Politics, Religion and Social Media Trends

Social Media Trends with Hubze Founder Dave Foster. Orginal post can be found here.

David Foster is the CEO and Founder of the Fan Page Engine, which provides business owners an easy to use tool to help them in the custom creation of Facebook Fan Pages along with tracking social media trends.  The Fan Page Engine also specializes in fan page design and the build out of some highly customized fan pages.  So you can either do it yourself or higher them to build it for you.  Dave is also the co-founder of the Social Media Engine which teaches the small business owner how to use Social Media effectively.  Dave is also the Co-Founder of the Hubze which is an informative site for business owners on providing them with the most up to date social media and online marketing services.

Male:   Preparing Business for Business is on the air.  Join hosts Marcia Hawkins, President of the New York Shop Exchange and Kyle Clouse, Vice President for insightful and creative strategies to prepare your business for business.  Listen in for great guests and great offers from our guests and sponsors, as well as thought-provoking dialogue.  Preparing Business for Business offers usable content, insightful ideas and resources to jumpstart your business in an effective, economical manner and to prepare your business for growth and challenges. And now, your hosts for Preparing Business for Business, Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good evening, everybody. Welcome, welcome aboard to this Business Preparing For Business radio program on the Preparedness Radio Network. I’m Marcia Hawkins along with my cohost Kyle Clouse. Today is Wednesday, January 11, 2012. That just sounds like just crazy. Seeing like we were just on the Internet this Christmas. But here we are in — smack dab in the center of the week, second week of January. Wow, I just don’t understand where time goes. So we do welcome you to the Business Preparing For Business radio program. The theme of our show is to provide you with the tools, contacts, products and services to best prepare your business for more business. Or if we can assist you in what we all know how really challenging times right now.

Periodically, we have guests on our program that through experience, problem-solving, different methodologies that they’ve developed and implemented into their own business some ideas, strategies that have really worked for them and if you can take that information and use it and apply them either to your own business or business that you’re going to be starting, well, then our job has been completed. Many of the preparedness listeners tune in to hear helpful tips or information and find out resources for preparedness products. So we essentially do the exact same thing except we apply ours to business and today we will be covering Social Media Trends.

Now whether you’re going to be starting business in 2012 or you’re trying to expand your business, grow your business or again if you just need some resources to help you overcome some challenges that you may encounter, then again, that’s where we come in.

So Kyle and I welcome you to our program and we invite you to e-mail us at info@newyorkshopexchange.com. That’s what we do for our business. We do video marketing. If you have any questions, if there’s any – if you’re listening and you think you’ d make a great guest for us, by all means, please make sure to e-mail us at info@newyorkshopexchange.com. Any questions, comments or if you’d like to be in the show. Now let’s bring Kyle in. Kyle, how are you?

Kyle Clouse:  Hey, I’m doing very well, Marcia. I’m looking forward to to talking about social media trends.  How are you doing?

Marcia Hawkins:  I’m good. I’m really excited. Last time we had our guest on we had quite an entertaining show. I enjoyed David so I would like you to introduce our guest tonight for us.

Kyle Clouse:  Absolutely. Well, David Foster, he’s the CEO and founder of the Fan Page Engine and what the Fan Page Engine is is they provide business owners an easy-to-use tool that helps them in the custom creation of Facebook fan pages. And the Fan Page Engine also specializes themselves in fan page, Facebook fan page creation and the buildout of some highly customized customizable fan pages and so the site serves as dual purpose, you can either do it yourself or hire them to do it for you.

David also is the Co-Founder of the Social Media Engine, which teaches a small business owner how to effectively market their business using mediums like social media and tracking your companies social media trends.  David Foster is also the Co-Founder of The Hubs, which is an informative site for business owners that provides them with the most up-to-date social media and online marketing services, so David is a very busy guy. He’s just been recently brought on by the Ron Paul campaign to help them with their social media or whatever they got involved with them. He’s been recently brought with them so very sought-after expert with social media, Facebook fan pages and so on so on. So we’re really excited to have him on our show tonight talking about Facebook, Twitter and Social Media Trends.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah. Welcome, Dave.

David Foster:  Thank you for that awesome introduction. Wow.

Marcia Hawkins:  Some of those – when I was being introduced on another radio show, I think, do they have the right guest? Everything we said about you is the truth so you were …

David Foster:  Well, thank you. And yes, I remember the last time I was on, I was sitting in my car. I believe Thanksgiving,wasn’t it?

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, welcome back, yeah, we really we have so much to go over. We clearly did not cover everything that we wanted to cover so we absolutely had to bring you back. And I’m just going to jump right in here. And we’ve got so much going on this year given the fact that it’s an election year. And you told us right before we went on the air how you had been tapped to help with the Ron Paul campaign. So how exciting is that?

David Foster:  Well, that is so exciting. I mean when we first got involved, I reached out to the campaign because I noticed some things they were not doing on Twitter and not doing on Facebook and just bugged them and bugged them until I actually got a meeting with one of the – Matt Collins, the social guy for the campaign. And then they contacted me and asked me about their pages, so I more or less first went in and worked on the coalition pages and then I had them contacting me personally and asking me to more or lock out and logging into all their personal profiles to lock them down so people couldn’t find them when doing searches when they’re doing press releases and stuff. So it was interesting being logged in to their personal Facebook accounts and making them private for them because they have no idea what they were doing there. So it’s been a very successful social campaign. I mean we had an article on all Facebook showing that Ron Paul’s social campaign is actually performing better than any of the others’ so that’s pretty cool.  It’s also cool tracking the Social Media Trends within Ron Pauls campaign.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good for you. I love that. You noticed that they were doing something wrong and you were like “I can fix this.” Got to love that. Got to love that.

David Foster:  Yup, exactly. Well, and I was relentless. I did not stop until somebody contacted me because I know how this is a crucial election year. I mean I think this is the most important election of our lifetime and so I just feel like I wanted to do my part and this is what I do so I want – and now I’m doing it.

Marcia Hawkins:  Good for you. I love that. I think the theme there is the persistence factor.

David Foster:  Yup, exactly.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yup, absolutely. It definitely is. This year, I mean the fact that we are really – we are kicking into high gear of the 2012 election. So with that said, do you see or what do you forecast is really going to dominate the political arena in terms of social media?

Social Media Trends

David Foster:  Well, I was – I just feel that it’s a completely different game from 2008 when the election happened last and – but if you look at Obama, how he more or less one because of social media and because of the younger voters he was actually able to bring out and Ron is closing out universities when you goes to speak because there’s people reaching out. I mean we have grown by about 400 and some thousand fans on his fan page since we really started engaging. And so I think that it’s going to play a part. But unfortunately, the most money wins it seems, so we’re giving it all we’ve got but unfortunately I just don’t – you know what I mean? That it’s like the person with the most money is who they look at the most. And that’s sad.

Marcia Hawkins:  Exactly. Yeah.

Kyle Clouse:  One of the things you mentioned, Dave, and the way I see it, social media, it doesn’t matter if you’re running a campaign or if you’re running a business. There’s a lot of universals involved and everything is basically –can be transferred from one niche or a company or your just to another and they can use the same processes and procedures. And one of the things that you mentioned was you noticed some things that the Ron Paul campaign was not doing on Facebook and Twitter and I don’t want to say what they’re not doing or what they were not doing, we don’t want to give any insider secrets out, but what should they have been doing that you stepped in and help them to do? And maybe we can apply that into someone’s business, what they could be doing as well?

David Foster:  Well, first of all, spending a little bit more money or spending money, period, on Facebook ads instead of that TV ads is much. I mean you’re looking at – most of the time, I mean people still think old school. They want to run – they want to rent billboards, they want to get magazine ads, they want to do radio and TV, which is effective but in social media right now, I got to say it’s a completely different animal than it was in 2008 because you’ve got many, many active users logging on every day and when they’re on that website you’ve got their attention. They’re not – I mean I know sometimes some people are doing other things but for the most part, they’re there, they’re engaged, they’re out looking for things so you got them on they’re really open to click stuff.

So running some ads on there and also just engaging the page a lot more, sharing photos when he was going to be on Jay Leno, sharing photos of Joe Rogan with a picture of him and a picture with Vince Vaughn and just different things to get people “Oh, this is cool!” and then commenting so just more or less showing – like I told you guys last time, to just be more personal. Yeah, you’re a politician but reach out and show personal pictures, show pictures – we have pictures of him with his iPad showing like how the fundraising was going and people just love that stuff because they feel so personally connected to him that way.

Marcia Hawkins:  That’s interesting because you’re right. I mean the radio, the TV, the print ads, they are effective, obviously. And they need that. But to drop the ball in social media would, in my opinion, cause them the election, and I’m sure you can agree with that.

David Foster:  Oh, I agree.

Marcia Hawkins:  Absolutely. And that’s true because it’s really funny when they get into like a town hall debate or they’re doing one of the debates with the other candidates or they’re in a – they’re stumping in a particular city right before a caucus or a primary, they really – everything is very, very scripted. And I really believe that seeing the personal side of the candidate is really I believe what sways the voter. And segueing that into a business owner, they really have to have the ability to kind of show their fun side as well. And I really — I completely understand, how can somebody, in addition to some of the social media – is there another angle that they can at onto social media pages that will allow them to kind of expand upon that?

Videos in Social Media Trends

David Foster:  Well, I mean one thing that we have always had a lot of success with is videos. I mean people just love videos. They like to take the time, sit down and do those. And another thing that we – we had no idea, we just started doing –we were doing the blog talk radio and we decided you know, we’re trying to get on a schedule and be in somewhere at 3 o’clock, every single day was just hard for me because I’m so – I mean I got so many things going on. So Scott ended up doing the shows by himself.

So I started doing a podcast. And we must’ve just landed on a niche of some kind because our subscriber rate has just skyrocketed. And so the podcast, something that you can actually – they can hear you, they can see you, like images, like pictures, something that they can see that there’s a personal side to your business. Because like I was saying the last time, if you’re just all stiff and just promoting and just talking in business language, people don’t talk like that. It’s like talking to a robot. And you don’t want to come across as a robot so video, I mean video is awesome. If you own a restaurant, put a video of your menu. You should go back and show your chef cooking your special for the night and say “Come and get this,” “Does it not look good?” or something like that. Just little things like that, the people are like “Oh, Wow! Look at this video of what they are making here. This looks really good. We should go try this place out.”

And so we actually just merged with another company that does social media management and tracks social media trends and is full service. And so we’ve been seeing different things that they’re doing for local businesses that’s really helping them with their fan page like the things that they’re engaging, like how they’re asking questions, how they’re promoting their specials, how they’re running little deals, and it makes all the difference. I mean weve got a local restaurant here, and we are in Tallahassee, it’s not a very big place, it is the state capital but when the college kids are here, I think I want to say 150,000 or something. So they got 5,000 fans on this restaurant page and they are engaged. I mean you got people sharing their deals, sharing images and it’s to see that much action going on just because they’re involved, just because they’re making videos, just because they’re sharing images of their menu, just because they’re giving to college kids because we all know college kids are broke and love to eat. So if you can tap into that, your home free.

Marcia Hawkins:  Exactly.

Kyle Clouse:  Right.

Marcia Hawkins:  And the fact that you mentioned video and using it in your social media trends, Dave, is it too premature to tell you that I love you?

David Foster:  Oh, no, that’s fine.

Marcia Hawkins:  Go ahead, go ahead, Kyle.

Kyle Clouse:  I was just going to say it’s interesting that Dave brought up video and also that you brought on a social media marketing company that manages campaigns, because as you know, we do video marketing and we do video promotion. We use video as a means of promotion. And we also do the management end of that as far as the video creation. We see that a lot of businesses, they want to be able to focus on what they do best, which is running the business and have someone else take over the marketing end of that, so very interesting. One of the thoughts that I had, Dave, was as we’re talking about that – social media and how social social media is becoming a means of communication, one thing that I thought about was even with television and with the news, breaking news will hit social media before it hits the TV, as you can really see where this trend is moving as far as engagement with social media and it really being able to stay in front of your customers and clients and being engaged with them and creating that relationship with them.

David Foster:  Well, you know why that is. That’s because most of these news people are getting their news from tweets and this is what we are seeing in social media trends. So the tweets are just ahead of the news because they’re like “OK, where’s the big stories? Well, let’s go to Twitter.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, you always hear people talking within the social media saying “Oh, I thought on Facebook,” or  “Someone tweeted me on that.” That’s very true.

David Foster:  Yup.

Kyle Clouse:  Yup, absolutely. One thing that I saw when we were talking about trends, where trends are moving, I’m – if I look back, as we’re talking about the elections, kind of get back in 2008, I see President Obama when he won the election, I think it was I mean largely due the fact that he was utilizing social media. And so as we see this trend coming now with 2012, we see that businesses, politicians, everyone are taking social media more seriously, they’re really looking at it and looking at ways in which they can engage their customers and their client and their client bases. As you guys have brought on this social media company that manages these different accounts, tell us a little bit about that service and what benefits that has for a business owner?

Social Media Trends in Politics

David Foster:  Well, one thing that has really helped, and I’ll just use the Ron Paul campaign for an example because we’ve been working closely with that, is we can target keywords, we can target Ron Paul or whatever, and find out anything good or bad that anybody’s saying and then actually if its bad, it  flags it and lets us know that it’s bad. And I don’t know if it picks up keywords, how it does it, but there‘s some kind of algorithm in the program that they use so we can go out and nab those faster and talk to people and try to figure out what issues they have and then always ends up being about foreign policy or whatever.

So it’s just what they can basically do is brand awareness and then going out and doing like brand repair, reputation management. Reputation management and social media is huge because if you start out and you do a couple of things wrong and you end up getting a bad reputation, sometimes it’s hard to repair because it can go so viral so fast. So you really want to be careful with your reputation and you want to know if people are out there talking about you, good or bad. So what they do is they put you in the system, they look at the keywords and put in your company name and all that and then they can see like alle these sites, Yelp, Citysearch, all these different places that people have done reviews on urban spoon of you, it all comes back and then they can go and they can reply to those comments and they guaranty to do it within 24 hours so that people, even if they have a bad experience, and they leave it all public if they had a bad experience, if you deal with the right way and people see that publicly that you dealt with that issue, They’re like “Oh, these people, I went and got ice cream and it was melted by the time I got it. Okay, well they reached out to me, they gave me a free ice cream and guaranteed that it wouldn’t happen again.” So the customer, even though they may have had one bad experience, ends up – the total experience ends up being good. So that to me is one of the most important things they do.

And then also as just knowing the industry enough to know what – if a restaurant needs to run kind of promotion, a hormone therapist needs to run this kind of promotion, a lawyer or attorney needs to run this kind of promotion so they’re really understand how to get the likes and fan engagement for your niche and not just any fan, because quality is so much better than quantity on social media as well. Everybody seems to think well, the more fans you have, the better, the more successful you’ll look to people. But if you go to a page that has 10,000 fans and nobody’s liking comments, nobody’s posting anything, nobody’s sharing anything, that really to me speaks bigger volumes because that tells me that that page is not engaging the correct way.

And so if you go to any page they manage, they’re engaging you the right way, they’re engaging at the right times like there are certain restaurants that close at 5 o’clock so they’re not posting a deal at 4 o’clock for that company. They’re doing it the day before when they close early and then they know that the people for this company are more – they have more conversations in the evening so somebody manages that page in the evening where one page might be people are going to eat breakfast at this place because that’s what they’re famous for, so there’s more people engaging in the morning so they are there in the morning.

So they really get to know the brand on a personal level, even the menu and all that so – because knowledge is power, if somebody’s asking a question about a crêpe or something, they need to know what’s in, which one or whatever for a restaurant. So it’s just about they understand how to engage, they understand how to get likes for that specific kind of niche and how to keep your reputation under control.

Kyle Clouse:  Right. One thing that you mentioned that I think is very personal, I’ve actually spoken to business owners who they get mad about it but they shy away from it, they don’t know how to overcome it or how to attack with that, and that is negative comments. A lot of business attacks just they get it a negative comment on Google places or Yelp for any of the other platforms, they’re almost – a,  they want to figure out first “How do I delete that?” which they can delete that but they’re afraid to reply to that or a combat that in anyway and they almost want to ignore it, which I think is a huge no no.

David Foster:  Yeah, no, that is huge. Because if you – the thing that I learned on social media is the bad news travels much faster than the good news. So if you really make it a point to handle those things, to go out there and just it could be very, very – it could be the worst review you’ve ever read, it could make you sick to your stomach, but if you at least deal with it and just do what you have to do to make that customer happy – I mean there’s a reason most of us get in business and that’s because we have a service that we want people to enjoy enough to not only tell other people but to just have a good overall experience. So if you really care about that overall experience, that carries through good or bad. Because you can always take something bad and make something good of it if you do it the right way.

So I never judge anybody by their mistakes. I judge them by a how they deal with that mistake. So most people in social media, if you reach out and you handle the mistake in a good way, then they’re still going to be spreading a positive message. “Yeah, I went to this place and their food was horrible but they reached out, they asked me exactly what was wrong, why I had that bad experience and this was my reason and so they took this thing off the menu and then they gave me a coupon to come in. I went back in and it was a great experience.” And so they just publicly turned that around. So that two-star review could be changed into – because the consumer can change the review. So they could say “I reviewed this two stars before but now it’s five because of the way they handled my problem.”

Kyle Clouse:  Interest, interesting. What are some – I know there’s a lot of talk with tracking social media or tracking the return on investment with social media. What are some things that business owners can do to track their efforts, see if what they’re doing is actually working for them?

David Foster:  Well, I’d like to call it return on relationships rather than return on investment because with – the deeper the relationship you get with your customers, the more you’re going to get out of it as far as return and as return sharing as turn them out a happy customer praising you out in public, that’s a bigger return to me than the investment anyway because I find that – I mean I have not advertised on Facebook or anywhere for six months. And I have no ad budget, period. And that’s because when you have so many happy customers and you’re putting out a good service, people are talking about it and they’re just coming based on that, that’s a return on a relationship for me for having such good relationships with our customers that they want to go out and talk about us obviously because that’s the only way we are making sales.

Marcia Hawkins:  You can’t put a price on that either.

David Foster:  No, you can’t. And it took us a year and a half to get there. I mean I ran – I was running $300, $400 a day in Facebook ads and I just started phasing them out. And for a couple weeks I’m like I’m just going to try not running them. And our sales stayed steady and I’m like oh my gosh, I was probably not even getting many sales from the ads anyway. So six months of no ads and sales still coming in, that’s obvious to me that it’s just our social media, just being on the blog, just engaging our fans, just helping people create their pages and going out of our way – I mean our support team, if somebody has an issue they can’t get through, our support team actually makes a custom video for them walking them through their back-office showing them exactly what they have to do to fix it. I mean we go out a way to make sure people are happy. That’s basically all you have to do.

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah, I can actually attest to that because I’ve used your fan page engine. I think I became a member of it a year and a half ago when it first began or has been longer than that? I know it’s been a while. But whenever I’ve had an issue, it’s been resolved.

Right now we have to take a quick break and run through our sponsors but we’ll come right back and again, we have David Foster, CEO and Co-Founder of the fan page engine.

Marcia Hawkins:  All right, everybody. Welcome back. This is Marcia Hawkins along with Kyle Clouse with NewYorkShopExchange.com on the Business Preparing For Business radio program. Our guest this evening is David Foster. He is the CEO and Founder of the Fan Page Engine and he’s just an awesome guess. I’m sure you guys have been enjoying the show. We went to break, had to pay a few bills and we were talking a little bit about – not a little bit, a lot about online management of your reputation.

And I’m curious if you have any insight. I just find this fascinating that in the line of work but Kyle and I do, we’re – I’m always direct line and I know when I leave an appointment, I call Kyle and say “Jeez, I can’t believe this guy said this.” Why do you think people are so reluctant to really recognize? I even sometimes when I go into an appointment, 99% of the time I’m very well-received but once in a while you just get this real ordinary businessperson and they’ll just “I’ve been doing my form of advertising the way I’ve been doing it,” and just really not wanting to just be receptive to possibly doing advertising or marketing or even conducting business in a different manner and trying to keep up with the trends. I mean I don’t know how old you are, David, but in my generation, growing up, things that used to take 30 days now literally take 30 seconds with the Internet. And so I’m really struck by the fact that there are so many people that are so reluctant to A, manage their online reputation, even utilize the Internet for what it is, and more importantly, they don’t see the importance of it. Do you have any insight as to why that is? Because I got to tell you, that’s something that really puzzles me.

David Foster:  Well, and it puzzles me too, and I’m actually – I’m 41 so I remember those days as well, and I think it’s – there’s some people whose business model has worked so well for them and they’re so – like me, myself, three, four years ago, I swore I would never be on Facebook. I swore I didn’t want to have anything to do with it. I was doing web design and stuff and I was getting enough clients for MySpace that I thought I’d never need it. And then as soon as MySpace just completely went into the pot with all the spam and everything, I mean I just got so sick to even go on that website, that I had some friends say, “Oh, you need to go and check out Facebook.” So I reluctantly started an account, then my high school buddies started finding me and then got into the business side of it.

And so I think people just have a fear of the unknown and the thing is it’s hard to show. It’s like me walking into their office and saying, “Hey, I have this pen. It’s a really nice pen and it writes yellow ink but believe it or not, you can see it on white paper,” and they’re like “Well, let me see.” “Well, I can’t show you, you’re just going to have to trust me because I don’t have it with me.” It’s like they’re so reluctant because they’ve never seen it work for them. They’ve never seen it happen but how they don’t see how it’s happening for other people, I don’t get. But I think it’s just they get so comfortable, just like anything else it’s like people become so complacent and so comfortable with where they’ve been and where they are, they’re almost scared to jump into something that they don’t understand because with social media, it’s really hard to show a return. I mean you have to at least be in the game for a few months before you start to see a considerable return in my opinion.

I mean there are some people who if you have something that’s specialized enough, like we have an ice cream shop here in town called Lofty Pursuits and they also sell like discs, crispy discs and tops and arcade – well, not arcade but the puzzle games and stuff and they have a really fifties-type atmosphere so you go in there and they’ve got the soda jerks and they dress with the old bowties and stuff so it’s very specialized. And they do very well on Facebook. But if you have an attorney, they’ve got all these regulations, they’re like “Well, we can’t say this,” they try to make every post about the legalities and you know and so it’s like it almost doesn’t fit for them.

But I still think that there’s a way where they could utilize it but in most cases, they’re just not open to it and that kind of baffles me too. But I think that what – if there’s enough people as you build your portfolio that you can say “Well, here I have another attorney that’s doing this and he’s had a lot of success,” and then maybe even have a video testimony or something of that attorney talking about that success, which is something we’re doing, we’re reaching out to the local restaurants that we’ve been working on and getting video tests, really nicely done video testimonial, so that we can show clients locally and say “Hey, this is what we’ve done, this is what they’re saying,” like when we run a deal, their place is just packed all day and it’s awesome. They love it. So other customers are like “Well, I want some of that, and you guys doing mobile marketing?” “Yeah.” “Oh, I want some of that.” So as soon as they start to see the success of their friends or their competitors, then they’ll listen little bit more. But if you don’t have that going in, you’d probably be on deaf ears. Plus I think it’s the older generation that have the biggest issue where you can get young guys who will just jump on it, they’ll drop whatever. I need to be on – yeah, I will do it.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, it is a little bit frustrating though I do, I find that when I’m talking with a client that – and like I said, Kyle will tell you we’ve really – have started to really make some headway with our message and people are really starting to resonate with people. But I’m still struck by the fact that people say you know – I mean you can sell them the numbers and you can sell them everything and they still – they just – I think it goes back to what you said. People become so comfortable being uncomfortable. That’s what they know. They know – “I’m so uncomfortable I’m spending so much money with no return but this is what I know and this is what I’m going to do and I don’t know, that it’s foreign to me. It really is. It’s just completely – I don’t get it.” When I’m uncomfortable, the only thing to get comfortable…

David Foster:  As I’m saying I find myself doing that with like my iPhone. Like I was thinking about getting a droid because I wanted to try the Google market and everything but then I started thinking about not having my iPhone and I seriously started getting sick to my stomach because I could run my entire business from this phone so it’s like it’s my business partner. So it would be like turning in my business partner. So I can understand where they’re coming from but…

Marcia Hawkins:  Yup. When I refer to phonedesk I always find it funny when you see people in bars and restaurants by themselves and their phone is like their date.

David Foster:  Yeah. Well, mine’s been my date many a night.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, exactly, exactly. But I just – I really – it’s frustrating but – I – that eventually, they do come around. But it’s kind of funny, it’s like you said when you get people that are really, really excited about what you’re offering them and they jump on, you get the video testimonials, the written testimonials and then you’re able to show like returns for other clients and that’s where it really starts to go. And then of course people , and I guess this is going to segue into my next question – is don’t you find that mentality with social media that even if the resistance like you were like I was in the beginning with Facebook and whatnot, that the eventuality is they do it even like almost subconsciously, because they want to belong? Like you didn’t want to tell someone right now “What’s Facebook?” or “I don’t have – I’m not on Facebook.” “What do you mean you’re not on Facebook? Everyone’s on Facebook.” So do you see that that mentality is what ends up winning out?

David Foster:  Well, I think so. And just a comment on a strategy that you could use to contact or to maybe get them a little bit more interested is go in there with case studies from one of their biggest competitors if you haven’t, one of their biggest competitors or somebody that competes in the exact same market they view and say “This is what they’re doing. So if you want to have – see this kind of success, this is what you need to be doing.” Because – like if somebody came in to me and they’re saying, “Well, this 50s diner is doing this but I’m a guy in a college as well. I can’t – you know…” I mean that’s going to be completely different. So I’ve another guy in the colleges that I work with and this is what he did and this is his results, so you could show that, you know what I mean? Having kind of the same – which that’s a bad example because that’s kind of – that’s one of those you’re going to have a have a big name in an area pretty much to have a kind of a local fan base anyway to build something like that. But because uniqueness does – I mean that does pretty much matter.

But I do think that what you’re saying about eventually feeling like you’re not fitting in, it makes sense. I mean people, it’s almost as like getting on the Internet. I mean people fought it for a while, they’re still sending mail, still sending invoices by mail and still not online in their business. But it’s like they had to bite the bullet because they just started to fall farther and farther behind. And social media is that next medium where they’ll just start to fall farther and farther behind if they’re not on there because I mean I – there’s – I don’t buy anything off-line anymore. I mean I’ll go to Best Buy if I need something like right now or Home Depot or something but most of the time, I’m on Amazon. That is my store. If they sell groceries on there, I’d be buying my groceries.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, I hear you. I just found out a local groceries store now will let you just pull up – you put your order online and you just pull up and they’ll bring your groceries out to you, it doesn’t get any easier than that.

David Foster:  Well, when I lived in Portland, Oregon, we had an organic food – nature market or something, I can’t remember the exact name and I would just get online, fill my cart and then a truck would bring my food right into my home.

Marcia Hawkins:  Got to love that. I really do believe that what we’re talking about earlier and I think that the common denominator with all of this is the fact that people resist change at all cost even if it’s going to save them money, and I don’t understand it. I’m not like that. I would not consider myself in that category. I embrace it. I always find if there is an easier, cheaper, more fun, more dynamic way to do things, I’m all about that. But I just – I think business owners, I think – I don’t know, maybe it’s the fact that we’re dealing with the egos. Sometimes people really want to believe that the way that they mapped it out in their mind and I just find that if you can just accept the fact that what you’ve envisioned in your mind may not be the way it translates out but if you figure it out and it works, who cares?

David Foster:  Exactly.

Marcia Hawkins:  Who cares? What do you think about that, Kyle?

Kyle Clouse:  Oh, absolutely. I was thinking, as we’ve been talking about – and I’ll use your term, Dave, return on relationship, one of the things you mentioned earlier was taking three to four months to see a return on a relationship and I think there’s two – there can be two problems with that is A, the business owner isn’t seeing a return where we live in a microwave society and they’re not seeing a return within the first day of the first week and I think other social media stuff doesn’t work and then they quit. And secondly, why do you think it does take three to four months to see that return on a relationship? Is that because we’ve been so innovated with advertisements that we’re – as a people, we are more cautious before we purchase something? And we want to see kind of the relationship build before we make that step?

David Foster:  That’s almost like trying to figure out how I can walk a mile in one step. It’s like you can’t – like if I came up to you and you didn’t know me – I mean this is the way people need to think. People need to think of the old school face-to-face, meet and greet, I come up to Kyle Clouse, I shake your hand and I get to know you. I’m not going to say “Hey Kyle, come on over here and like my fan page because I have all these specials and everything.” I’m going to want to build – “Hi, how you doing? Nice to meet you. So what do you do, where are you from?” It’s kind of like you have to build that little relationship. Will some people move faster? Yes. Some people just – it’s like the difference between dragging a stubborn donkey to water or guiding it to water, letting it to go to water on its own. If you try to drag, you are going to drag and it’s going to fight you the whole way.

But if you just set your expectations to just get to know people and build relationships the way that we used to, then that’s a more realistic expectation. But if – we’re so spoiled with the fast-food mentality that everything has to happen so quick because we can go online and order something and have it delivered the next day. We can go to McDonald’s and have food ready in a minute and a half, not that I don’t eat there so that anybody that listen to this, please – anybody that I know, I don’t eat McDonald’s. But you know what I mean? We just had that mentality, and people need to understand that social media is about being social. And you just don’t go blast an ad in somebody’s face and expect to build a relationship off that because the relationship starts off on the wrong foot right from the beginning.

Kyle Clouse:  Right, right. Yeah, yeah. I don’t know, just a segue from what you said, I don’t know very many people from Oregon who order their groceries online through an organic store that eats in McDonald’s.

David Foster:  Yes. And biodiesel crops delivered by the way.

Kyle Clouse:  I would think that I want to get into, Dave, as well is kind of we’ve been talking for about 45 minutes about why a business needs social media and why the need to engage? Let’s talk a little bit about what the Fan Page Engine and the Social Media Engine, what can they do for a business in helping the business? Like if I’m the business owner, I’m listening and saying to myself, “OK, I’ve already got a fan page. I have a fan page on Facebook. So why do I need the Fan Page Engine? What would be your response to that?

David Foster:  Well, to me, it’s important to be taken seriously from the beginning. If you went to – like if I went to your page, to the New York Shop Exchange, and it went directly to your wall, OK, and there’s nothing there that shows me who you are, there’s no branding, I don’t see – even though you might have your logo over on the left-hand side but it looks like you just uploaded your logo and you didn’t take any time to use that real estate, you don’t have any images at the top – because branding, branding is important. It’s very important. And it’s not superficial because when you look at branding, that’s how people get to know you right. So that’s like their first impression and you get one chance to make a really good first impression. So branding at that moment for that very first visit is crucial to the whole rest of that relationship.

So if you impressed them from the beginning because you’ve got a custom-designed fan page that shows your brand, shows what you’re about, it’s easy to maneuver, easy for them to click through to get information, they can look over on the left-hand side and see like ours, we put no monthly fees on there so that people know right from the beginning no matter where they are that that’s our thing. And so they get to know us in that little bit of time where we’ve got that time to either have them stay and like it or walk away. And you’ll still get people to walk away but more people are going to walk away if it goes to my info page in my wall, which I’ve seen a lot of people do.

And then what we really focus on is OK, now we’ve got their attention, they like our branding, they’ve liked our page, now they decide that they’re going to use our builder to customize their page so they do that. Now what do I do? Well, answer’s Social Media Engine? Social Media Engine goes through and we’ll show them how to use that page after it’s branded because it’s important. And one thing that I did, this is how I learned and what was pretty much what created the Social Media Engine is I just went to the top social media marketers’ pages and look what they were doing and emulated it. Because if they’re having success, well then this is what they’re doing, so this is what I need to do.  This is also part of tracking social media trends and how people interact on Facebook and other social media platforms.

So if you want to know how to engage a page, come to our page. Look what we’re doing. Go to somebody like Mario Smith’s page who’s in social media, look what she’s doing and emulate it. Look at how she’s engaging. Look at what she’s posting to get shared. She’s doing training information. If you’re – and it varies by niche but it still is the same concept. I mean if you have a lot of local people and they like your restaurants and are putting pictures of your food and – or you’re sharing pictures of your customers and they know somebody, they’re going to share that because they want their family to see that they were at that restaurant or that their picture is actually on the Internet.

So that’s basically – we not only help you brand yourself very well and track your progress in social media trends, we help you know what to do with it afterwards because it’s very important that you understand that it takes a commitment. It’s not something you can do willy-nilly like “I’m going to post this every other day and I might get on Saturday and kind of look and see if anybody has commented and follow up with them.” “And here’s the picture that I took like six months ago. Let me see what that will do and upload that and just be like lackadaisical about it.” You can’t do that. You have to be consistent. You have to be there when people are commenting because it’s almost like they’re walking in your store. So you don’t want to be out walking around trying to get new customers in your store when you got somebody at the register. So…

Kyle Clouse:  I like how you put that, it’s as if someone is walking into your store when they visit your fan page. One thing, let me come across as someone that knows absolutely nothing. And one of the things that you mentioned was when someone got to your fan page, if they go in straight to your wall or straight to your info page. And if I’m someone that knows nothing, my – I guess response would be you mean I have a choice, where I can have them land. Explain what that choice is and how the Fan Page Engine helps the part – we’ve already talked about utilizing that but what is that choice? And also we can talk about a reveal and how someone uses a reveal and what those are because you hear a lot of buzz about that.

David Foster:  Yeah. Well, basically on Facebook, you can set your default landing tab so – in your admin section under edit page in your settings, you can set that when somebody comes to your page that has not liked it, this is the tab that they will see. So when you set that tab what you would do is you’d customize your page with the Fan Page Engine, and one thing I want to mention is you don’t need to know any code, you don’t need to know anything, you don’t have to be a web person, you just have to get some images, build your page the way you want to publish it. It goes right your Facebook page. You don’t have to do anything. Then you just go in, you rename the tab to “Welcome Home” or whatever you want and then you set that as your default page so that if somebody is coming from – they see a post on somebody’s newsfeed that they had posted on your wall and they click it and go to your page then they’re going to see your branded page that could be and what Kyle mentioned the reveal tab, people call it a light gate or you know, there’s other terminology but what that is it’s what somebody sees before they like your page. So I could say like this page and save 35% right now so then they like the page and then all of a sudden that image goes away and boom, there’s a coupon under there.

So it’s basically – a light gate means you now have something they see before they click Like and then something that they see after they click Like. And a lot of people use it for like click Like and watch this video and they have the video like there but it’s kind of blurred out and then they click Like and then the videos are there for them to watch. So there’s all kinds of uses you can to do that. But – and a lot of people use that and some people don’t. You don’t have to. But the point is you can set your default landing tab and just brand your business, more or less have your website inside Facebook.

Kyle Clouse:  Yeah, like there was a lot of talk about 1-800-FLOWERS. They really used that reveal tab with that reveal function to their benefit where  on this fan page they have their branded page and then there was the box that would blink built with a coupon code it was supposed to be  in and when you click like, it takes you to the second page and then that coupon code was revealed to use when ordering flowers. And so there was a lot of buzz that I remember seeing across the Internet about how they were using that to really grow their fan base.

David Foster:  Yeah and I’ll tell you, when we started to review the reveal tab, back when the reveal tab was really hot, our fan base just exploded. I mean it increased by – we weren’t using it before and then we started using it and tracking our social media trends, it increased by about 80%.

Kyle Clouse:   Right. And when you’re offering an incentive for someone to become a fan of your fan page and that’s all – I mean people want something in return. And so if I’m a business owner and I’d come to the Fan Page Engine, I’d create my custom fan page, I came to do it myself, hire you to do it for me, if my branding changes down the road or if I decide to change down the road, am I still able to – can I do that? Can I go back to the Fan Page Engine and do that? And is there an additional charge for doing that?

David Foster:  No, we have – we pride ourselves on being a one-time fee and the reason I do that is because I, too, am a small business. And I understand to try to come out with monthly fees, everybody charges monthly fees, and I looked at our server costs, I looked at our hosting site, like how much space we have and how many users we have and where we were percentagewise. And like get this, we don’t have to charge a monthly fee. So that – I think that’s why we’ve become one of the biggest ones out there is because we are the go to for the people who are just getting started and they can come get their fan page one-time fee and then you can go back and edit at any time. If you happen to get a new logo design then you want to change it, you just log in to your back office, you add your logo, you hit publish and you’re done.  From that point on you can track your social media trends and how your Facebook fans are interacting on your website.

And we do have extra training where we will charge a monthly fee but for the Fan Page Engine product, it is just a one-time fee, and that has been what helped us reach such a large fan base over some of our competition. If you look, they have smaller fan bases. And some people come just for that alone.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, I’m sure you heard that tone. We are unfortunately out of time, Dave, and I can’t thank you enough for coming back and joining us on our program. You are just an absolute fabulous guest. And everytime you answer a question, it segues into about five or six more questions, I haven’t asked but we’re out of time. So we’ll have to have you back again for sure. So Kyle…

David Foster:  Well, I have a question for you next time.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh absolutely, absolutely. I look forward to it. So Kyle and I of course want to thank our guest, David Foster, of FanPageEngine.com and our sponsors of course and of course, our listeners. Please visit us at NewYorkShopExchange.com and grab your video business channel to advertise your product or service. We would love to host your business video but more importantly, we want to promote your product or service. We will see you next Wednesday evening here, 7:00 p.m. on the Preparedness Radio Network. But until then, you have a great evening.

Male:   You’ve been listening to Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.  Questions or comments?  Email the show at info@newyorkshopexchange.com.  Also, find them on the web at NewYorkShopExchange.com.  Until next time for the best tips on how to manage and grow your business, tune in again for Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

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Fan Page Engine and Facebook Marketing

Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse of New York Shop Exchange  will be interviewing David Foster CEO of Hubze, Inc. and Co-founder of the Fan Page Engine.

Dave Foster has been in social media marketer going on 3 years and has been an Internet marketer for over 14.  Dave was a spammer back when that meant entrepreneur.  He has always worked hard for what he has and never went to college; he did however tour some colleges just out of high school playing music.  Dave never liked working for other people and always knew that someone else was making a fortune from his hard labor.

Dave decided to get into web design, but only ever really learned to edit HTML. So as the top internet marketers say…outsource what you do not like to do yourself, so he did and that is where he met the co-founder of the FanPageEngine, Valik Rudd. He and Valik had a great working relationship that has turned into a great friendship. They launched the FanPageEngine product in May of 2010 and have not looked back. They are proud to help small business in a down economy to create very nice do-it-yourself Facebook pages for very little out of pocket. This thinking has made them one of the largest providers of custom Facebook pages online today.

Male:   Preparing business for business is on the air.  Join hosts Marcia Hawkins, president of the New York Shop Exchange and Kyle Clouse, vice president for insightful and creative strategies to prepare your business for business.  Listen in for great guests and great offers from our guests and sponsors, as well thought-provoking dialogue.  Preparing Business for Business offers usable content, insightful ideas and the resources to jumpstart your business in an effective, economical manner and to prepare your business for growth and challenges and now, your hosts for Preparing Business for Business, Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

Marcia Hawkins: Good evening, everybody and I do welcome you to the Business Preparing for Business radio program on the Preparedness Radio Network. This is Marcia Hawkins along with my cohost, Kyle Clouse.

Today is November 23, 2011, 7 p.m. Eastern Standard time on this eve of Thanksgiving. I can almost smell the pumpkin pie baking from here. In fact, I think I have gained about 10 pounds just thinking about all the food tomorrow.

But more importantly, I also want to say a heartfelt thank you to our troops active and retired as a former military mom, I completely understand the sacrifice made especially around the holiday so I want to make sure that we give a nice heartfelt thanks out to our troops.

So I do welcome you here and thank you for joining us here every Wednesday evening to take an informative look at how we can help you prepare your business for business. We have an abundance of ideas and information for you along with exciting guests and informative commentary.

Now our intention each week is really quite simple. We want to provide you with the tools you need to either start a business, grow an existing business and offer up solutions that you may encounter during challenging times. And I think our guest tonight is going to be quite exciting and helpful on this.

So now, tonight, we’re very excited to bring Dave Foster who is the CEO of hubze.com and I’d like to –first, before we bring Dave on, I would like to welcome my cohost Kyle.

How are you tonight, Kyle?

Kyle Clouse:  Hey, great to be here, Marcia. Just wanted to touch really quickly on what you just mentioned where you spoke about abundance and being grateful especially during the Thanksgiving holiday.

When I was at the networking event this morning, those were the two key points that we actually honed in on which was abundance and gratitude and coming from those places and as you come from those –from the place of gratitude and the place of abundance, you’ll see huge transformations in your business as you and I are seeing in ours and we always try to stay focused in those areas and we are definitely seeing the fruits of that

Marcia Hawkins: Absolutely. That’s a very key point, Kyle. And so I would love to – I’m really exciting to bring our guest on, he is definitely my kind of person. That is for sure. I was reading over his bio and learning a little bit about him and I’m quite excited to bring him on. He sounds very entertaining as well. Kyle, you want to tell our listening audience a little bit about David Foster.

Kyle Clouse:    David Foster, he is the co-founder of FanPageEngine.com. They’ve got a Facebook Fan Page. If you type in FanPageEngine, keep everything together without any spaces, you will come across a fan page that are close to 50,000 fans grown organically and Dave is proud to tell us that. They have done a phenomenal job in branding themselves on Facebook and on other social media platforms. And Dave is also the founder of hubze – if you go to hubze.com, they build professional Facebook fan pages, landing pages for businesses, fan page or personal profile fan page and we’ll talk a little bit about that. But they’ve done a really good job of branding themselves and really working into this niche market of Facebook marketing and social media marketing and even keeping people up-to-date on what the latest trends are within the social media arena and what businesses can do to effectively get themselves out across the social media networks and build the relationships with trust with the potential clients using social media.

So we’re really excited to have Dave on the show today. He’s been an entrepreneur for the last 20 years – going on 20 years and has – with an intrepenuerial when that meant spamming. We were laughing about it earlier and he has transformed that into Internet marketing, which he’s been doing for the past 17 years and now, social media has really taken a foothold especially in business, he has really niched himself into this market.

Marcia Hawkins:  Awesome! Well, without further ado, let’s bring Dave on. Hi, Dave!

David Foster:  Hello! Hi, Marcia. Hi, Kyle.

Marcia Hawkins:  How are you?

David Foster:   I’m great. I’m actually visiting Indiana from Tallahassee, Florida so I left 80-degree weather to come up in the 30 – well actually, it gets about 45 today but still that’s about 30 to me.

Marcia Hawkins: Oh, I’ve got to ask you, what part of Indiana are you in?

David Foster:   I am in Goshen, which is about – that’s where I was born and raised, Goshen, Indiana which is about 10 minutes from South Bend. We went up to Notre Dame campus today and walked around and just been out enjoying the – I guess it’s fall.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah. Well I have a sister just South of Indy. She’s in Greenwood, Indiana so happy Thanksgiving out to my sister out there. So I know Indiana quite well, I love the Hoosiers.

David Foster:   Oh, yeah. I kind of miss it because in Florida we only get two seasons where you know, here we have four and fall was always my favorite because the leaves’ changing and that always meant that Thanksgiving is coming and that meant turkey and mashed potatoes. My grandmother would make me my own batch of mashed potatoes because I ate so much of them.

Marcia Hawkins:  I have to grab that recipe from you at some point. So anyways I just – when I read your bio and Kyle have been telling me a little bit about you, I was really excited to get you on the show because I think you’ve got an edgy personality, a little bit of an edge of humor to you and I love that. I think every entrepreneur kind of needs it, I think that’s part of a survival tools but everybody knows that the popularity of Facebook and social media. What drove you into that particular sector? And can you talk a little bit about exactly what you do?

David Foster:   Well, you know, to be honest, I was on MySpace for the longest time and I swore that I would never touch Facebook. I was one of those people that said you know, I just don’t get it, I don’t want anything to do with it and on the advice of a friend I decided to start a profile and so got involved, made a profile, started having a bunch of high school friends add me and I was able to reconnect and then I thought, you know, this is pretty cool.

And MySpace, it had just become more or less an ad farm. Every time you went on there, all you saw were ads and I was getting tired of that and my business really wasn’t doing as well and I was at the time doing web design so I wasn’t getting many clients from it anymore. And so pretty much joined Facebook as a personal reason at first. And then in about – this was back in ’07 I believe and then I kind of dabbled around on there, had done some marketing stuff on Twitter, tested that out.

But then in March of 2010, my developer Valik Rudd who’s the co-founder of FanPageEngine, he sent me a link and what he had done is he had customized his Facebook page to look just like his website. And I looked at it, I thought, “I didn’t know you could do that,” and so my eyes just – when I see things like that, I’m just like, “Aha!”, you know, and that “Aha!” moment being the entrepreneur, you’re kind of always looking for that.

Marcia Hawkins: Oh, yeah.

David Foster:   And so I asked him, I said, “Do you think there’s a way that we can automate this so that people could easily create their own pages?” Because most people aren’t designers, they don’t have time to learn code and it’s kind of like I’m always reminded of the Gold Rush. It wasn’t the people that were out there mining for the gold that made the most money, it was the people selling the picks and the hammers and all that stuff.

So I always look to try to be the pick and a hammer to help people make – do what they’re doing so that I can just provide the tools for them to get there so that they don’t have to learn a whole new skill because it takes time to learn a skill, I bet.

So about two- three days after I asked him if he could do that, he sent me a link and I went in and he had created a tool where I can actually grab images and create my own page and then just grab the code and at the time, all you did was grab the code and copy and paste it in the Facebook and boom your website or whatever images or lead capture forms or whatever that you had on there ended up on Facebook.

So that was – and we’re actually called Glow Themes at the time, it wasn’t even called the FanPageEngine because I just took in an existing name that he had. And so that was pretty much what happened. And then we ended up calling it the FanPageEngine, we launched our – March 31 of 2010 was our first week and that first week we did $7000 in sales and I knew we were onto something. And the rest is kind of history. So we pretty much now just are one of the leaders in fan page creater tools for Facebook.

Marcia Hawkins:  Oh, that’s great. That’s awesome. It’s kind of funny that you kind of got forced into it. I love that. So I know everybody pretty much is on Facebook at this point and if they’re not, a lot of people set up their Facebook profile and they never do a whole lot with it and that’s fine too. But can you talk a little bit about just how important it is for a business to have a presence on Facebook?

David Foster:   Oh, sure. I mean, at first I really didn’t think it was and it was funny because between March and May of 2010, we got to around 600 fans on our page and I didn’t really engage the page, and by that, I’m going to use terms that might – people might not know what I’m talking about so to tell you what that is, engagement is just you know, when somebody posts on my page and if you have a Facebook profile, which most people do, a page is very similar in where I post as a business, I post an update just like you would a status update and then you would get replies. Well it’s just like if your friends were commenting on your profile, you go and you respond on your friends’. Well it’s the same on a business page, only very potential customers.

So what I mean by engagement is if somebody were to post on my page, I respond to every single post. Well once I started doing that, and I was at about 650 or so fans, 630 or whatever, once I start started responding to every single comment and I started posting every single day, educational stuff like how people can use Facebook or just simple things like showing people how to change their privacy settings in a video, our fan base just shut up to 30,000 fans in like no time.

I mean, it’s probably a good four, five months and by the time we got the 30,000 fans, I was the only one managing the page, I was doing all of our customer service, I was trying to make sure people’s accounts were getting set up and all that stuff so it just got overwhelming. So then I was able to bring more people on and now we’ve got three people that manage the pages that we have. I’ve got three developers, I’ve got a customer service guy, I’ve got a Twitter guy so you know, it just kind of exploded at that moment.

And that’s when I realized, this is a way for – and I was able to do that with my own capital. I never had to get an investor. I never had to take on any loans, I didn’t go to the bank, I did nothing. I just simply launched the product and just used the money that I made to reinvest in my company and so – the only thing that I spent money on was my marketing budget, which was Facebook advertisements because you do those and lead people to your page and I started out with what I could afford, which was $20 a day and got up until I was spending between $300 and $400 a day and that’s pretty much where I was.

And now, we’re to the point where we’re such a high on the search engine on Google, I don’t even pay for advertising anymore. So you know, it’s such a great way to get out there and connect with your customers in a way that we’ve not been able to for a year. I mean, if you look at like, how customers used to connect with the business owner in the ’50s, you know, you’d walk into the soda shop and everybody knew the jerks that were in there making the sodas and they knew their customers by name because they were regulars and it’s away for – I don’t know if everybody remembers but in the ‘80s, customer service was all press one for this, press two for that and you could never get a human person and so that whole interaction was a completely taken away from the process and it was just like the big company and the customer and there was no connection. So you didn’t have any loyalty so why would I be loyal to a brand if I couldn’t connect with that brand?

And so in doing this you are able to engage with your customers, find out what they really want and create that community and create that loyalty because that loyalty is very important and there’s days you know – if there’s ever somebody that comes to our page and was slammed after saying anything like there’s a couple people that have been in the past said negative things about us, our customer stepp up and respond to those and answer people’s questions because of how loyal they’ve become. So it’s just a game changer for business in my opinion.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah. So just to be really clear on your message because I’m completely picking up what you’re laying down. It sounds to me like you really identified something that a lot of businesses are forgetting to hone in on and that is the customer service aspect. And so you’re suggesting that they utilize their Facebook fan Page as a way of keeping that interaction with their customer base?

David Foster:  Exactly, yeah and that’s the thing. You can use it for your customer service, you can use it to you know, once a day throw out a deal or a special of some kind and then – because there is different businesses and business types of course that are going to be on there. I mean, a restaurant probably is not going to gain fans like we did posting information about how to use Facebook.

But they could talk about things that make their restaurant unique or offer a coupon or maybe do recipes or something, you know, share recipes of things that they actually have in there that they’re making. I mean, there’s different things that you can do for each niche or each industry that you are in. But it is the key, the engagement and getting to know your customers is the key.

Marcia Hawkins:  Great advice. Kyle, I know you’re chomping at the bit to ask him.

Kyle Clouse:  Absolutely. There’s a lot of good information that we can cover here and unfortunately we don’t have the time to go over everything. I mean I’ve been a member of the FanPageEngine for probably a year now and I’ve also bought your course of the social media engine. And just a fantastic course with a wealth of knowledge and walk a business owner through, learning how to engage their audiences, using social media and how to use social media for business.

So let’s talk a little bit about engagement, Dave. What are some good ways to engage your audience? And what are some negative ways that you’ve seen businesses engage their audiences so we can see the difference and get the listeners on the show can you know, really focus on positive engagement?

David Foster:  Well I always focus on what I call the 90-10 rule and I would say for us it’s more of a 95-5 rule and what I mean by that is 95% engagement and conversation, 5% marketing. So I’m not blasting a marketing status update. I mean, we’re sharing blog posts with free information on things that are going on in Twitter and Google+ and the war back and forth with Facebook and Google+ and just covering social media things.

And we find personally, that when we post an image like if you have a restaurant and you have like some kind of gathering that goes on to take an image and post that on your page and then tell people to tag themselves in it, our pictures get the most shares. They get the most comments. And then just asking simple questions I mean, like today, our question that we just posted probably 15 minutes ago was Thanksgiving, do you prefer turkey or ham? And then I’ll get 50, 60 comments.

So it’s just about being social. So you know, the positive way to engage is to just be social because that’s first and foremost it is a social network. Second to that, it is a way to market. So I’ve always looked at it as a marketing tool second.

Kyle Clouse:  So a business owner listening to this – now, a lot of people view Facebook simply as a social platform or they keep up with their high school buddies, so on and so forth. And so transitioning them into our Facebook Fan Page might be a little intimidating for them. When you’re talking about posting images and updates to someone it might seem like a lot of work and distracting from what they usually do throughout the day to keep their business going. How often, have you – in your experience, how often should someone be posting to Facebook to get the most engagement and to also they’re not spending their wallet if I can say that, what’s the happy medium there?

David Foster:  Well, we always kind of tried to stay below five posts because with the content that we got going on in – we’ve got 50,000 fans so it’s a little bit different. If you got you know – if you’re a local restaurant and you’ve got a good 400, 500 fans and those are all local people, all potential customers, you’re not going to want to post 5x a day.

And the one thing that I highly, highly recommend people do not do is try to go sign up for every social network and then start these feeds that feed out a certain post from one to all of them and then not monitor the comments that are going on. If you really want to use social media, the best way to look at it in my opinion is that’s like somebody’s walking into your store and the last thing you don’t want to do is be there for them when they ask a question.

And up until when we had 30,000 fans, I was still doing it by myself and I could you know – I mean, I would get on there various times of the day and I bet you it was not even an hour total with 30,000 fans. So somebody could dedicate – what I would do and how I do it is I have my daily activities and it’s very important that you have those. If you don’t have a plan and you feel like you have to go out and join every social network in existence just because it’s there, I highly recommend you don’t do that because what happens is you end up getting overwhelmed and then you end up spending no time on any of them when if you could just say, you know,  “Okay, I’m going to do Facebook, I’m going to do Twitter and I’m going to do a Google plus.” Those are going to be my three and then so every morning what I’m going to do is I’m going to get my cup of coffee first then I’m going to sit down and answer my e-mails and then I’m going to go check out my social networks and see if I have any comments from the night before and I’m going to respond to those and then I’m going to post a status update and just kind of monitor that for a while because a lot of times you’ll get comments initially right when you post and you can almost start a conversation right there with the speed of Facebook right now the same as Twitter. Well and G Plus.

Everything is instant now. We’re in this instant age. So you can have a conversation and then go on around your business. It does not take that much time to go in the afternoon, go in for about five minutes looking through the comments if there’s anything that needs a response, go ahead and respond or get the person the information that they need to contact somebody that you know – if you have another person that could help with that, that would be cool.

But it’s just about being there but it does not – you don’t have to be intimidated because it doesn’t take the time that people think it does. Like I was saying, the smaller your fan base, really the less – you want to at least post once a day but I would say three to 5x is the max. So if you’re one of those people that you know – and I’ve seen businesses actually do this were in the back making gravy or whatever, there are just posting all these status updates all day long and what happens in that case, people see those posts and they’re just like they’re not relevant to them, they don’t want to engage because it’s not really engaging, it’s not really asking a question and they end up hiding that business.

Well, you’ve got the fans showing on the page but then they’re not – they’ve hidden your update so they’re not going to see them and that’s the last thing you want to do. So you just want to really focus on keeping it so that it’s not spamming, you don’t want to spam the wall.

Marcia Hawkins:  It also sounds like you’ve gone after quality fans as opposed to just generalize traffic. And a follow-up question to what you said, it sounds as though when you talk I think, 30,000 fans you had mentioned that you were posting about 4x per day. Quick question, are you changing up those posts and are you strategic in what you’re posting in terms of are you going after – one is like a question, is one a poll that you’re taking? Can you talk a little bit about the quality of your post and your fans?

David Foster:  Sure. About three of those posts everyday our blog posts. We post roughly 3x a day so there was a time when we were posting more but we were selective on which blogs and that’s one thing we don’t automate that. We have one fan page where we have all of our news from our blog go  automatically and that’s like a news aggragate so people who want to get all of our blog posts via Facebook may go to that page and they like it and then they see a new post.

But as far as our main page, we will post three blog posts, which ever ones we feel are the best ones for the day and then we might ask two different questions like again, one today was about the Thanksgiving turkey or ham  and then we might post an image of a dog that we can say finish this caption and have people finish what the dog may have been thinking or something like that, something fun.

So we just kind of keep it loose and be real. That’s one thing that I really see a lot of businesses, it’s like they feel like they have to be businessy, like you have to have your tie and jacket on the whole time you’re on there but you don’t. Loosen your tie, be a real person and really connect with people because you’re not connecting with robots. You’re connecting with real people. So you have to always remember that.

Marcia Hawkins:  I must say in just looking at what we’ve done in our fan page, I definitely – I know Kyle and I will have quite a bit of a dialogue about this. Isn’t that right, Kyle?

Kyle Clouse:  That’s absolutely right.

Marcia Hawkins:  We’ve had this conversation about keeping it real on the Facebook page and how – you are so right when people get in there, they want to feel like they’re communicating with you you’re not doing a business transaction and when you really think about Facebook and you think about you know, the fact that people are there really, let’s call it what it is. It’s entertainment.

David Foster:  Exactly.

Marcia Hawkins:  It’s a source of entertainment, exactly.

David Foster:   Think back to the day when you had the call customer service and you press buttons to get somewhere and never got to where you want to be, you never connected with a real person, you know how frustrating that was.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, I know. And I’m really glad and I want to make sure that – we got to take a quick break but I would do want to get back to that when we come back after the break.

So as I said we got to take a quick break to highlight our sponsors. We want to say thank you to the Freeze Dry Guy and of coursethewondermill.com. This is the Business Preparing Your Business for Business program on the Preparedness Radio Network. I am Marcia Hawkins along with Kyle Clouse inviting you here each week to join us for an informative dialogue on everything about business preparation and please also visit us on NewYorkShopExchange.com.

Thank you so much for allowing us to help your business prepare for business and we’ll be right back.

Alrighty, everybody. Welcome back. I’m just so excited to get back. We just kind of left a little bit of a cliffhanger there with – talking about the kind of the rules of engagement for Facebook.

Again I want to remind everyone that we are speaking with David Foster and Kyle Clouse and we’re talking all about the importance of the Facebook integration for your business. And I want to just get back to what we were talking to a little bit before the break and how being able to keep it real on Facebook and being able to interact with your fan base and very interesting thing you said about back in the 1980s when you would call and press one and that really as we all know, irritates people.

But you think about it when people actually physically come in to your business you wouldn’t be a stiff and robotic person in communicating with them. You would want to keep it real for them. And I got to tell you, if I take anything away from this radio show tonight, I can definitely reassure you that Kyle and I will be having a conversation about our own fan page and really making some changes because I believe you completely hit the nail on the head with that in terms of keeping it real.

So when you’re grabbing content for your blog post again, is there any little secret to that that you’re grabbing and posting?

David Foster:   Well, we just really keep our finger on the pulse of social media so we try to see what the latest trends are, we have some people that do some really cool infographics for us and then they do a post or something and we just really keep everything – and I mean we’re constantly looking at what’s going on because social media is our world, that’s how I feed my family so it’s very important to us but that information we keep completely free and so we’re just looking for things that if Facebook makes changes in the privacy settings we want people to know right away if it affects them or we see that they’re getting ready to change the news feed, which they have several times we can kind of let people know just how they can go in and make it the way they still use it or things like that. So we just keep our finger on the pulse of social media and that’s the content that we provide there.

Marcia Hawkins:  Great.

Kyle Clouse:  So let me ask you real quick, Dave and kind of follow-up on that just so we can see what might be a little bit more effective or can you guys see the difference and you might not even be a difference but when you’re posting on Facebook or grabbing a link from your blog and then putting it onto Facebook, is more effective to copy and paste that link in? Or are you just as good using the share button to do that for you?

David Foster:  Well, what we do personally is we actually copy the link and then we go and we paste in a link where it says put the link and then we put a status update next to it and the reason we do that is because for the longest time, Facebook was actually grouping automated stuff like network blogs and stuff like that together. The share button, if you share that, that’s going to go on to your personal profile so it’s like when we put the like button or the share button or anything that on the post that will automatically – now there are some ways you can choose the page you want to post to but you’re not going to get the engagement when it looks like it comes from a third party and you don’t get the news feed activity that you get when you just go in there and take the time to hand post it on your wall and make the comment that you put and specific to that post because a lot of times if you’re sharing it, it will already have an explanation description and all that stuff there. And you can just if you just want to keep it like I said to keep it real.

Kyle Clouse:  So you’re not spellchecking your posts or anything like that? Are you also grabbing the same link and posting it to your personal profile and to your fan page?

David Foster:  I very rarely post my blog posts in my personal profile. I used to but I have so many friends that just – they’re not into social networking the way that I am but so I pretty much stopped doing that. I will like posts sometimes but I don’t go and put every single one on my profile now.

Kyle Clouse:  So now there’s a difference between a Facebook fan page you and we’ve been talking about fan pages, Facebook fan pages and there’s also groups and they’ve recently changed that from what I understand, they’ve recently changed up their events pages where you can create an event. Now as a business or should the business create a group page, a fan page and how should they use events page and events page so that they can really get the interaction of their audience like we’ve been talking about?

David Foster:  Well personally, I mean a group is kind of what we would create if we wanted to put a mastermind group together. And the reason a group doesn’t work in my opinion for a business, I mean, I think certain businesses you know, depending on what they’re trying to accomplist, you probably could use a group but the first thing is you cannot customize it so there’d be no branding which we have found – if you’re going to run any kind of apps, I highly recommend you run some Facebook ad because if you really get in there and you could laser target your demographic, you’re going to save money.

But you can send people right to a custom tab on a page which means you can have your ad, say something and then when they go there, that landing tab can be specific to that ad so they’re getting exactly what they clicked on and the information is there. Where you can’t do that in a group and also in a group, if I go there as a business owner and I post something that I want people to see, if somebody else comes in there and they post something, my post moves down the page. And then if somebody comments on a post that was from two weeks ago that post is going to automatically move back to the top so your initial post can just get completely lost in the shuffle.

And so on a page, I can set it up so that the page post stay on top all the time and that people can comment on it but it stays kind of what I call sticky, it stays right there. So if there’s information that I really like – we have server maintenance coming up, that we have a server issue that’s going on, I want that right at the top so that when people come to complain about it you know, they let us know that we have an outage, they see that right there and they don’t have to you know – because if that was a group there’d be no way for them to find it if other people have posted.

So a group is good for like, I’d say a small number of people but I’m in a couple of groups that are upwards of 1000 people and you just cannot keep up with it. I mean, I get so many e-mails I have to shut it off. And the comments. If you see a comment come across your notifications and you go to the group, by the time you’re there you cannot find the comment. And Facebook notifications don’t take you directly to that comment, they just take you to that group. So I personally don’t like groups for business. I like groups for personal.

And in the event page, I haven’t got to play with the events page as of yet so I don’t really have much to talk about on that. However, I do know as a business page, we’re able to create events and link them right to our page and then as we can post the event right to our page from the event. That’s the way we do it if we do have events. But I have played with the new event stuff yet.

David Foster:   Kyle, I was talking about customer service robots earlier and you really sound like one right now. You’re on Skype, correct?

Kyle Clouse:    Yes.

David Foster:   Yeah, you’re breaking up pretty bad. Can you call back in real quick?

Kyle Clouse:    Yeah.

David Foster:   Okay, thanks. Well, I think I caught he was talking about landing tabs.

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, he was.

David Foster:  So I’ll talk a little bit about landing tabs until he gets on, I can maybe answer the question but the cool thing about Facebook pages is you can create landing tabs and so you can have you know, like we’ve got a landing tab that have videos for training, we have a landing tab that has our customer service so people can connect live to our live support right from Facebook, they can push the button and they’ll be connected to our support team and be able to have the conversation right there on Facebook.

We have a tab for our products so we can customize that and people can look at our products and actually but them right from Facebook. Click the BUY NOW button and it goes to our shopping cart. So it’s a way for you to create a whole website experience right inside your Facebook page and it’s the only place you can do that. You can’t do it in a group or anything like that and then like I was saying earlier about that, that’s a very, very important because if you can really target your ads, you can get down to where you are spending very little money on advertisement but you’re going to get a lot of bang for your buck because when people go to that ad they click on it and it’s very relevant because as we all know Google always likes relevant. If you can keep your ads relevant to your content, people are more receptive.

So it’s a real cool way because you can – each ad can land them on a completely different tab. So it’s been a game changer for us because we used to try to run Google ads and you have to be a bit – more or less rocket scientist just to try to figure out the algorithms.

Facebook, you just pick who you want to target, the age group, whether they’re in college, some of their interests and boom, you’ve raised, you’ve target them and we were spending sometimes $0.60, $0.70 per click and we’ve always made more than we spent as long as you know how to target.

Marcia Hawkins:  And hence, why we started NewYorkShopExchange.com for the same reason being able to take your video and update it any time, re-tag it because yes, you can’t figure out what Google – and when you think you figured it out, just then of course they change the algorithm. So it’s really hard.

David Foster:  And all of a sudden they don’t accept this niche or they don’t accept this, you know.

Marcia Hawkins:  Exactly. I do want to ask you, I’m sure a lot of our listeners are probably thinking this question so I’m going to be the one to come out and ask it. So what are your thoughts on Facebook versus Google+?

David Foster:  Well, you know personally, I am just so into Facebook because I feel like it’s more stable and the demographic on there in my opinion is more geared towards what I’m dealing, more towards business. Where Google+ right now seems to be a very techie crowd, I do get into some conversations on there once in a while but I still have not made the complete move because I just feel like it’s a little bit more techie.

Now I see them doing some things that have some potential with the hangouts, which is where you can create a room and go in and have a video conversation with multiple people and they’re coming out with a version where as a business owner I would actually be able to go in there and stream video that people can watch so it could be like a webinar or something like that and have as many viewers as I wanted so they do have some potential but right now with the numbers, Facebook still is the fastest growing, their’s are most stable and just have a better reputation.

And because of Google+ was created because they want to figure out a way to give our data to advertisers where Facebook was created to create the college experience online so you know, the motives were a little bit different which I can appreciate because I look at Facebook and people get so upset because of the ads here and there but they have to pay for that platform. I think they’re really out of the way and I love the fact that they’re geared towards me. If I have an interest, I see an ad on that interest and I have made a lot of purchases from Facebook where a Google+, it doesn’t have it yet but you know…

Marcia Hawkins:  No, they don’t.

David Foster:  I know they will, it’s coming. Look at YouTube. I get so frustrated now because I got an extra ad I was in the middle of my videos but it’s coming. But if you watch the conversations on Google+, it’s more of a Twitter type thing because it’s fast. It’s like such a fast conversation that if you’re not there to keep up with it, you’ll miss it. So…

Marcia Hawkins:  Yeah, it goes back to what you said earlier too though, it’s customer loyalty and you know people, look what happens when Facebook makes one minor change, people are all over the place. You know, “Why did you that for?!” And they’re very quick to let you know their dissatisfaction with something. But you never see people deleting their page because Facebook made a change.

David Foster:  Right, exactly.

Marica Hawkins:  Well, we got Kyle back and I know Kyle chomping at the bit to ask you another question. Go ahead, Kyle.

Kyle Clouse:  Sorry about that. We went into some technical difficulty. I was bringing up the landing tabs and so if you can talk about what, you know, as a business owner coming to Facebook and starting their fan page, what does FanPageEngine.com do for them in creating most the landing tabs and how easy is it for them to integrate a professional landing tab into their fan page?

David Foster:  When I came out with the system and the whole time I was in communication with Valik, I got – told those guys to make sure that my dad could do it. So if my dad can to do it, that means anybody can do it. So it’s just very easy to understand and it used to be copy and paste where now Facebook has Facebook Connect so you’re actually – what you do is you create your page and it can be an already existing page, doesn’t matter.

You just go to our system, you click on Connect, it automatically connects with Facebook and then it pulls down a list of your pages, you select the page that you want to work on and as soon as you do that it pulls up a tool, you’re able to upload graphics, you’re able to add videos, lead capture forms, Facebook comments and just basically build from scratch from the ground up. It’s a complete webpage right inside Facebook and then you click publish and if you go back to your Facebook Page it will be there.

Kyle Clouse:  A miracle. Now I noticed that there’s – you know, I’ll go to a business’ fan page and there’s some business fan pages, you land on their info tab, others you land on the welcome tab then you go to those that have like the fan page engine, you have a custom build tab. What kind of difference does that equate into for someone quickly like and become a member of your fan page?

David Foster:  Well, it makes a huge difference because people become loyal to a brand and so you always want your – I mean we all know the importance of branding. Branding is very important for people to recognize you. So if you just send people to your info tab, that’s not really going to – I mean it’s not pleasing to the eye because it’s just information and people have to read and they don’t like to read as much anymore. They’d rather look at something that’s pleasing to the eye and watch a video or something like that. So what we have is what’s called a fan gate, I guess it’s what they call it now. I used to call the reveal tab but more people have called it the light gate, which means I can show information on a tab before somebody likes it. So I can say, “Like this page to learn how you can customize your Facebook fan page,” and then as soon as they like it, it reveals a video that shows our product and prices and stuff like that.

So it’s just a more – we all know how much a better experience of sending a customer to a website than calling in to a sales department. They can do that eventually to get their questions answered but most people want to see the information, they want to read, they want to get informed and that’s the way for them to do that without ever having to talk to people because we like to get information, we just don’t really like to talk to people on the phone or anything so it’s kind of like your 24/7 salesperson then if they want to go deeper you know, some people have a phone number or an e-mail address they can get more info or whatever.

Kyle Clouse:  So you’re basically using your cliffhanger to get them to take the next step which is liking your page and then giving them the information that you promised to give them.

David Foster: Yeah, exactly. And it can work for any guy I mean, if you happen to have an ebook that you wanted to give away and I noticed you know, with the Preparedness, if you wanted to give people information on food or something, you could say, “Like this to receive a 10% coupon on your next purchase of freeze dried food” or whatever and then they like it and then there’s the coupon.

Kyle Clouse:  Very cool.

David Foster:  So it’s like building a list because back in the old days when I first got started and entered marketing, the most important thing you can do was build your e-mail list. Well, now the most important thing in my opinion that you can do is build your fan base and your e-mail list. So you get the like first and then you give them something for getting that like and then you can have a lead capture form there as well to capture their e-mail after the fact and you actually get a lot better results when you do both in my opinion.

Kyle Clouse:  So can someone use a fan – I mean a fan page essentially is like building an e-mail list in a lot of aspects.

David Foster:  Oh completely. And some of the things that Facebook is kind of leaning towards that is coming is a better way for pages to communicate on a mass scale with their fans and that’s something we’ve been looking for for a long time. I mean, they had it so you could send a message to all your fans but it was always going into what is called the other box, not the regular inbox of your messages so they would get overlooked. And so they’ve been testing it out with groups with e-mailing and everything and then they’re looking to roll out some kind of communication for pages where we can communicate with our fans better than just a post because there’s some times when you have information that people are not going to see the post but they always check their e-mail.

Kyle Clouse:  Right. So what is the best way for – if you have to choose one method to drive targeted traffic to your fan page and really engage your audience and give the audience that is niched to your business, what’s the best way to do that?

David Foster:  Well, initially out of the gate, it’s Facebook ads because you can – you know, if you’re a restaurant owner and you live in Tallahassee, Florida, I can go in there and I can target people 25 miles outside and inside and outside of Tallahassee who like coffee and you know, who are entrepreneurs or whatever and so anybody that fits that demographic will see my ad.

So I just increased my likelihood of a click in doing that and then for us it’s just become about engagement because people are seeing people engaged on our page and then they’re coming and liking us. Well, when we they first get there, they’re of course going to see our sales page so they become a potential new customer. Because I have not run Facebook ads probably in four months and our sales have not slowed at all. So you just get to that point where you can stop spending the money because just the engagement alone is driving traffic.

Kyle Clouse:  Absolutely. So on the Facebook ads, let’s talk about those for a second. How difficult is it for a business owner to set up an ad campaign through Facebook and what kind of cost are they looking to incur when they run a campaign?

David Foster:  Well, you know, it’s really going to vary and how deep you can dig in to your demographic and how local you can make it. If you’re an international business, it can be kind of expensive depending on your niche. Our niche was Internet marketer so of course we can be international but we also – our biggest demographic actually is real estate agents.

So we’re going to pay a little bit higher click because we’re targeting such a wide range of people but if I like I said, if I were the coffeehouse and I were able to really laser target my demographic like let’s say, I want to target kids that are 18 to 23 that like live music, that are 15 miles within Tallahassee and even be in specific bands if I wanted to because there’s a difference between somebody who likes John Mayer and somebody who likes rap music or something.

So you can figure out – okay, who is my best customer? And once you establish who your best customer is, you can go in and very easily create your ads and you know, the hardest part of it is the graphic in my opinion because you really have to figure out a graphic to use the call for action. So…

Kyle Clouse:  Is there a way that people can get in contact with you if you have additional questions regarding Facebook like an e-mail address?

David Foster:   Yes, they can e-mail us at support@hubze.com and the reason I give out that e-mail is because it actually creates a ticket and then Chase is going to find it to me to make sure I stay on it because I am one of those – my e-mail box right now has 8900 e-mails and I can’t wait to see what it’s like after Friday.

Marcia Hawkins:  Well, we do have to wrap up. I’ve got a big dislike button here but we do have to say goodbye for tonight as we are unfortunately out of time. But I promise we’ll be back next week, Wednesday evening at 7 pm.

We want to thank you so much for listening and we also want of course to thank our sponsors and of course our guest, David Foster, CEO of FanPageEngine and Hubze.com.

This was an extremely, an informative preparative show and we sure hope you’ll visit us at our site, NewYorkShopExchange.com and get your business moving with video on your very own Video Business Channel.  We look forward to chatting with you next week, Wednesday evening, 7 p.m.  And again, thanks so much.  I’m Marcia Hawkins along with Kyle Clouse.  Enjoy the rest of your evening and of course, have a wonderful Thanksgiving. Goodnight!

Male:  You’ve been listening to Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.  Questions or comments?  Email the show at info@newyorkshopexchage.com.  Also, find them on the web at newyorkshopexchange.com.  Until next time for the best tips on how to manage and grow your business, tune in again for Preparing Business for Business with your hosts Marcia Hawkins and Kyle Clouse.

Profit from Your Facebook Fan Page Real Estate. Is it Possible?

Facebook Fan Page Real Estate

You are most likely wondering what I mean by your fan page real estate.   After going through the recent changes within Facebook Fan Pages I found two areas of prime real estate that you can potentially profit from.

Let’s tackle them one at a time; shall we?

Facebook Fan Page Wall

What would it be worth to you to if you were running a health and wellness website and Nutella posted a link to your website on their wall with the potential of reaching 7,728,795 fans!  I suppose the nature of your business and the size of the fan page following would be two critical factors in what that cost would be.  Needless to say the potential traffic that you could realize could be worth the investment.

Facebook Featured Likes

Facebook has given admins a few more options in controlling their fan pages.  Two of those updates are made by selecting Featured Likes and Featured Page Owners and then having them displayed on your fan page.  See the two images below.

As of now Facebook allows you to have 5 pages that your fan page profile has liked to be shown on the left hand bar.  You can either have these pages cycle randomly or choose 5 that you always want displayed.

This poses the question again.  How much would it be worth to have the Nutella fan page “like” your fan page and then have your image and link back to your fan page prominently displayed on theirs?

Just a couple of things to think about.

What are your thoughts on this?  Can it work and how would you market this?

 

Facebook Fan Pages via Lujure

Click here to discover how 2 guys figured out how to market any business on the Internet while also putting 15K into their pockets in 90 Days!

Want a Custom Facebook Fan Page?

Drag n’ Drop Facebook Fan Page with Lujure?

Nathan Latka, of The Fan Page Factory, has defeated every other company who offers Facebook Fan Page creation software and he has done it in record time.  The name of Nathans new venture is Lujure.

Lujure is an online service that allows the user to completely customize a Facebook Fan Page tab.  Lujure is based off a drag a drop system while utilizing a color wheel for aesthetics.  After the end user customizes the look a feel of their Fan Page they simply click “Publish Tab” and the code is presented to be pasted in their Facebook FBML tab.

Lujure get’s even better than this.

The user is also able to add Social Media icons, Facebook share buttons, Facebook comment buttons, and embedded code from aWeber, Constant Contact, Mail Chimp or other list building services.  The list goes on with what a user can do with the Lujure platform.

Watch the short video below as Nathan Latka goes through an example of creating a custom Facebook Fan Page.

Comment, share and get Lujure now.

Facebook Fan Page Layout – Is the Change Necessary?

Click here to discover how 2 guys figured out how to market any business on the Internet while also putting 15K into their pockets in 90 Days!

I have a question!

Are the changes that Facebook is making to Fan Pages necessary or just another wrench to be thrown in the ever changing world of Facebook?

If you have been on Facebook for any amount of time; let’s just say within the last two years, you’ve seen some changes and additions to layout, functionality, apps, texting, messaging, places, etc.; some good, some not so good.  In my opinion it’s as if changes are made just as the Facebook community is getting comfortable with the new layout and feel from the LAST time they changed it.  Honestly, what gives?

Some of you may or may have not yet noticed changes that Facebook is making to their Fan Pages.  I manage a few Fan Pages for clients.  At this time the change has only been implemented on one of the Fan Pages that I manage.  This is for the Utah Advocates and you can see the change on their fan page at http://www.facebook.com/TheUtahAdvocates.

Two other pages that I also manage are for Lifted Life Yoga and Hidden Hills Cabins.  To see the difference take a look at their Facebook Fan Pagesathttp://www.facebook.com/LiftedLifeYoga and http://www.facebook.com/BrokenBowHiddenHillsCabins.

Make sure to click “Like” on the Fan Pages.

From the looks of things this looks to be a progressive move from Facebook.  Very similar to the changes they made on personal profile pages.  Change a few here and a few there until they are all changed.  One of the major concerns that I have with the new layout is the ability to select a landing page with your FBML.  We have known for some time that Facebook has been working towards iFrames and away from FBML.  I wrote an article about Facebook changing to iFrames.  But at least let us choose the landing tab for new comers.  That feature has apparently been taken away.

Please comment below and help shed some light on these changes; if anything shorten my learning curve.

Look at the image below to see how the Managed Permissions with your Facebook Fan Page editor looked before and now what they are looking like.  The “Default Landing Tab” has been removed.

Custom Facebook Fan Page Using FBML

Want a Custom Facebook fan page for your business?

If you are like most who dabble in entrepreneurship you know how important personal image and personal banding is.  With Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter it has become increasingly easy to get your image and your business in front of your audience.  It is also more important then ever to live by the age old saying:

“You never get a second chance to make a first impression”

Well what are you customers first seeing?  What is their first impression…of you?

Are you looking to set your brand and image leagues above your competitions?  If that’s the case then let’s be honest.  Facebook is no longer just for the high school and college kid looking to make a new friend. It has now become a central space where businesses are able to connect with their audience in a way that has never before been possible.

Why not take this a step further by creating a custom Facebook fan page using FBML?  Not sure what that is…that’s okay.  Contact me and together we can go over the details.  Make sure to click on an image below to see a few of the templates that we have to work from in creating you your own custom Facebook fan page.

Click an Image

5 Easy Steps to Adding Google Analytics to Your Facebook Fan Page

You already have Google Analytics installed on your website and blog; now it’s time to get it installed in your Facebook Fan Page.  This post will show you how to install the Google Analytics code into your Fan Page so that you can start tracking user footprints.

1.  Go to http://www.google.com/analytics and login to your analytics account.  If you haven’t already set one up, it only take a few minutes.

2. Once you have logged into your Google Analytics account your want to click on the “Add New Profile” button.

3.  Go back to your Facebook Fanpage  and copy the URL.  Go back to your Google Analytics page and select “Add a Profile for a new domain” and then paste the URL in the area that says “Please prvide the URL of the site that you like to track“.  Make sure to remove any excess http:// and then click continue.

4. Google Analytics will then take you to another page and provide you with a “Web Property ID”.  You will need to copy this ID to insert into your Facebook Fanpage FBML page.



5.  Take your Web Property ID “UA-99999999-9″ and paste it into the Facebook Analytics tracking HTML code and paste it in the bottom of your FBML editing box.  It is that simple!

<fb:google-analytics uacct=”UA-9999999-99″ />

Comment below on how it went adding Google Analytics to your Facebook Fan Page…and don’t forget to share this post!

Powerful Lessons Over Soup and Salad

Today I had lunch with two amazing people; Tiffany Walke Peterson and Ty Bennett.

Tiffany is a key note speaker for the self founded company The Lighthouse Principles and is also endorsed by Jack Canfield, co-author of the Chicken Soup for the Soul series.  Tiffany is also a personal coach and mentor who has had remarkable success helping others to get their desired results.  She is a seasoned success trainer, speaker, coach, and facilitator helping individuals and organizations alike  in creating stellar results and lasting change in their professional, financial, and personal lives.  She is a powerful person and demands a presence.

Ty Bennett is also a speaker and author for Leadership Inc which he founded in 2009.  Ty has a life changing audio CD called The Power of Belief.  Ty is a gifted communicator who has a unique ability to make the complex simple and to teach and inspire. At age 21, Ty started a business with his brother Scott, which in a few short years they built into a multi-million dollar, international enterprise.  He is currently in the process of co-authoring a book with Kevin Hall about the two most important days of your life.   Kevin just released a New York Times best seller Aspire: Discovering Your Purpose Through the Power of Words.

At this point you are probably wondering what the point of this post is. Have you heard that your network is your net worth?  As an entrepreneur are you an introvert or extrovert.  Especially in today’s competitive world it is more important than ever to get yourself out into the public’s eye serve first.  It is easier now than it has ever been to make connections…powerful connections.  Social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube have been the means of connections that would have never existed otherwise.  It is no wonder that there are more millionaires created now than in any other time in history.

One more thing…today’s lunch was the first time that I have met Tiffany, although we have communicated a few times via Facebook.  She did something that really impressed me.  She asked Ty and myself if there was any way that she could serve us.  She didn’t ask us half way or at the end of our meeting.  She asked right at the beginning.  Tiffany has mastered that if you help enough people get what they want, eventually you will get what you want.

What is the most powerful connection that you have made?

The Power of Personal Branding

If you are an internet marketer, YOU are your brand. You have to market yourself; therefore you need to be consistent. You have to be true to who you are. Take note of the things that make your personality and you should improve the gifts that you have. Compensate for the ones that you lack.

These days, when you say “brand”, people instantly think material branding. Branding from commercial products, these companies that have made their mark in our consciousness. And how did they make that mark exactly? It’s through years and years of consistent quality and unique product packaging. A good marketing and advertising strategy helped too. And what was achieved was a sort of trademark, a brand, a guarantee that you will get your money’s worth.

You may wonder why you should have a personal brand. Well, look at you and your business as living stories. Tell your audience, in this case, your customers what makes you and your business unique. Tell them what sets you apart from your competition. Think of those moments that make you stand out. You have to help them understand your tools and your community. You can do this by improving your own communication skills.

When you talk to your customers about your business, deal with them as if you are an annual review. Tell them what your business has done and what the goals are for the coming year. You should have integrity nonetheless. Another thing you should remember is that you must improve what you have. Do not lament on what you lack. If you focus on your liabilities, then you will not be able to work on your strengths.

As children, we are taught to be well-rounded. We should strive to fix what’s broken. But there are cases when you need to show your colleagues what you can do and impress them about your abilities and your perspectives on the business. You have to accept the parts of your job that you’re very good at accomplishing. You should encourage them that you can get it done for them. Remember that you are branding yourself.

Since you are brand and you are marketing yourself, it is best to think about your characteristics. Identify your strengths and work on your weaknesses. Re-invent yourself and invest in your well-being. After all, you are your own brand.

But then, you have to realize whether it is worth the time investing in something that you’re not. You can build and deliver power through those parts of you that are already considered to be your best gifts. If you look into other several works, these words have already echoed. Flip through those self-improvement books and you will see this statement.

Finally, the most important technique that you should learn in personal branding is confidence. You have to nurture your confidence. When you do, then you will accomplish far more than any software, logo, or slogan. You are your own brand, remember that. You have to empower your belief in yourself. This is the best strategy and method that you can do.

Don’t forget to comment and share…

Microsoft is Integrating with LinkedIn, Facebook and MySpace

The global conglomerate Microsoft is now adding a feature within Outlook that will allow the user to integrate with LinkedIn.

In seeing the huge growth of the social media arena Microsoft has jumped in allowing users the ability to stay connected while increasing productivity. New relationships are also being fused with Facebook and MySpace and are following the existing association that Microsoft already has developed with LinkedIn.

Now that this the integration has gone live Outlook users can download the LinkedIn for Outlook application and renovate their desktop inboxes into social media hubs.