Saturday, May 29, 2010

Facebook Fan Pages: Company A's Story, part 5a

When I sent my plan to Company A, I had already visited the Facebook fan page for the site, and had even become a fan. There was very little traffic on the page, so one of the steps I outlined was to start posting regularly to the Facebook page. Until they were ready to do that, though, I said I would take it on, posting links to relevant news articles and posting upcoming events that they sent in-house e-mails about.

For the next three weeks, I did just that, posting two or three times per week. As I started posting, so did others. The site, which had hundreds of fans, was starting to wake up.

And then I got an e-mail from the person who had initially contacted me. He had just found out that this was not an official Facebook fan page. The powers-that-be had decided to take down the unofficial page and launch an official one.

I immediately shot an e-mail back.

"Gah! Don't do that!" (Though worded more professionally.)

I shared Coca-Cola's story.

In essence, many fans had created Facebook pages as tribute to their favorite soft drink, but one page rose above all the others in sheer number of fans. Rather than Coca-Cola getting upset about this page, or trying to start their own official page from scratch, they contacted the page's "owners." They worked with the two fans who had created the page, and turned that page into the official Coca-Cola Facebook page.

The fans (on that page they numbered in the thousands) got to stay put. They got to see Coca-Cola as a company that respected its customers and fans, which wouldn't have happened if the company had tried to shut down that fan page. And the two who created the page became minor celebrities in the world of Coke. (Read more about Coca-Cola's Facebook fan page story .)

The following day my contact in Company A wrote me and said he'd shared the story with the decision-makers, and they were going to migrate the existing fans to the new page. The fans wouldn't have to do anything.

What happened, instead, was that a new page was created and the fans from the old page were asked to become fans of the new page.

In theory, this isn't a bad approach, but the reality is that the fans of the old page have no reason to take action. They don't necessarily care that one page is official and one isn't. They just want to feel like they're part of a community and have discussions about things that are important to them. Official, for those purposes, is irrelevant.

Company could have made it relevant. They could have posted links, invitations to events, and plenty of other information that wasn't available on the fan-created page. But they didn't. They've given their fans no reason to leave the original fan page. Over the next few posts we'll look at things they could have done differently, and things they're doing right, with their new Facebook page.

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