• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

@BasilPuglisi

Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI, Since 2009

  • Headlines
  • My Story
    • Engagements & Moderating
  • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • Content Disclaimer
    • 🧭 AI for Professionals
  • Basil’s Brand Blog
  • Building Blocks by AI
  • Barstool Biz Blog

facebook

Facebook Success Stories

February 16, 2011 by Basil Puglisi Leave a Comment

We have heard and read a lot about Facebook, about its 500 million users, about it overtaking Google as the most visited site per day. But what does it have to do with your small business? Those businesses who don’t have a department for social media? Can Facebook help small businesses expend above and beyond what they could have done with traditional advertisement?

Facebook enables business owners reach their targeted audience. With users profile information posted and open for all to see, with details about their hometown, relationship and employment status, interests, religious affiliation, education and favorite books , TV shows and movies – small businesses  can target their potential customers.

Here are some success stories from different walks of life:

Sprinkles Cupcakes – Los Angeles. A small cupcake store opened in Los Angeles. To get the word around, the owners, both former investment bankers, turned to Facebook. Every day they post a ‘code word’ on their page and give a free cupcake to the first 50 customers who whisper that word. Their fan base grew and they now have 254,785 followers and branches in other cities across the US. “Be patient with it.” Mr. Nelson, one of the owners, advises. ”People are not going to flock to your social media site overnight. Technology is about the network effect. It takes time for those connections to build.”

Wedding Photography – Mr. Meyer is a wedding photographer from Woodbury, Minnesota. He had very little luck with traditional advertising. A full page ad in a bridal magazine didn’t bring any new clients, and a trade show yielded only 4 bookings, not even covering the cost of the booth. So he turned to Facebook. Aiming at women ages 22-28 who listed their status as “engaged” in the Minneapolis – St Paul area, he connected with them and offered to join his page. Mr. Meyer estimates he spent about $300 on Facebook ads in the past 2 years and has generated about $60,000 in business. The majority of his clients now come from Facebook, either from ads or from recommendations.

Equine Dentist – Mr. Geoff Tucker from Palm City, Florida, has a very specific business. He’s a dentist for horses. His business is driven by word of mouth and personal recommendations. People like to do business in his profession with people they know and Facebook allowed him to express himself and let people know him. That led to appearances in a magazine, radio and TV. Over the past year, he estimates, Facebook has generated about 100 leads and 10-15 new customers he would not have had without a page on Facebook.

SteelMaster – of Norfolk Va. deals with steel structures.  About a year and half ago they decided to go on Facebook. What does a steel company do on a social media? They found that posting pictures of their constructions is very helpful. Not only do the pictures engage existing customers, they demonstrate to potential customers what the company can do in other areas. In this case, chicken farmers and woodworkers that usually don’t think about using steel structures, suddenly showed interest. It opened a new market for SteelMaster which they didn’t have before.

Neenah Paper – the manufacturer of high quality paper products found it extremely hard to reach new customers. Their traditional ways of making business, phone conversations and personal meetings, were not working very well. Since most of their customers; designers, graphic artists and printers spend a lot of time on their computers, they thought that social media can provide a better way to engage them. Today they have 10 sales representatives across the country and their business is on the upswing. “Social media is an invitation to have a conversation. You’re getting permission to have a conversation – a conversation that used to happen in person.” says Jamie Saunders, Neenah’s marketing manager.

Sources:

  • JeffThomasCobb: Facebook Small Business Success Stories
  • Mashable: Surprising Social Media Business Success
  • NYTimes: Small Business

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, Branding & Marketing, Conferences & Education, Social Brand Visibility, Social Media Topics Tagged With: brand, Business Coach, Business Consulting, facebook, PR, Puglisi, Social Brand, Social Media, Visibility, Visibility Marketing

Facebook: A Seven Year Review

February 11, 2011 by Basil Puglisi Leave a Comment

What has not been said and written about Facebook?  Articles, numerous books and a movie -“Social Network”, which is nominated for this year’s Oscar awards. Mark Zuckerberg, the name and the face of Facebook was the subject of exposes and studies; how did a 20 some year old managed to create a company from his dorm room that is now estimated to be worth 50 billion dollars?

Facebook is a social network website, launched almost exactly 7 years ago (Feb. 4, 2004). This free access site is privately owned and operated by Facebook Inc. Each registered user gets a profile page on which s/he can write, post links and share experiences. Users can upload pictures, links to website they found interesting and stories they found fascinating. They can share it all with members of their circle of friends.

Users can join networks organized by businesses, workplaces, schools and connect and interact with other people. They can find friends from the past and make new connections.

Facebook has distinguished itself from its rivals partly because it offers a Spartan design ethos and limits how users can change the appearance of their profile page. This cuts down on visual clutter and threats like spam which plagued social sites. Many analysts see Facebook as the default platform of a new age of information organized around personal relationships.

Throughout the years, this social network has transformed from a college only social club to the most popular website in the world. With over 500 million users it overtook Google as the most visited website, and is a broadly popular online destination, used by teenagers and adults of all ages. In country after country Facebook is cementing itself as the leader, often displacing other social networks, much in the same way it overtook MySpace in the US.

The headquarters moved to Palo Alto from Harvard University in June 2004. In September of that year the Group Application was added and the Wall made its debut. By the end of this first year, TheFacebook, as it was called then, had 1 million users. The photo application was added in 2005 and at the end of that year Facebook had 5.5 million users.

In 2006 Facebook mobile debuted, the Facebook Platform was launched, Note Application and News Feed. By the end of the year it has 12 million users.

2007 saw the launch of Ads, apps and Platform. Facebook invited third party software makers to create programs for the company and to make money on advertising alongside them. The announcement drew many programmers and hundreds of new features or social application were creates. From games to music and photo sharing tools, which turbo charged the site.  But users were complaining about the privacy settings that were visible to all.

In 2008 Facebook adds privacy controls to ‘friends’ lists, launches Chat and Facebook Connect. In

2009 it introduced the “Like” feature and acquired FriendFeed.  By the end of the year Facebook had 350 million users.

2010 – Facebook Places was launched and Messages arrived in an attempt to expand from a social network into a full-fledged communications system. E mails, text messaging and chat through a single point is what Facebook was after. Time magazine names Mark Zuckerberg “Person of the Year” and the movie debuted.

At the beginning of 2011 – Facebook is valued at $50 billion, when it raises 500 million from Goldman-Sacks and a Russian investor.

Facebook policies, more than those of any other company, are the ones to define standards for privacy in the internet age.

Many companies tried to buy Facebook and were met with a tough refusal. In 2006 Yahoo tried to buy the company for $1 billion. The company earned $335 million on 1.2 billion in revenue during the first nine months of 2010, but that is only a rumor, Zuckerberg keeps those numbers close to the vest.

Facebook built its lead not only through savvy design but also by rapid deployment of features that increased the site’s appeal. And indeed as statistics shows, 88% of people around the world are aware of Facebook.

As for active users,  males make 46% of Facebook users, and it is spread almost evenly between age groups; 11% of the users are 13-17 olds, 29% are 18-25, 23% between the ages of 26-34, 18% 35-44 and 12% between 45 and 54. It is also spread evenly between levels of education.

This goes to show that the success of Facebook lies in the fact that it reaches all ages and all nationalities. Their constant innovation and additions in the form of apps and programs is what keeps the company ahead of the game.

Well established companies have been using Facebook in different and interesting ways; As a promotion tool; a campaign by Gap for a giveaway of 10,000 pair of jeans was announced only on Facebook. The pants were gone as soon as the stores opened. Calvin Klein regularly announces sales and posts coupons. As of Nov. 15 they have 332,521 ‘friends’.

As for brand engagement – Taco Bell is responsive to fan comments and has generated strong positive feedback when it posts promotions. Zara, the clothing chain, has 1,581,000 fans; Target has 588,300 fans and engages its audience with votes about charitable donations. MTV has 1,146,737 fans and engages its audience with a fast moving page and consistent fan engagement. So does Pizza Hut with its over 1 million fans.

With so many active users Facebook has established a new way of communication, a new way of maintaining relationships and a new way in advertising. The company still turns down offers to buy them and plan, as the speculation goes, to go public in 2012.

 

Sources:

  • The Big Money: Big Money Facebook
  • Gigaom: Facebook vs Twitter an InfoGraph
  • Mashable: Facebook
  • Mashable: Facebook 7th Birthday
  • NY Times: Facebook Inc
  • Wikipedia

Filed Under: Basil's Blog #AIa, Branding & Marketing, Conferences & Education, Social Brand Visibility, Social Media Topics Tagged With: facebook, Social Brand, Social Media, Visibility, Visibility Marketing

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7

Primary Sidebar

For Small Business

Facebook Groups: Build a Local Community Following Without Advertising Spend

Turn Google Reviews Smarter to Win New Customers

Save Time with AI: Let It Write Your FAQ Page Draft

Let AI Handle Your Google Profile Updates

How to Send One Customer Email That Doesn’t Get Ignored

Keep Your Google Listing Safe from Sneaky Changes

#AIgenerated

Spam Updates, SERP Volatility, and AI-Driven Search Shifts

Mapping the July Shake-Up: Core Update Fallout, AI Overviews, and Privacy Pull

Navigating SEO After Google’s June 2025 Core Update

Navigating SEO in a Localized, Zero-Click World

Communities Fragment, Platforms Adapt, and Trust Recalibrates #AIg

Yahoo Deliverability Shake-Up & Multi-Engine SEO in a Privacy-First World

Social Media: Monetization Races Ahead, Earnings Expand, and Burnout Surfaces #AIg

SEO Map: Core Updates, AI Overviews, and Bing’s New Copilot

YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Meta Reels, and X Accelerate Creation, Engagement, and Monetization #AIg

Surviving February’s Volatility: AI Overviews, Local Bugs, and Technical Benchmarks

Social Media: AI Tools Mature, Testing Expands, and Engagement Rules #AIg

Navigating Zero-Click SERPs and Local Volatility Now

More Posts from this Category

#SMAC #SocialMediaWeek

Basil Social Media Week

Digital Ethos Holiday Networking

Basil Speaking for Digital Ethos
RSS Search

@BasilPuglisi Copyright 2008, Factics™ BasilPuglisi.com, Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI,