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Home Insider Blogs Jonathan Saar's Blog Facebook’s Impact on Multifamily Part II- Stop the Mistakes
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Mar 23
2011

Facebook’s Impact on Multifamily Part II- Stop the Mistakes

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Posted by: Jonathan Saar

Tagged in: Social Media , Facebook

Much of the material in this post may be items you have read before from others.  In multifamily there is quite the pool of pretty amazing folks who work hard to educate us on best practices specifically regarding Facebook.  However despite the education available I am still witnessing some common mistakes taking place.  As you read this and find yourself in any of these categories I do not want you to feel bad at all.  I can’t tell you the amount of mistakes I have made along the way in learning about social media.  Making mistakes will only help us improve, so please review this post from that objective.  I am outlining today five common mistakes and also remedies that will help Facebook’s impact on multifamily.

1-      Making a Facebook Profile instead of a Facebook Page

I continue to get requests from profiles to be “friends” instead of suggestions to “like” a page.  The way this previous sentence is outlined I hope speaks for itself.  It is against Facebook’s terms of service to set up a business on a profile.  If they find out you risk losing all of your hard work.  However you cannot have a business page without a profile which lends itself to questions such as “Who should have the profile?” and “How do I separate the personal from the business?”  Both are good questions which I would like to hear from your experience what is working for you in the comment section below.  What I have recommended to property management companies is to not allow onsite staff to set up a business page through their profile.  There is still too much turnover and Facebook pages are not transferrable.  Where I have seen the most success is where perhaps a Director or Vice President or even the owner themselves have a Facebook personal profile, give access to someone in marketing to their account, have them set up the necessary business page or pages, and then perhaps give admin rights to the community manager.  There are many scenarios on how to strategically do this but the main focus is that a property management company needs to have control (I use that term loosely) over their pages.  This approach is really one of the safest.

2-      Putting the Cart before the Horse

I can create a brand new Facebook page in less than ten minutes now.  It may not have a bunch of bells and whistles attached to it but it will be a functioning page.  This really goes to show that there is so much preparation involved prior to setting up your page.  Do you have goals outlined for your page both short term and long term?  Do you have a content strategy?  Do you know your target audience and how you are going to reach them?  Are you aware of the full functionality of your future Facebook page?  Do you have a clearly defined purpose for your page?  These and many other questions should come before you ever start making your page.

3-      Overly Focusing on Numbers versus Interaction

Numbers can be very deceiving.  If you have 2000 likes on your page but only 2 people regularly interact on your page how does that compare with a page that has 200 likes and on average 15-20 people regularly interact? Using the “suggest to friends” feature is good to get your page going but after that extremely sparingly.  You may initially be impressed with the numbers in the beginning but will become quickly discouraged when no one is interacting.  If you have a solid but adjustable plan to show your community why they will benefit from this page then you will gain long term interactive page members and your numbers will organically grow from there.

4-      Putting Your Facebook Page in a Coma

This point is somewhat related to the second one.  I have witnessed either extremely boring content as well as pages that rarely have any updates at all.  This happens as a result of not having an adjustable strategy.  In your planning stages you may have all thought you had cool ideas about content and topics that could be shared on your pages.  When you found that it was not working how quickly were you able to adjust?  If you keep doing the same thing over and over again that is where the Facebook coma happens.  One tip that I have found super helpful is to really show appreciation for those who do interact with your page.  These are potentially your brand advocates.  By showing appreciation for their voices you are building a living, moving and breathing community instead of coma one.

5-      Lack of Connection to other Media

Part of your overall strategy needs to include all other digital and print media.  The launch of your Facebook page should be somewhat simultaneous to any website, print, and outreach changes that are necessary.  If you want to see positive growth of your Facebook page it certainly cannot be an island.  It needs to be part of the mainland with a clearly defined “interstate” path to all other media you are using.  Facebook pages are just another tool that will help your business.  They are certainly not the Grand Poobah of business tools. 

This post is a little longer than usual so I am wrapping it up now and I would love your thoughts and experiences.  I write these in order to help our industry and not to put anyone down.  The more we share the stronger our industry will be.  Whatever is on your mind, please feel free to share in the comment section below.

Original Post

Written by Jonathan Saar- The Training Factor


Comments (9)Add Comment
3712
written by Chrissy Surprenant, March 23, 2011
Jonathon... my facebook page is in a total coma.. I have tried doing different things like post riddles or topping tuesdays to get people involved... through your research is there a better part of the day to post to get better feed back?
679
written by Jonathan Saar, March 23, 2011
Research has proven that there are better times yes. Typically in the evenings you have a higher probability. Your analytics for each post should help you. There is a number that represents "impressions". When you line that up with the time you post it will show you at the very least what had the most views. It takes a lot of time and persistence. One tip that can help with those interactions is to go over and make comments on other pages as your Facebook page. This shows your interest in other businesses daily affairs. Once you get enough people interacting with your page, Facebook's algorithm will then have your posts show up in the "news feed" as a result of those interactions now being of higher value to the Facebook user. Important thing is to be super consistent and keep trying different things. What is the link to your FB page? Hope this helps. I think my comment was too blabby and almost as long as my post smilies/smiley.gif Thanks for taking the time to read it Chrissy!
3712
written by Chrissy Surprenant, March 23, 2011
I went ahead and had my property "Pinewood Apartments" like the Training Factor so you can see. I don't know if I'm missing the mark... I am going to look at what you suggested and look over those numbers... I was wondering what those numbers meant... I kinda had a feeling when the arrow is going downward that it is not a good sign!
679
written by Jonathan Saar, March 23, 2011
Thanks Chrissy. I will write up another post soon on how Facebook's insights can be useful in making decisions. Thanks for everything!
3712
written by Chrissy Surprenant, March 23, 2011
Awesome! Thanks a bunch!
85
written by Charity Hisle, March 24, 2011
Chrissy,

Often the best way to get activity online is by having activity offline. How are you promoting your page to wake it up out of the coma? smilies/smiley.gif
3712
written by Chrissy Surprenant, March 24, 2011
When we first started the page we did a big campaign and it went well... now we don't do a whole lot... what can we do besides putting things on our letters etc? This is a fun topic!
85
written by Charity Hisle, March 24, 2011
When you have community events, take lots of pictures! Encourage residents to take pictures too and post them on your Facebook page. (you can have them sign a release during the event or put up notices that images will be used online).

Create an event on Facebook and invite your residents to RSVP. Those that RSVP will be entered to win a prize during the event.

Take a few pictures of the community parking lot. Ask residents to "tag" themselves in the photos on Facebook for which parking spot they'd like to have! Select one random winner a month and put up a sign on that spot that says "Our resident of the month parking". Move the sign around from month to month.

Have a pet photo contest: go to the pet walk area and take pictures of people's pets and post them to Facebook. The pet with the most "likes" wins!

These should get you started! Good luck!
679
written by Jonathan Saar, March 25, 2011
Nice tips Charity. I have seen some communities pace their picture posts. That way it gives you more content to post and more opportunities for interaction.
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