THE iSTRATEGY BLOG

Digital Posts from the iStrategy Conference's Global Marketing Experts

7 Ways to Humanize Your Brand Facebook

Negative Vote
0
Positive Vote
0
Aaron Lee Photo
Aaron Lee
Twitter: @AskAaronLee
Website: http://www.AskAaronLee.com
18 November 2011
3

Facebook is a personal social network, it’s where friends and family stay in touch, connect, update each other, etc. However many marketers and brands treat it as another advertising medium to promote their product. Ssssstoopp it..

askaaronlee

After starting a new brand on Facebook and learning from other brands, I thought I should share some methods that I’ve found to be effective in getting people to notice your brand.

Let us start with one of the most controversial:

 

1. Put a face on Facebook. Not all brands want to put their face on their business page or even on any social networks. But it is said that the Best way to be “human” is to have a human face on it. People want to talk to people, not to an avatar or a logo, and I believe that there are several ways that you can do it. 

  • Create an alternative Facebook page to respond. You can create an alternative Facebook page dedicated for support or responding to enquiries. Sort of like an alternative Twitter account with a face on it.  I wouldn’t go with a personal Facebook account since it would be a question of who owns the account later on. However, an alternative Facebook page with a person’s photo, person’s name, and the company name can help. 
  • If your company doesn’t allow a photo, then alternatively what you can do is create an alternative Facebook page to respond, use a logo as an avatar. However when people go to the alternative Facebook page, they will be able to get a full banner and photo of the person behind it. 
  • If your company doesn’t want a photo or a name, then last resort would be a dedicated page with a company logo, YOUR NAME + company name:

  Eg: From ShoeDazzle, they have a couple of people such as Natalie Dazzle, Jane Dazzle:

 

 

2. Facebook posts: I won’t go much into the details about this, but here are some ways that you can make your page more humanized. Posts should be:  

  • Engaging
  • Worth sharing 
  • Include photos: Stands out on Facebook rather than just boring text 
  • Questions
  • Tips
  • Pick one question: Eg: Shoes vs Heels
  • Fill up the blanks questions: First thing I do when I wake up is ___________
  • Videos

 

3. Develop a personality or a voice: Sounds easy but often times it is the hardest and takes time. A voice or personality brings a whole new level of engagement. Don’t be a ROBOT. If people want to talk to a robot, they'll use SIRI. 

Tip: Write the way you speak!

 

4. Don’t bore everyone about your products daily! Sure, brand awareness or product awareness is something that you want to achieve on Facebook, but posting them daily will bore your fans. Remind yourself that It IS about your fans, not your products. Make it about them and the rewards are two-fold.

 

5. Reward fans: Fans love to help a brand that they love. You can reward your fans by:

  • Doing a fan of the week where you have photos of fans on your banner.
  • Use applications such as booshaka that allows you to see who the top fans are. This shows how well fans are doing and they will compete among themselves. At the end of the week/month, you can reward them. 

 

6. Post “behind the scenes”: This allows people to see what goes behind a brand. People will feel they know a brand or feel a personal connection when they see what happens behind a Facebook page. Here is a great example by Zappos. They shared a photo of one of their employees, Tony Hsieh, making pizza in Las Vegas. Zappos is a great brand that we can learn from. 

 

 

7. Respond: Most important of all... respond to every enquiries if possible. If you can’t respond to all them, then have a number that they can call and get help right away. Some tips that I’ve learned is always make it easy for customers to reach you. I’ve seen people going to a company’s profile page, posting an inquiry only to get another email to email the question to someone else without getting a reply. This happens most probably due to companies outsourcing their voice and the person behind it is following a script. A great respond doesn’t follow a script.

In summary, do something that represents your company and culture well. Some things might not work for your brand. Do what feels comfortable. Anyway, I hope I have covered most of them, if I miss any, do share by leaving a comment below. 

RELATED CONTENT
  • No Related Articles
COMMENTS 3
John Wedderburn
Posted 11.18.11
3.07pm
I really like #1, good tip - I was thinking this may break Facebook's rules about pages and having more than one personal profile, but I guess not. I assume you could just kill the page when the person leaves the organisation.
Aaron
Posted 11.18.11
3.12pm
Hi John, Thanks for the compliment. I don't think it breaks any rule as most brands have more than one pages. Recently Walmart created 1400 facebook pages for each region. Indeed they can just kill the page, they can actually rename the page if one of the team member leaves. (depending on the amount of fans)
Pak Hou Cheung
Posted 11.21.11
6.38pm
I heard something similar to do this at pubcon a couple of weeks ago, someone else mentioned about putting a human face on in the profile picture instead of brands logo... can you expand a bit more and give another example where this has been successful?
LEAVE COMMENT
Your Name * Comment *
Email Address *
Subscribe to the iStrategy Newsletter
* These fields are required
 
Back To Top