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What impact did your Facebook fan page have on your sales or traffic?

Did you try to measure conversion rate: "Facebook fans/visits" or "Facebook fans/sales"?

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The problem with Facebook marketing is that you get a lot of quick attention that dies quickly. If someone clicks a link on Facebook, chances are he will click the back button on his browser within five seconds. – tyjkenn Jun 20 '12 at 19:15
@tyjkenn not if your link leads to a relevant blog post or content your users are interested in, see my answer below. My average session for a user coming from Facebook is 4 minutes, with 5 page views average – webbie Jun 22 '12 at 2:16

4 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

In sort of the exact opposite situation as @Dario, we experienced fairly good results in marketing a consumer oriented product that would likely be used during leisure time towards a younger audience on Facebook.

It all depends on who you're trying to reach.

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To answer your question in the title - it varies, it can be highly effective or useless, as you can see from some of the responses. It depends on the product/service, but also your marketing goals - new customer acquisition, customer retention, brand management, engagement and research. It also depends on who your fans are - existing customers or facebook users you advertised to to build your fan base (a mix for me). I believe for most companies fan base is initially built from existing loyal customers with hopes of expanding fan base to their fans networks.

I don't look at Facebook fan page as an acquisition channel with immediate results, but rather as a long-term brand and customer management tool. Everyone talks about engagement these days and it seems to imply that engagement improves customer loyalty and retention, and in the long run LTV. It can also be helpful as a feedback loop with your customers. For example, when you post about new features or new blog posts the number of likes or shares you get can tell you what is popular and what is not.

And lets not forget about indirect SEO benefit from all those links coming from a domain with SEOMoz highest domain authority of 100/100. Source: Open Site Explorer Example: http://www.opensiteexplorer.org/links?site=www.facebook.com%2Fpages%2FTest-Designer%2F267814749902223 - my site's Facebook page has a higher (gasp) page authority than my site

Another SEO benefit is the "likes" you get on your site pages, which in turn boosts their visibility. I got more than 10 likes on each of the last 2 blog posts I promoted on Facebook. Sure 10 likes is not a lot, but the pages existed less than a week.

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It depends on the industry and the way they chose to market it on Facebook. You have to engage the users and put them at ease that they're not being marketed to. It can be tricky.

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In my experience for b2b, the impact is very small or inexistent. Twitter seems to have a much broader reach and better results.

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I agree completely. I think the reason is the context: when you're on facebook you're not thinking about anything work related, nor do you want to. – DougN Jun 20 '12 at 12:13
I am in education space and most of my customers aren't on Twitter at all, but my Facebook facebook audience is a lot bigger and more active. – webbie Jun 22 '12 at 1:34

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