Wednesday, April 10, 2013

5 Tips to Make Facebook Marketing Mobile-Friendly


According to Facebook’s fourth-quarter report, around 680 million of the company’s one billion monthly active users access Facebook from mobile devices.
It’s up to brands and businesses to make sure that any marketing efforts they add to Facebook are mobile-friendly, including custom apps, email, advertising, etc.
Here are five things you can do until Facebook fine-tunes its mobile experience:

#1: Target Sponsored Stories to Mobile Users

You can choose where your Facebook ads are seen. Facebook allows ad managers to place ads so they’re viewable on desktops, on desktops and mobile devices, or on mobile devices only.
The “mobile-only” ads are limited to Sponsored Stories, so when you have an important update on your Page, you can opt to pay for a Sponsored Story that will show up in your fans’ newsfeeds and networks on their mobile devices.
Sponsored Story
Sponsored Stories are a great way to reach Facebook’s mobile audience. The Sponsored Story appears in the newsfeed and says “Sponsored” on it.
If you’re not sure whether mobile or desktop Facebook ads perform best for your brand, test what works best for your business and do an A/B test so you can compare results. You don’t want to throw money at something that doesn’t perform.

#2: Make Sure Your Email Is Mobile-Friendly

Part of a running a good Facebook campaign is promoting it. So make sure your promotion efforts are easily viewable on mobile, including anything you send via email.
According to MailChimp, 40% of Americans who use mobile devices currently read email on them. A Forrester Research Email Marketing Forecast anticipates that by 2017, that number will jump to 78%. And according to a HubSpot survey, two-thirds of people under age 30 use a smartphone or cell phone to access email.
Collecting data through custom apps includes building your email list. If you’re building your email list through a custom app on Facebook, it’s important that the emails you send are mobile-friendly.
Why?
Because according to research put out last year by Econsultancy, when people receive email that isn’t optimized for mobile, they close it immediately. You don’t want to be the sender of that kind of email.
MailChimp mobile marketing
MailChimp makes it easy to create mobile-friendly emails with mobile-friendly templates.
With MailChimp you can see what your email will look like to mobile users.
Make sure your subject lines are always short and sweet.
Since your mobile users are probably multitasking (i.e., distracted and not giving your email the full attention it might deserve), use a direct call to action.
For example, “50% off for today only!” or “Here are our top 10 bookmarks from this week.”
If possible include special offers that are only available to mobile users.According to e-Dialog, 18% of consumers who opt in to mobile marketing messages do it to access special deals.

#3: Integrate Mobile With Your Other Efforts

If you have a brick-and-mortar business, you want to make sure that customers have an experience that’s consistent with their online experiences.
To integrate mobile with brick-and-mortar, consider creating table tents or signs that have QR codes that will take customers to your Facebook Page.
QR code
Using QR codes at your business can lead customers to your Facebook Page for exclusive promotions and giveaways.
From there they can like your Page; sign up for coupons, special events and newsletters; and gain access to Facebook coupons and deals, including whisper codes.
Whisper codes are special offers that are given in Facebook status updates to friends/followers of a business who later can “whisper” the offer they read about to the cashier or server to redeem it.
You can also incentivize check-ins at your store or restaurant by offering an instant discount or a coupon for a future visit. Bonus: Whenever someone checks into your place of business, the announcement appears in their friends’ news feeds, making check-ins great word-of-mouth marketing.
Encourage your users to share whenever possible!

#4: Make Sure Your Facebook Apps Have Mobile Capability

What good is a Facebook contest—or any other Facebook app for that matter—if your users can’t access it from their phones and tablets?
If you want to prevent frustration for your users, when you choose a third-party app,make sure that it has mobile capabilities.
ShortStack Phone Generosity
Generosity Day 2013 made their custom Facebook app mobile-friendly so desktop and mobile users could pledge their acts of kindness.
This is important because some apps created for Facebook won’t work on mobile unless the developer uses “smart” URLs that detect whether the user is on a mobile device or a desktop.
Smart URLs adjust the content accordingly so it’s easy to see, read and use.

#5: Test Everything!

Facebook’s mobile experience can be inconsistent, so make sure you test your apps and ads from a few different devices.
In the image below for AMD, when the website link is clicked the visitor is led to a mobile-friendly version of their website.
Mobile test everything
On their Facebook timeline, AMD links out to their website.
Do your images load quickly? Do all of your links work? The last thing you want is for your users to bail because they have to scroll and scroll and scroll to read your message or they have to wait too long for images to load.
The best way to be sure that everything works as you expect is to test everything on multiple mobile platforms.

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