7 Plain Ways Your Local Business Can Increase Sales with Facebook
7 Plain Ways Your Local Business Can Increase Sales with Facebook
Co-author of Facebook All-In-One for Dummies and “Ambassador of Awesome” at Post Planner, Scott became addicted to social media before even MySpace (the very first time around!). Scott treats training for the Post Planner app as well as Customer Support, Blogging and Social Media. He’s been married for twenty one years and has three kiddos who are his world! Connect with him on Facebook and Twitter.
I’ve noticed lately that most advice from Facebook marketing blogs only applies to online businesses.
The “experts” there only run pages for their online products — social media training, blogging training, ebooks, etc. — so when they suggest marketing advice, it often doesn’t apply to the real, brick-&-mortar world.
Which kinda deep-throats.
Let’s get Real
This is why I attempt to base my advice on my practice running real-world, brick-&-mortar petite biz pages on Facebook.
I’m talking about petite business pages that are geared toward local customers.
Running a page for a local business is much different than running a Facebook page that trains you how to market.
They have different challenges — which require different tactics & technologies.
So let’s talk about seven ways you can use Facebook for local business to increase sales.
7 Elementary Ways Your Local Business Can Increase Sales with Facebook
1. Engagement Very first
Your #1 aim when posting to your page should be catching the attention of your followers & getting them to engage with your posts.
If you fail at this you’ll very likely fail at running your page.
Sure you want to market your products — and yes, you want people to click thru to your website.
But this requires:
A local gastropub I’ve been following is excellent at this — and recently received a strong response to this post:
The page only has about seven hundred Likes — and yet, almost eighty people Liked this post!
I think any of us would take a 10% engagement rate any day!
Reminisce — people don’t want to just be sold to all the time. They will let you sell to them it sometimes, but only after you build some rapport.
Begin by posting interesting content, including:
Build trust with your followers & get them talking on your posts. Then, once you’ve built this relationship, mix in link posts to your products or website.
Recall — with the way Facebook’s page algorithm works, your fans only see posts from pages they engage with.
For example, on Post Planner, we make sure that only 50% of our posts are links back to our blog. The other posts are created purely to get engagement from fans — so we can make sure ALL our posts proceed to demonstrate up in the news feeds of our fans.
If all you post is salesy content, eventually engagement will die off — and you’ll just be talking to yourself.
Two. Showcase Off Your Products
I’m focusing here on local, petite businesses — those that have tangible products.
The power of suggestion is very strong on Facebook — especially with photos that kindle the senses & passions of people.
Here’s an example of a local automobile shop displaying off their product:
With about 1,500 fans on this page, this post got more than one hundred Likes — not too shabby!
The post did well for Aloha because:
- it appeals to the fans/demographic of a petite Texas town
- they list the details of the product — which will excite truck guys
- they use a fine looking photo
Another local joint called Captain Billy Whizzbangs had similar success showcasing their tasty burgers:
I’ve eaten this burger — and even tho’ I’m vegetarian now, my mouth waters when looking at this photo!
Appeal to your fans senses by demonstrating off your products with high-quality photos.
Trio. Get More Likes
To get engagement on your posts, you have to have fans!
Many puny business owners get their very first burst of Likes by inviting friends & family to Like the page — either by:
- posting about it on their profile
- inviting friends via their page
This is fine, as long as your family & friends are potential customers who will engage with your posts.
There is no need to have people Like the page who will never engage — and in fact, having too many non-engaged fans will hurt your page in the long run.
I have pages that I will never recommend to my friends — because they aren’t the target demographic of the page.
As a petite, local business, the best way to get Likes is to use the Promoted Page Likes feature on your page.
(Again I’m talking to puny, local businesses here not global companies or digital product type pages.)
I’ve successfully used this feature on local pages & seen superb results — both an increase in Likes & sales related to those Likes.
You’ll find this feature just above your cover photo on the left mitt side.
Since we’re talking about local businesses, I suggest targeting an audience within twenty to thirty miles of your store. There’s no need to target everyone in your state — as all of them are not your typical customers.
I usually drill down to my town and (sometimes) a nearby town.
Something to keep in mind here is the default setting on this ad type is to run continuously — so if you set a budget of $Ten per day it will run until you tell it to stop!
I’d advise letting it run for four to five days at a time — so you can judge whether it’s working or not, and kill it if it’s not.
Four. Run a Contest
I’m a Large fan of contests on Facebook pages — especially for local businesses.
People dig winning stuff & dig it more when they can redeem it locally & instantly.
As you may know, Facebook lightened the rules of contests on pages some time ago so now you don’t need to run a contest on an app — which can be challenging & time-consuming for puny businesses.
Instead you can simply post a text update with a contest & you’re all set!
Or post one with a photo.
Whizzbangs gives us another fine example of this with a post made at the same time I’m writing this!
This is a good Timeline contest because it appeals to their fans’ senses. And within minutes it had 50+ likes!
Also notice that instead of just telling “Get a free lunch”, they’re providing away “$30 in Free Food”. This puts a value on the prize — and also will encourage customers to spend more when they come in, since they’ll likely bring a friend or two with them.
And even if you don’t win the contest, your mind still just triggered your taste buds — and now you want a burger!
Where will you go to get that burger? Most likely Whizzbangs if you’re in the Waco, Texas area!
At least that’s what they hope you do!
For further information on the rule switches attempt these resources:
Five. Boost Your Posts
I’m a massive fan of the Boost Post feature on local Facebook pages.
- it’s ordinary
- it gets results
- it’s effortless to measure the results
Could you get better results by using more powerful ad apps — like Power Editor or Facebook Ads Manager? Maybe.
But as a puny business holder you don’t need to waste time on those things.
You’re very likely only going to spend $20 to fifty per month on ads — and you don’t need to get bogged down in advanced contraptions that just make numbers geeks giddy!
Boosting a post is elementary.
Below each post on your Timeline you’ll see a “Boost Post” link — click or hover on it as seen below a post of my local bounce house business:
Once you click “Boost Post”, you’ll see this:
Yes, there are fairly a few options here.
You can choose to target
- existing fans & their friends
- specific demographics
I typically will choose my local town as the target — and then choose the age & gender.
You’ll then choose a budget for the ad, which depends on what you’re willing to spend.
Then click “Boost Post” and you’re done.
This will create a “Sponsored Story” in the news feed of the people you targeted — which looks natural & non-intrusive to most people.
Do Boosted Posts for local businesses work?
Well, the proof is in the pudding. Here are my results from a latest post:
So I spent $Five to boost this post. This $Five helped me reach eight hundred fourteen out of the 1,100 people who eyed it — (the page had about two hundred fans at the time of the post).
The post resulted in six fresh page Likes and (most importantly) one fresh rental sale — which will net about $100!
Not a bad come back on a $Five ad spend!
I ran another boosted post before Thanksgiving — suggesting a weeklong special. I got these results:
I spent $15 on boosting this post, which resulted in:
- reach of almost Two,200 people
- Five fresh page Likes
- (most importantly) two rentals that will net me more than $200!
Again, a good comeback on ad dollars at a local level.
The other good thing is that both of these examples resulted in fresh Likes for my page — which means more potential business later!
In addition to being able to boost a post on the post itself, you can also do it from the Admin Panel above your cover.
There you’ll see a list of your latest posts — and can quickly boost from there:
This comes in handy when you see a post is performing well & want to give it a bump in the news feed.
BRIEF Rant on what Experts say about Boosting Posts
I know Facebook ad experts like Jon Loomer, Mari Smith, Dennis Yu and others don’t recommend boosting posts.
I have to respectfully disagree with them.
And I think they’re not helping local biz page owners by telling this.
Yes, for large pages & companies, it makes more sense to use Power Editor — but in reality those companies are better suited to hiring out for their Facebook ad management.
But for a local business that will never have more than 1,000 fans, hiring someone to run your ads or bogging yourself down learning Power Editor or Facebook’s Ad Manager is overkill, in my opinion.
Trust me — you’ll get almost the same results by quickly boosting a post as you would spending hours picking through nerdy stats in the Power Editor!
- Big Company — use Power Editor, Ad Manager & hire out your ads
- Puny Company — use Boosted Posts & Promoted posts to save yourself time & money
6. Make it Effortless to Contact You
In the old days of marketing, what did every print, radio & TV ad have?
Sure, the medium may have switched, but the necessity of customers being able to contact you has not.
Two Ways People can Contact you
1. Facebook Messages
Make sure the messages feature on your page is turned on — so people can send you a message quickly & lightly, either on their computer or mobile devices.
For my local page, I can’t count how many times people have asked about pricing via messages — and I’ve closed the sale right there!
So fan page messages are a crucial feature for local businesses.
People don’t care about your email address — they want to message you directly from your page — or call you.
To turn on messages on your page, go into your admin panel (above your cover photo) and click on “Edit Page” then “Edit Settings”
Click on the “Messages” area, then permit messages & click Save.
Now any user on Facebook can send a message to you via your fan page.
Two. Phone numbers
As a local business, you MUST put your phone number in the About section. Period.
But you should also include your phone number when you create a post.
Recall that 99% of fans will only see you in their news feed — not on your timeline. So make it effortless for them to call you from there.
A good example is a post from Poppa Rollo’s Pizza in Waco, Texas. The place is a local legend & does a good job with social media — including posting their phone number with their posts:
7. Run a Facebook Suggest
Facebook Offers are another good way to increase your sales using Facebook.
Unluckily, they’re no longer free to run on your page. But they can be a fine way to suggest a discount or time-limited incentive to your fans & their friends.
To redeem the suggest they’ll need to come into your store — thus spending money!
You can run an Suggest directly from your page’s Publisher — where you normally post status updates.
Click “Suggest, Event+” and this will emerge:
Now click “Suggest”.
A lightbox will open providing you tons of options to choose from:
On the left-hand side is a preview of your Suggest — and you set it up on the right:
- add the headline you want
- choose from a latest photo on your page or upload a fresh photo
- choose a date to commence & stop the Suggest
If you don’t choose to pay to promote the suggest, you won’t be able to choose a target audience — and the Suggest will simply post to your Timeline.
Also reminisce that if you choose “Not Now” — meaning you don’t want to spend money promoting — the post will NOT display up in the news feed of your fans. It will only display on your Timeline — which doesn’t stop you from promoting it later, if you determine to do that.
Make sure to add in the Terms & Conditions of your Suggest — and then click “Create Suggest”.
The post will look like this:
For local businesses, Offers are awesome because, once claimed, they send users an email instructing them to visit your location to redeem the Suggest.
Thus driving more traffic into your store — and enhancing your sales!
Your Turn!
If you run a local business, I hope I’ve wooed you to begin using Facebook to increase sales.
By leveraging these seven elementary technics, you’re well on your way to making your local business a powerhouse in your area.
Do you have questions or other proven technologies for leveraging Facebook for local businesses? Let me know in the comments below.