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Forget Facebook Likes: It's Time To Return To Fans
by Kaila Colbin, Friday, February 14, 2014 11:50 AM
Via Mashable, today’s must-watch video is the brilliant Derek
Muller from Veritasium, talking about Facebook fraud and how fake Likes destroy your ability to reach your true fans. If you don’t
have the eight minutes and 59 seconds it takes to watch the video -- and, if you’re involved in online marketing, you’ll need to find the time -- here are the key takeaways:
- If you pay for Likes at all, through Facebook or anyone else, there’s a good chance many of the Likes will be fake.
- If you get fake Likes, they will not engage with your page.
- If a big percentage of your Likes don’t engage with your page, Facebook will interpret your content as irrelevant and show it to fewer and fewer people.
One more key
takeaway: Muller points out that Facebook is actually disincentivized from addressing the problem, because once your organic reach is restricted, “Facebook makes money twice over -- once to help
you acquire new fans, and then again when you try to reach them… [Y]our organic reach may be so restricted by the lack of engagement that your only option is to pay to promote the
post.” Part of the problem is that we’re applying the rules of advertising when we should be applying the rules of relationships. But those two things sit on a continuum, and it
isn’t always readily apparent when we’re crossing into dangerous territory. It is outstandingly obvious, for example, that
paying people to say nice things about your government is a bad idea. It is also
obvious that if you are trying to sell a product or service, people need a way to find out about you, and advertising is one accepted way to do so. But when you advertise to get Likes instead
of to sell, the net effect is the opposite of what’s intended. By way of example, Muller refers to a campaign by the U.S.
State Department, which in 2012 spent $630,000 to buy 2
million Likes and then realized only 2% of them were engaged. The bottom line is this: if you are measuring success in number of Likes, you are fooling yourself. We need a total
shift in how we measure success, and Facebook itself has given us the clues to understanding what that should look like. Remember when there was no such thing as a Like? If you’re looking for a
successful and cost-effective Facebook strategy in 2014, you need to focus on fans. In his epic rant about "
1,000 True
Fans," Kevin Kelly says, “A True Fan is defined as someone who will purchase anything and everything you produce. They will drive 200 miles to see you sing. They will buy the super deluxe
re-issued hi-res box set of your stuff even though they have the low-res version. They have a Google Alert set for your name. They bookmark the eBay page where your out-of-print editions show up. They
come to your openings. They have you sign their copies. They buy the t-shirt, and the mug, and the hat. They can't wait till you issue your next work. They are true fans.” It is, of
course, dramatically harder to build a fan than to get a like. But that’s the point. Building a business isn’t easy. Creating a product or service that people love isn’t easy.
Sharing it with people in a way that touches their hearts and resonates with their self-identities isn’t easy. But it is the right way to do it, and it is the only way you will retain any kind
of autonomy over your relationship with your community. When people love who you are and what you do, Facebook can’t control you anymore. Viewers of the TV show “Hustle” will
be familiar with the saying, “You can’t con an honest man, because an honest man doesn’t want something for nothing.” Paying for Likes might not be something for
nothing, but it is still the easy way out. Take the road less-traveled instead. It will make all the difference.