What is Facebook Timeline? – The New Facebook For Marketers – Part 4

Posted by: Neil James // October 26th, 2011

What is Facebook Timeline - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 5

Facebook Timeline

Facebook Timeline was the most glamorous product announcement made at the recent f8 developer conference. Currently, Facebook timeline is only available in beta to developers, but will be rolled out to all users in the coming months.

In essence, Timeline replaces a user’s profile page (not their news feed). The most striking change is the dominant cover image at the top of the screen:

Facebook Timeline Cover Image - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 5

Facebook Timeline Cover Image

The emphasis on visuals, according to Facebook VP of products, Chris Cox, arose from the rising importance of infographics – images that allow individuals to quickly and easily visualize large amounts of data. Facebook’s goal in Timeline is to create an infographic construct for a person.

Notice on the right side of Timeline, you can select a month or a year to see updates from:

Facebook Timeline Choose a Date - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 5

Facebook Timeline: Date Range

Facebook allows users to manually add or remove items from their Timeline, whether its a post, photo, app, video, or something else entirely.

According to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook Timeline will ultimately curate the story of an individual’s life into one single page.

Implications For Marketers

None yet.

What?

Assuming it is rolled out to everybody in its current format, Facebook only affects existing profile pages.

Just spent a lot of money rebranding your Facebook page? Relax. Currently, there are no announcements on how or if Facebook plans to incorporate this functionality into branded Facebook pages.

More importantly, the percentage of time that Facebook users spend on the profile page that will ultimately be replaced by Timeline is miniscule relative to the amount of time they spend in their news feed and on apps. The day-in day-out user experience will remain largely unchanged.

That said, the model by which brands post updates out to their network of followers will likely remain relatively unchanged. Outside of the changes made that rewards brands for creating engaging posts, Timeline should have relatively little impact on editorial calendars and content strategy in the immediate future. As always though, it pays to keep an eye on your Facebook Insights analytics to watch for any aberrant movement in your key metrics.

In the meantime, if you’re curious, you can enable Timeline for your personal page now! Check out the easy step-by-step guide to setting up Timeline from Greg Kumparak at TechCrunch!

The New Facebook for Marketers by Russell Herder

Introduction: The New Facebook for Marketers

Part 1: Facebook Ticker and How the New News Feed Works

Part 2: Getting the Most Out of Facebook Insights

Part 3: The One Thing That Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook

Part 4: What is Facebook Timeline?

@NeilAndrewJames


The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook – The New Facebook For Marketers – Part 3

Posted by: Neil James // October 25th, 2011

The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 4

If you are versed in the principles of search marketing, SEO and PPC, you are at an advantage as a marketer on Facebook.

It’s an important point, arguably the one thing you need to know about the new Facebook as a marketer,  so let’s repeat it.

If you are versed in the principles of search marketing, SEO and PPC, you are at an advantage as a marketer on Facebook.

How?

More than ever, Facebook’s changes have been influenced by the strategic principles that propelled Google to undisputed search dominance.

For those of you old enough to remember, Google holds the rare distinction of being both their industry’s dominant player and last-to-market. Before Google, the search landscape was ruled by indefatigable titans such as Altavista, Lycos, Infoseek, and Yahoo!

Even in those glory days (the 90s) marketers recognized the advantages of having a high ranking for relevant search queries. Savvy webmasters gleefully stuffed their websites with keywords, gaming the system. Yahoo! sold off top rankings to the highest bidder.

Enter Google. While known among techies but less so by marketers, Google’s ascent into dominance was built on their commitment to relevance and the user experience.

What does a user want when they enter a search query? Relevant results.

What type of effect did the gaming and paid placement have on search engines? They produced less relevant results for their users.

Google was the first of the major search engines to recognize this fact and built a system predicated on relevance. If Google’s search engine does not return relevant results, it has failed in its mission. So successful though was Google at delivering relevant results that their very name came to represent the category of online search.

With superior relevance and user experience, Google attracted more eyeballs than any other search property. Advertisers looking to take advantage of these eyeballs were greeted by one of the industry’s most innovative and effective marketing models: pay-per-click marketing.

The rest was history.

What does this have to do with Facebook?

SEO and PPC

The new Facebook will provide visibility to brands similarly to how SEO and PPC produces visibility for brands in search engines.

Consider a search query for the phrase “Caribbean cruises.” Google will return what it believes to be the most relevant results in its organic listings, highlighted below in red.

SEO - The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 4

SEO: Organic Listings - Google

Attempts to improve visibility in these non-paid, organic listings is known as search engine optimization or SEO. The art of SEO is a complex one, and involves, more or less, work to convince Google that your website is worthy of higher organic rankings. SEO is accomplished by attracting links from credible sites, thorough tagging of site elements and properly sculpted architecture enhancing site visibility.

While the benefits of SEO are immense, the process is slow and arduous. Enter, pay-per-click marketing or PPC.

PPC - The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 4

PPC: Paid Listings

In the above image, the areas of a search engine results paid highlighted in red are purchased through Google. The art of PPC is complex as well. Ever committed to the user experience, Google does not simply allow any advertiser to buy visibility for a given keyword. Advertisers must (generally) be relevant to the keyword they choose to advertise under. PPC allows advertisers to obtain visibility as a media expenditure rather than as a function of natural relevance to a specific keyword.

Facebook Visibility

Prior to September 2011, the bulk of Facebook updates were delivered to users in chronological order. If my friend made a post at 3:00 pm, a brand I was following made a post at 2:00 pm, and another friend I was following created an event at 1:00 pm, I would see those updates in that order from top to bottom: the 3:00 pm post is most visible at the top followed by 2:00 pm branded update and and the 1:00 pm event creation.

As discussed in part one, with the introduction of Top Stories, Recent Stories and the Ticker, this is no longer the case.

Now, Top Stories, the most visible part of the Facebook user experience, is controlled by a Facebook algorithm. Based on the posts you’ve liked, commented on and interacted with in the past, Facebook figures out automatically which posts are most likely to be relevant to you and gives them prominent visibility.

Sound familiar?

Top Story - The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook – The New Facebook For Marketers

Top Story: Facebook Organic Visibility

In essence, brands that fail to produce relevant content, which in the context of Facebook, is content that is liked, commented upon, shared and interacted with, will be punished with reduced visibility.

Such, the analogue to SEO. The art of SEO is creating a website that, by improving relevance, promotes organic visibility in the results pages of search engine. Creating visibility for your brand’s posts on Facebook, formerly a product of chronology, will now be a function of relevance, which for Facebook, is measured by user engagement.

Sponsored Stories

Not everybody can be a winner at the organic game. What if you just want to buy visibility?

Enter Facebook Sponsored Stories.

Sponsored Stories - The One Thing Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook - The New Facebook For Marketers - Part 4

Sponsored Stories: Facebook Paid Visibility

Let’s say somebody likes your brand’s Facebook page. This action is likely not something that will be shared or commented on, and as such, be less likely to be visible in the new Facebook construct.

By paying for Sponsored Stories, Facebook allows you to increase the visibility of this new “like”. When purchased by the advertiser, the friends of the person who liked your brand will see this “like” as a prominent sponsored story in the right hand column of the page.

“Likes” are not the only action that can have their visibility powered up by Sponsored Stories. Perhaps more importantly, if your brand issues a post about an upcoming sale, purchasing Sponsored Stories will ensure that more of your fans see this post. Specific likes or comments on posts, app uses and check-ins also can be promoted via Sponsored Stories.

Just as with Google PPC marketing and Facebook’s current ad platform, Sponsored Stories can be tightly targeted. If you’re promoting an extreme energy drink, you can create parameters that ensure your sponsored story only shows to males ages 18-34 in your targeted geographies.

Sponsored Stories are purchased on a cost-per-click or cost-per-impression basis. It should be noted that if you choose cost-per-click, which most advertisers will, Facebook is not in the business of giving you free advertising. If your sponsored story doesn’t generate a click, Facebook will stop promoting your message.

So just as Google did, Facebook is leveraging the sheer amount of eyeballs it owns to charge brands for prominent visibility.

Should You Buy Sponsored Stories?

Like any good answer to a generically asked marketing question, it depends.

With any luck, you’ve been very diligent about paying attention to the metrics of your Facebook page generated through Facebook Insights. If you haven’t, that’s okay.

If your brand posts according to an editorial calendar or on a schedule, keep a careful eye on the news feeds impressions through Facebook Insights, particularly if you have a KPI whose effectiveness depends on this metric. If you notice a decline in the number of people viewing your posts, you need to consider:

  1. Rework your posts to drive more engagement – more shares, comments and likes.
  2. Consider purchasing sponsored stories to drive up impressions, and track the subsequent results

The New Facebook for Marketers by Russell Herder

Introduction: The New Facebook for Marketers

Part 1: Facebook Ticker and How the New News Feed Works

Part 2: Getting the Most Out of Facebook Insights

Part 3: The One Thing That Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook

Part 4: What is Facebook Timeline?

@NeilAndrewJames


The New Facebook For Marketers – A Four Part Series by Russell Herder

Posted by: Neil James // October 19th, 2011

The New Facebook For Marketers - Part One of a Five-Part Series by Russell Herder

Facebook: 500 Million Users in One Day

We’re well past the point where half a billion people having Facebook accounts was a significant milestone. At the recent f8 developer conference, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg reported that half a billion people used Facebook in one day.

As a marketer, or even a non-marketer, you might have noticed that Facebook has undergone some pretty significant changes in the past month. Top stories. Recent stories. The Ticker. Timeline. Sponsored stories. What are all these things, and more importantly, what do I need to know to keep my Facebook marketing plan ahead of the competition?

Over the next week, Russell Herder will dive into the new Facebook and highlight the changes that will impact you and your marketing plan the most!

Part 1: Facebook Ticker and How the New News Feed Works

Part 2: Getting the Most Out of Facebook Insights

Part 3: The One Thing That Marketers Need to Know About the New Facebook

Part 4: What is Facebook Timeline?

@NeilAndrewJames


Does Social Media Marketing Increasingly Mean Facebook Marketing?

Posted by: Neil James // March 21st, 2011

Does Social Media Marketing Increasingly Mean Facebook Marketing

One of the primary challenges of social media marketing has been choosing the appropriate venue. Should your brand have a presence on Twitter? Flickr? Blogs? Delicious? But new findings by eMarketer, as chronicled in Facebook Reaches Majority of Web Users, finds that half of all Internet users logged into Facebook at least monthly. In addition, eMarketer predicts that over half of the U.S. population will be on Facebook by 2013! When you consider that according to Comscore, Twitter traffic has remained essentially flat and traffic to other major social networks has either flattened out or is declining, an interesting question is raised: will social media marketing in the future be synonymous with Facebook marketing?

@NeilAndrewJames


How Brands Are Applying Groupon Principles to Facebook Offers

Posted by: Neil James // November 1st, 2010

Launched in November 2008, in only two short years, Groupon has grown into a company with $350 million in estimated revenue. Not too shabby! Does Groupon’s quick ascent suggest reflect marketing strategies that brands can integrate into existing efforts. Absolutely, says Elaine Wong in her article for Brandweek, Why More Brands Are Dangling Incentives on Facebook. More and more, Wong says, brands are using Facebook as a medium to offer sales promotions whose values are tied to participation the volume. Consider the following:

* Healthy Choice offered a 75 cent off coupon to those who “liked” the brand’s Facebook page. The more people that liked the brand, the more the coupon value increased.

* Barilla launched a similar promotion for Wasa Crispbread, earning over 7,000 likes in two months time.

* For each person that liked the Jack in the Box fan page, Jack in the Box deposited a virtual nickel in a jar, awarding the entire pot, $10,660, to one lucky winner on October 25th.

Wong notes that these promotions are designed to do more than simply stimulate Facebook fan count. Rather, the ultimate goal of these group promotions for brands is to create opportunities for engagement and dialogue through a sense of community.

@NeilAndrewJames