spoke to the appropriate businesses and got them onboard.
    I am confident I can make over $1k a weekend at each of the 4 different sites I have lined up. Needless to say, I won't be doing any of it, it will all be done by hired help.

    None of what I have set up has been advertised at all so far.
    People seem to forget with all this Social networking hype that the most effective promotion and advertising of all for localised enterprises is still to get out and knock on doors and get face to face with people.
    I walked into places with the school work and sewed up contracts worth a lot of money and now I'm doing the same with other things I want to take on.

    While I appreciate face waste may work for you, it's not the only marketing avenue out there and would do absoloutley Jack all for my markets.
    For some reason, many people seem to think that being liked and having a pretty page on face waste is the be all and end all of marketing these days.

    They are poorly misguided.
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    GerryDavidGerryDavid Registered Users Posts: 439 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    Glort wrote: »
    If it works for you that's great.
    With something like senior portraits, I would think a more direct route would get you more work still but if face waste is your thing, terrific.

    What direct route would you take to get the senior portraits? :)
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    dlscott56dlscott56 Registered Users Posts: 1,324 Major grins
    edited September 21, 2012
    Glort wrote: »
    Errr, not even close.
    A smart marketer knows which mediums apply and are effective for their business and which are not both financially and time wise. A smart marketer knows where the people that want and have the means to buy their product.


    If good marketing was taking advantage of any medium, you'd see Coca cola advertising in the classifieds of every little hicktown local paper in the world and on the back of shopper Dockets.

    Smart marketers know where NOT to waste their time and money.

    Well, this conversation is getting a little silly I think.

    FREE advertising to 100+ of my potential customers that is set up in minutes (probably less time than it took to type those lengthy replies). I'm not suggesting this be your only marketing strategy or that you should use it. Of course it would be silly to BUY classified ads in a paper that no one in my market reads.

    By the way, you can find Coca-Cola on Facebook, Twitter, their website, Flicker, and YouTube.
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    ian408ian408 Administrators Posts: 21,910 moderator
    edited September 21, 2012
    dlscott56 wrote: »
    FREE advertising to 100+ of my potential customers that is set up in minutes (probably less time than it took to type those lengthy replies). I'm not suggesting this be your only marketing strategy or that you should use it. Of course it would be silly to BUY classified ads in a paper that no one in my market reads.

    This.

    The beauty of it is you make a customer happy showing them their stuff. Their friends see it and you've made multiple first impressions with one post. You'd never get those impressions with just a web site or by relying on SEO. If the friends are convinced, maybe they'll like your page or check out your website as well and the cycle repeats.
    Moderator Journeys/Sports/Big Picture :: Need some help with dgrin?
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 22, 2012
    Let me put it this way.....

    I try to sell my business without a facewaste page or any likes.

    I then acquire ( legitimately) 1000, 10,000 or 100,000 likes.

    All else being equal, would the value of my business as in it's worth on the open market be any greater and be valued higher buy a business broker with the likes than without?

    I am trying to clarify if these likes have a real and tangible worth or if they are really nothing more than a brain washing in effect as something you should have but don't actually have a dollar value or definable potential to a business.
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited September 22, 2012
    I think the crux of the to use or not use fb is somewhere in the middle of the two poles of the discussion. But going back to the original topic, it seems like contests or giveaways work quite well. I was able to ramp up over 250 likes in just over a month for a site I was hired to design with simple giveaways at like milestones.

    But the likes are nothing unless people take action on the posts you post. I recently posted something that over 50% of the 'likes' audience saw--and not one bit of feedback. It's still like fishing, not like shooting fish in a barrel as the hype suggests.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
    Want faster uploading? Vote for FTP!
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    ian408ian408 Administrators Posts: 21,910 moderator
    edited September 22, 2012
    SamirD wrote: »
    It's still like fishing, not like shooting fish in a barrel as the hype suggests.

    Think of it more like junk or catalog mail. At least, that's they way I look at it-except it's free.
    Moderator Journeys/Sports/Big Picture :: Need some help with dgrin?
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    GerryDavidGerryDavid Registered Users Posts: 439 Major grins
    edited September 22, 2012
    theres more to advertising than sales, its also brand awareness. for the photographers that can benefit from facebook *not glort* it makes sense. Its free, its an easy way to get your product infront of new customers and its on the same level as having a website. Using glorts logic, I bet he doesnt have a website since it doesnt increase sales or reach his target market. Most of us dont have huge swimming schools in the area so that wont do us much good. :)

    For us folks that do regular portraits we need to get our brand in front of as many people as often as we can so we'll be in their mind when they need a portrait. The problem is glort is trying to convince us its a waste of time which it is for him but isnt for the rest of us. :)

    The way I have been getting facebook likes is to just have conversations and questions on the fan page that people answer and then their friends see it and check the page out and also answer. Ive gotten 25 likes in the last week from trying this. Its more for fun, I know the likes dont mean anything but they do help you look more established than the other guys.

    I get more business inquiries on my personal facebook page than I do my fan page. :) and I have a lot more "friends" than I do "likes" so I reach more people there anyways.
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    SamSam Registered Users Posts: 7,419 Major grins
    edited September 22, 2012
    I have 2 friends and I even know one of of them. I have 3 likes.....................I'm on my way to stardom!
    :D:D:D:D:D:D

    Sam
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    sapphire73sapphire73 Registered Users, Super Moderators Posts: 1,945 moderator
    edited September 22, 2012
    I am not at the point of selling my photos but have been involved with some new fb pages for nonprofits over the past year. Thought I would respond to a couple of things that cropped up in this thread:

    1) Likes are important to help your status updates be seen by more people - it does affect what reaches the newsfeed for those who subscribe to your page and may be seen by their friends as well
    2) I agree that if people who like your page never interact with your content, it doesn't help as much as one might hope
    3) fb is very good at changing up the algorithms for people seeing your status updates and it is now harder than ever to grow organically.
    4) In my experience, the non-profit fb pages that achieve the most likes are those with some budget to get facebook to push their status updates or ads. I would guess that this would apply to other fb pages for brands.

    That said, people tend to respond very well to photos on fb. I will often click through to someone's website when I see an image that catches my attention. And I have now subscribed to several photographers' fb pages. If I see a photo that inspires me - in a fb status update on a photographer's fb page - I will click "like" on the particular photo in the hope of helping them out with fb stats (Insights).

    I am by no means an authority on any of this, and am offering these thoughts in the off chance that they are helpful to the op or others.

    Cheers,
    Gretchen
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 24, 2012
    GerryDavid wrote: »

    For us folks that do regular portraits we need to get our brand in front of as many people as often as we can so we'll be in their mind when they need a portrait. The problem is glort is trying to convince us its a waste of time which it is for him but isnt for the rest of us. :)

    I'm not sure if you are being deliberately obtuse because my point doesn't suit your preferred agenda or you have genuine comprehension difficulty with the written word.
    If you read my last post which was as simple and clear as I knew how to make it, and took from that I am trying to convince people its a waste of time, then it's clear to me you are letting other issues taint your position.

    What I am asking for is someone to provide some first hand experience with the relation ship between likes on face waste and actual $$ in the bank.
    You are still talking theoretical and assumptions but nothing to support that having a load of likes on Facewaste translates to an increase in business.

    You seem to get narky at things I suggest you don't agree with but over look the fact that you have no idea there are other things I am working on besides what you know about that Face waste may well work for.
    You also fail to read between the lines that i'm looking for an indication of the value in face waste so I can use it myself in other markets.
    I don't know a lot about this social media stuff so I'm not about to go spending time on anything without having some idea or indication as to it's real and tangible value to my business.
    If I can get some idea of that you bet I'll be in like Flynn on an effective free advertising and marketing medium. I'm not a person to fall for Hype and I DO look gift horses in the mouth to verify they aren't a donkey before I guy buy the saddle for them.

    You seem too young to have kids but I have a son that is all over this stuff and could set me up a face waste page and work it to within an inch of it's life. That's an advantage I have but it's useless to get him doing that unless there is some sort of indication of a payoff.
    That's what I'm looking to gauge but failing to see any evidence to support.

    You say you get 90% of your seniour portrait work from face waste. You don't indicate how many that is though or if it's even anything of consequence. Frankly, from what I have read I don't think it is a substantial amount of work but I don't know and could well be wrong. Without some sort of indication of the popularity of face waste pages and likes to bookings and sales ( which IS what marketing and advertising is about) then I am still without any viable indication that this is as effective as the hype indicates.
    I bet he doesnt have a website since it doesnt increase sales or reach his target market.

    I detect a note of sarcasm in this comment but you are absoloutley right. I don't have a website because I don't think it will reach my target market or increase sales in what I'm doing atm. I think I have stated that several times in different posts here.

    Can you give me a direct and specific answer as to why you have an issue with me not spending time and money in what I know would be an ineffective marketing strategy?

    FWIW, I had a website for many years that ended up getting me ALL my (Substantial) Glam work and was never out of the top 3 listings in it's category on any search engine. With that knowledge of web marketing over 7-8 years, my choice not to have a site with the work I am doing now is based on experience not the mistaken belief that every business has to have a web site in order to succeed.

    I know a lot of people think that and I also know a lot of people don't know beans about sales, marketing and advertising despite often convincing themselves otherwise.
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 24, 2012
    sapphire73 wrote: »
    I am not at the point of selling my photos but have been involved with some new fb pages for nonprofits over the past year. Thought I would respond to a couple of things that cropped up in this thread:

    1) Likes are important to help your status updates be seen by more people - it does affect what reaches the newsfeed for those who subscribe to your page and may be seen by their friends as well
    2) I agree that if people who like your page never interact with your content, it doesn't help as much as one might hope
    3) fb is very good at changing up the algorithms for people seeing your status updates and it is now harder than ever to grow organically.
    4) In my experience, the non-profit fb pages that achieve the most likes are those with some budget to get facebook to push their status updates or ads. I would guess that this would apply to other fb pages for brands.

    That said, people tend to respond very well to photos on fb. I will often click through to someone's website when I see an image that catches my attention. And I have now subscribed to several photographers' fb pages. If I see a photo that inspires me - in a fb status update on a photographer's fb page - I will click "like" on the particular photo in the hope of helping them out with fb stats (Insights).

    I am by no means an authority on any of this, and am offering these thoughts in the off chance that they are helpful to the op or others.

    Cheers,
    Gretchen

    I think these Thoughts are VERY helpful Gretchen and I thank you for them.

    You do trigger a thought I have seen first hand. People may click the button on face ache because they do indeed like something but that does not mean they would ever be a customer of the vendor.

    As mentioned I used to do a lot of glamour photography and specialised in figure and nude work. I would always have people lined up 3 deep or more at the shows I would exhibit at and receive raving comments on the pics but 90% of people would almost run away at the suggestion of booking a shoot themselves.

    There is a big difference between liking something and wanting to own it yourself.
    I like babies but the last thing in the world I want is my wife to have one!

    There is no question in my mind that face waste IS a very effective marketing/ advertising tool for many businesses. That's no different to any other marketing initiative. Yellow pages works great for Plumbers and tradesmen but it's next to useless for a heck of a lot of other businesses.

    I'm just looking for some trustworthy evidence that faceache is a worthwhile medium for shooters and if you do whatever it takes to get all these holy grail "Likes" they are going to translate into worthwhile $$. If they are not, then I'm better off spending my time and MONEY on something that does yield worthwhile returns.
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    angevin1angevin1 Registered Users Posts: 3,403 Major grins
    edited September 24, 2012
    Glort you're right about wanting to be able to measure the whole of the Social Media world.

    here's a link for those wanting some semblance of metrics measurement: http://www.business2community.com/social-media/six-free-tools-to-measure-social-media-for-business-067356

    It's title says it all. six free tools. FB has wanted for some time to be able to measure folks exposure to ad's placed on FB and whether they purchased the same in a Store or Online. Imagine how easy it would be for them to sell ad space if they could do that. Even if it were 2%. Because once you can measure, then you can actively pursue improving the ROI.
    tom wise
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    GlortGlort Registered Users Posts: 1,015 Major grins
    edited September 25, 2012
    Thanks Tom.
    Very interesting that there are these tools available. Also seems that very few if any people here apart fro yourself realise the importance of measuring response. Pretty clear everyone is just busting a get to get liked but have no idea what so ever if that's actually getting them anywhere at all.

    I Think this paragraph from the linked page sums it up nicely but is what some of the facewaste dedidcated brigade here just don't have the knowledge to realise:
    These are easily understandable common social metrics. Many companies track them. However, monitoring data is only valuable if it’s being tied to a business objective. Having 500 Facebook Fans or 5,000 doesn’t mean anything if your business goal is generate leads and you’re not measuring lead referrals from Facebook. At the end of the day, you should track metrics that align with your business goal, whether that’s generating demand for a new product or generating leads. What metrics are your measuring?

    Seems few people even knew they were supposed to let alone how to measure their leads. Probably dosen't matter since they wouldn't know what to do with the data if they did.
    Wonder if they actually track any of their advertising at all? I knew where each and every lead came from with my Glam and wedding work.

    You HAVE to measure all the variables and parameters in your business ( No matter what business it is) or you are flying completely blind. That includes face waste.
    People think it's such a good thing but have no real idea where their leads are coming from or what advertising is working and what is not.
    So what if faceache is Free? If it's not getting you a valid return on your time, unless you like to use it as an ego massage tool then it's not worth a Zac as an advertising medium for your business.

    I hammer on about business skills every damn week but it's clear from threads like these that some shooters think they know it all when the fact is they don't even know enough to realise their own ignorance and mistakes.
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