How NOT to Build a Facebook Following

by Carol Schiller on March 11, 2011

I belong to a LinkedIn group focused on Facebook success. From what I can tell it’s a mix of people from all over North America (mainly), who work in social media (or who would like to), and people who just want to get a better grip on using Facebook for business success.

Recently, someone posted a discussion thread that went something like this: “Let’s all band together and “Like” each others’ pages, so we can all build up our followings.”.

I was tempted to post back what a silly idea I thought this was, but figured it might cause some hurt feelings. Besides, no one asked me for my opinion there, right? That’s what this blog is for. So, here goes… This is a NOT the way to build a Facebook page. In fact, it’s a terrible idea. Let me explain.

Let’s say you have a Facebook page for your local hair salon. You use it to post specials, chat about what’s going on in the neighborhood association, give some hair tips, maybe even post photos of cutting someone’s hair for Locks of Love. All good stuff that your existing fans like. But you’ve only got 350 fans and you wish you had more. So, you follow the advice of this thread and ask for “likes”. Suddenly your fan count zooms to 700. Yippee, right? Wrong.

Before, Facebook was looking at your stats and rating you an A+ content provider, because a nice percentage of your 350 fans were interacting with your page – “liking” your posts, writing comments, maybe even posting “I got an awesome haircut!” to your wall.

Now, Facebook is gonna give you C, because you’ve got 350 new people who, after “liking” your page once, are never going to interact with you again. So as a purely strategic move, this is bad idea because it hurts where you will show up in the news feed. And showing up in your fans’ news feed is the #1 goal of any post. The higher, the better. After all, you can’t be relevant if you aren’t being seen.

But put that aside, and pretend Facebook doesn’t have an algorithm that rates which posts are most popular, and then put them in your feed accordingly. This is STILL a bad idea. Why? Because 50% of your fans are NEVER, EVER going to set foot in your salon or spend a dime on your services. So what business goal has been accomplished?

Of course, you could argue that artificially inflating your fan count is good simply because people love to join a winning team. Thus, the bigger your fan count, the more likely new visitors will take the step to “like” your page. This is actually, the only decent argument for doing this, and not an entirely bad one. But you have to pay a price. Now YOU have to go fan all those irrelevant pages to pay the favor back. (Unless you’re a freeloading jerk.) Do you really want to do that?

How about just building a REAL following instead? A following of people in your area who actually need their hair done? A following of people who love your services and will recommend them to others? Even a following of people from all over who are really into hair products and styles who come to your page to learn the latest and greatest?

I’m not saying you shouldn’t deploy tactics that bring in new fans. Of course you should. But when you choose them, make sure you’ve got at least a better than even chance that you’re attracting and retaining RELEVANT prospects and customers. Because don’t forget, business success – not fan counts — is what Facebook marketing is for in the first place.

  • http://treerootandtwig.com Stacey @ Tree, Root, and Twig

    Interesting, and very timely for me, as I belong to a group that has done this very thing. I guess the idea behind it is that “social proof,” or hoping that because so many others like the page, a new visitor will be more motivated to Like as well. But I see what you’re saying, because the interaction has definitely not increased as much as the Likes have.

    Ah, Facebook. I call it my Social Media Kryptonite because I tend to loose all my powers when trying to handle it. Someday I’ll get a grip on how to use it to my best advantage! :)

  • http://www.carolschiller.com Carol

    Stacey, Yes, social proof is important, but it works much better when it’s based in reality rather than favors. It’s hard not to focus on numbers, but focusing on quality does pay off in the long run.

  • http://makeyourowndamncookies.wordpress.com/ Kathleen Coleman

    Thanks for the post. I’ve been trying to demystify Facebook myself. What I’ve learned… Focus on your true fans and interact with them. By building those relationships you will gain recognition through their recommendations to their friends who will actually use your service.

  • http://www.kimberlygauthier.com/blog Kimberly

    This is such a great point of view.  I’ve joined those “let’s like each other” conversations on LinkedIn and connected with a lot of great photographers.  The only bonus for me has been that so many people saturate these discussions that my like gets lost in the mix so I did get new readers, but hopefully I read this post in time to avoid any real damage to my ratings and feed status.

  • http://www.carolschiller.com Carol

    Right on Kathleen!

  • http://www.carolschiller.com Carol

    Hey Stacey, So nice to see you stop by here. Facebook “Likes” are like candy. They feel so good when you stuff ‘em down full tilt, but then you’ve got a heck of a workout facing you in the morning!

  • http://www.carolschiller.com Carol

    Hi Kimberly, Don’t sweat the “damage” too much. If you stay focused on building a great page, you will reach your goal.  Thanks for so many great comments :)

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