Both of these are equally important to your business and usually you are trying to do both.Our first piece of advice on converting Facebook posts is to set goals and be specific about what you are setting out to achieve. This will help you to be able to track and monitor your goals and continue to produce data. This data allows you to keep refining your content and your process, which essentially benefits you and your client. We're going to be looking at some tips for how to get your Facebook posts to have a high conversion rate.
We are so accustomed to blankly scrolling through Facebook without even really taking in most of what we are seeing (guilty!). In our case, it's often not until something funny or a deliciously mouth watering video from Buzzfeed's Proper Tasty that makes us stop, watch and tag.Try applying this tactic to your business posts - there is a fine line between brand continuity and putting people (including potential clients) to sleep.But besides keeping your viewer entertained, there are also some logistics to follow to keep your content reaching the right people and generating some engagement. Here are some of our tips:
This is where you bring life to your image or video. Let your brand speak and show your personality! The goal is to speak to your end reader, feel free to mix it up too, a little humour never hurt anybody.- YAWN ALERT - Avoid Jargon, inside jokes, and the same receptive text. 😴A good rule of thumb is to follow the old 8 second rule - If it's not engaging someone in within the first 8 seconds, chances are it's not working. That doesn't mean that long posts are necessarily bad, just keep it engaging. Feel free to experiment and see when and what works best for you to best increase converting Facebook posts.
This is where the purpose of your post really shines, what is the "why" behind the "what"?This is often in the form of a button, a link, or an irresistible offer! Choose your "verbs" based on what you want them to do. For example: last offer, sign up, subscribe, apply, free download, FREE etc.Make sure you keep it simple, only one call to action in a post and don't make it repetitive.
Facebook has some great targeting abilities when it comes to ads. There are a few different ways you can approach targeting.Likewise, both organic and paid ads are great tools for your business. Therefore, one of the most important factors in both are knowing your audience. Don't always assume your Facebook audience is the same as your other social platforms. Identify the majority: age, gender, location, interests. As a result, we identify who gives the most engagement and what time they seem to be most active online. Then target away! Continue to tweak and collect data always - there is no "one size fits all" solution to Facebook Ad's and it's a bit of trial and error when best trying to find what works for your business.