Getting More People to Like Your Business’ Facebook Page

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The following excerpt is from Perry Marshall, Keith Krance and Thomas Meloche’s book Ultimate Guide to Facebook Advertising. Buy it now fromAmazon | Barnes & Noble | iBooks | IndieBound

Like campaigns are simple. You can get in quickly, create a campaign right away and start seeing results. You’ll start building an audience of leads and collecting real, usable data.

There are three main reasons to run a Like campaign.

1. “Like” campaigns deliver social proof

Once you’ve run a Like campaign, you can do connection targeting. You can aim your ads at friends of fans and make the most of instant credibility. Your ads are no longer just a cold interruption. They appear recommended by a friend. They look popular. Viewers can see that other people, including people they know, have liked you, so they feel comfortable about liking you, too.

Related: 14 Ways to Increase Your Facebook Page Engagement

2. Fans see your ads more

Few people realize that Facebook shows your ads to your fans twice as often as they show them to non-fans. Facebook has told us that currently non-fans can only see your ads in the newsfeed a maximum of twice a day, while fans may see your ads up to four times a day.

3. Building warm audiences

Targeting your fans with conversion-focused campaigns will always yield the best ROI. You’re hitting a warm audience. It’s like targeting people who’ve already joined your list or visited your website. This is instant, subconscious social proof. People immediately drop their guard and are more likely to click the ad, opt in and take action.

By investing time and money in Like campaigns, you get higher click-through rates, higher opt-in rates and a better ROI. Like campaigns also won’t take up most of your budget. Spending somewhere between five percent and 10 percent of your campaign bucket is typical. And once it’s up and running, you can set it, forget it and leave it to run so that your audience is always growing with fresh leads.

Related: 10 Proven Ways to Make Millions on Social Media

Creating your Like campaign

Like campaigns start in the Power Editor. Once you’re inside your Ads Manager, choose Power Editor from the drop-down menu. Next, choose “Create Campaign” and select the campaign objective “Page Likes.”

After selecting “Page Likes,” you’ll need to name your campaign. Choose a name that identifies your goal, such as “Like Campaign.” The current order of tasks during ad creation is setting the “campaign objective” (in this case, Page Likes); building the “ad set,” which involves defining the audience, placements, and budget; then designing the “ad” itself, which is the creative part of the task and requires picking images and writing the copy.

Once you’ve chosen the Facebook page you want to promote, the next step is to pick an audience. For a Like Campaign, focus on targeting cold audiences. If appropriate for your business, a good place to begin is the main five English-speaking countries: U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. Then choose age and gender — use these options to hone down your audience.

Next, focus on people with particular interests. Creating different ad sets for different interests will let you see how the response of each of those interests compares. For now, just choose one or two related interests to build a reach of around 1.5 million.

Beneath the Detailed Targeting are Connections. Select “Exclude people who like your page” as these people are already fans.

Next up is Placements — where your ads will appear. Since this is a Like campaign, all of the platform options that Facebook offers under Edit Placements — Instagram, Audience Networ, and Messenger — are ineligible. You can just stick with the recommended Automatic Placements option.

The final option is the budget. A good amount to start with is $10 per day per ad set. Keep the bidding automatic, and name the ad set based on your targeting and placement so you can easily identify it. If you decide to change your targeting or placement before you go live, change the title, too.

With the campaign chosen and ad set settings determined, the last stage is to write the copy and choose an image. For a Like campaign, the Power Editor provides just three options: a single image, a single video or a slideshow.

Related: 5 Social Media Rules Every Entrepreneur Should Know

There are no hard and fast rules about which images work best on Facebook. We’ve found that in general, using images that clash with Facebook’s colors tend to work well. That might be a solid background that contrasts with Facebook’s white and light blue color: a black background or bright backgrounds. We’ve also had good results with black and white images, and close-ups to the face seem to catch people’s eyes, too.

You’ll need more than one image because you’ll want to run tests. We suggest testing three ads, so once you’ve chosen three images, scroll to see how each image looks in each different feed: mobile newsfeed, desktop newsfeed, desktop right column and so on. You can crop the image and move it around.

You’ll then have to enter the text that runs alongside each image. Facebook limits the copy to 90 characters, so you have to be able to be pretty concise. Facebook won’t let you change the headlines of Like ads so this text is the only thing you can change. You can also check the mobile feed to make sure it works on the small screen.

The Landing View indicates where the user will go if they click the headline instead of the Like button. You can choose between the timeline, likes and photos. The timeline view is usually the best option, so make sure you have good content there as well.

At the bottom of the page, you can choose to track “All conversions from my Facebook Pixel.” That’s worth doing because you might find that somebody clicks Like and then a week later opts in to one of your lead generation ads. Your Like campaign will show that conversion.

When you’re ready, you can hit “Place order” and your Like campaign will be up and running, and you’ll start building your fan base.


 

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