Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Facebook, Facebook, Facebook

The old Real Estate motto was "location, location, location." Today, we modernize the slogan. Let's "Face" it - Facebook is everywhere. With over 250 million people connected, odds are you either have an account or are going to get one. And, if you're an indie filmmaker or musician, you need to be on there stat.

But if you are reading this, you're probably not an idiot, you surely know what Facebook is. Here's just a few tips to help you maximize your usage.

1. Create a Fan Page and Like it. Once you have a regular account, you can fairly quickly and easily create a Fan Page for just about anything. This can be the home page for your movie! Fill out the information and suggest that your friends "Like" it and you're off and running.

2. But that's just the beginning. A static Fan Page is boring and will get few interactions. Conversely, a page that does nothing but advertise itself over and over again with postings will also turn people off. Instead, think of a creative way to post regularly - either using a quote from a character in the movie, posting an article or video somehow related to your subject matter, or even creating a weekly blog (such as this one) to add fresh content. Facebook will let administrators see right on the page how many times your update was viewed, amongst other things.

3. Snazz up your page with new profile modifying applications. Have you gone to a Facebook page, and it stands out from normal pages because of a snazzy design? Companies are popping up everywhere to add functionality. Sites such as Wix.com and Thrusocial.com offer free apps that can increase functionality. Wix's site has limited Facebook designs, but this company's other applications (its Flash and now iPhone-friendly templates) are so great that this surely will be as well. For a start, pick out a few free apps from Thrusocial (such as the link maker, which can link to a DVD page or official movie site) and the video player, which will enable you to embed your trailer right on the landing page.

There are a ton of Facebook modifying pages, each of them with intriguing offers, although some of them can start being quite expensive ($19.99 a month and up.) Tabfusion.com seems like a good compromise, charging a yearly fee ($10/year $20/3 years) per app, which is good esp if you only need one or two. There is a pretty good list at http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/23/1-best-ways-customize-facebook/ but there are a few newer and better ones in the comments section, so be sure to read that.

4. Advertise your page. Getting people to "Like" your page outside of your close circle of friends is always a challenge. But now you can advertise cheaply and effectively with Facebook Ads! These tiny targeted ads are like the ones that dot our Facebook pages already. It's a snap to create an ad - they even give you a preview - but be cautioned that the ads are not automatically approved. Ads that show nudity or imply nudity are not allowed, as well as curse words, of course. Another no-no is implied functionality, with phrases such as "Click here to watch a preview!" probably won't be allowed. Once your ad is approved you can fund it very easily via Paypal. One trick to getting more "Likes" is targeting "Friends of people who already Like your page." This is an option in your ad display preferences and it seems to work best. When someone sees that one of their friends already Likes something, they are more inclined to click. Also, go with a per-click campaign rather than just impressions (appearing on a page) as it will be more results-oriented.

5. What does this all mean? Nobody is quite sure, actually. A "Like" isn't a sale, and even if someone does like your page, there is no direct way to reach them, save for a status update, which they may or may not see. As an experiment for my film The Great Intervention, I purchased $100 worth of advertising to see what would happen. To be honest, my head starts spinning when we get in to all this analytics stuff, which, I guess, I should attempt to tackle in another post. Suffice to say, "insights" or "analytics" as it's called over at Google, does give you a breakdown of how your advertising dollars were spent, much of which I can't make heads or tails of. But, a simple breakdown seems to be that I got 30 "New Likes" - yet somehow that only increased my "Lifetime Likes" about 10 people (which seems to be the number which appears when it says "XX People Like This". Then we get in to the CPC, CTR, and all those other crazy numbers I don't understand. For anyone inclined or interested, here is a screenshot of my $100 campaign.


If anyone would like to offer their expertise as to whether this was a "successful" campaign, please let me know. In the meantime, I'll keep trying to drum up support for my film using a combination of these ideas, and I suggest you do for your project as well.

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