Facebook Launches New Profile Feature “Timeline” For Showing All Your Important Content on One Page

Today at f8, Facebook’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a new profile feature called “Timeline” that lets a user’s friends see their most important content from their entire time on Facebook. Available on both the web and mobile versions of the site, Timeline can be filtered to show just recent content, content from the last year, or from multiple years all on one page. Users can set a big banner image to appear at the top of their Timeline, and expand or remove panels of content they want to feature or hide.

Users will also be able to use apps to generate “Reports” of specific types of content such as all the meals they’ve cooked. There are also new types of updates users can publish specifically for major life events such as getting a new pet, starting a relationship, or moving to a new city. Timeline will make the profile a much more engaging place and likely increase the amount of time users spend there.

Facebook will automatically choose content to show in Timeline based on Likes, comments, and other signals. To edit the Timeline, users can scroll through see hidden updates or look through a private activity log. They can then choose to make certain updates visible to friends in the Timeline.

To allow users to add media and lifestyle content to the Timeline and also the home page Ticker, a new class of Open Graph apps is also being launched. Users will grant permissions to the apps and they will then automatically publish activity to the Timeline and Ticker. Zuckerberg calls this a “frictionless experience”, as users don’t have to constantly fill out sharing prompts.

The Timeline also features tabs for music, video, and other content types. Here users can view a collection of all the content of a certain type that a friend has consumed. The music tab will show all the songs a user has listened to and playlists they’ve published, while the video tab will show a user’s most watched film and their recently watched TV show episodes.

Timeline will rollout over the next few weeks.  Users who want to learn more about Timeline and get it on their profile as soon as it’s released can sign up on the new Timeline about page.

Facebook Growth Brings A Half-Billion Users in a Single Day For The First Time


Facebook didn’t confirm any new growth numbers this morning at its developer conference, but did say that it saw at least a half-billion users access the site in a single day last week.

The most recent statistics from Facebook in June said that the company had more than 750 million monthly actives. (However, in a spoof at the beginning of the conference, SNL actor Andy Samberg, who was pretending to be Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, did show a chart suggesting the site has more than 800 million actives.)

Facebook has long said that at least half of its monthly actives log in on any given day. So if it has more than 800 million monthly actives (or people who have logged in at least once in the last 30 days), it wouldn’t be surprising to see more than 400 million users log in on any given day.

Live Blog: Facebook’s f8 Developer Conference 2011 Keynote

The Inside Network team is here at Facebook’s f8 developer conference in San Francisco. We’ll be providing live coverage of all the news over the course of the day, starting with a live blog of the opening keynotes below. You can also watch the live feed of the show here.

Among the many rumored launches are a music and media platform service, a new profile, more sophisticated developer access to news feeds, and a new set of buttons that indicate certain actions.

10:16 Andy Samberg has taken the stage posing as Mark Zuckerberg, cracking lots of jokes — including a graph that shows “800+ million users” worldwide, and a graph that shows engagement trends growing. He’s also announcing a new section of the profile for “I’m not really friends with these people.”

10:21 The real Mark Zuckerberg has taken the stage. They’re making more jokes.

It’s great to be hear today. Here are two of the most exciting things we’ve been working on.

The last 5 years of social networking have been getting people signed up and connected. Until recently, a lot of people weren’t sure how big it was going to be, how long it would last.

Now we can see that it’s everyone working.

For the first time ever last week, we had half a billion people use Facebook in a single day.

More and more people continue to sign up and use the service.

The next era, the next 5 years, will be about apps and depths of engagement now that everyone has their connections in place.

It’s an exciting time to be part of building these new apps that are possible.

10:26 I want to start out talking about the profile. People feel an intense ownership over the profile. Everything about you. Millions of people have invested a ton of time on them. Our job is to make them the best way to share and express who you are.

How this works has changed a bunch over the years.

The 2004 profile was basic, just showed info like where you’re from. But people loved it. Showed valuable information.

Then we started adding things like photos, groups and apps. If the first 5 minutes is basic, an introcution, then the next 15 is about what your’e doing.

By 2008 we introduced a new profile. It had changed to all things you’d shared and done recently. Allowed you to have the next 15 minutes.

But we’re more than what we did recently. Most get into all parts of your life. Just clicking “more” on the wall was hard to do.

All the stories you’d shared over time fall off the cliff at the bottom of the wall. Millions of people have spent years curating the stories of their lives and there hasn’t been a way to share that.

We think we’ve solved that. Showing all the unique things of your life…. beautiful.

What I want to show you today is the rest, beyond 15. The next few hours of a great, in-depth engaging conversation, whether with a close friend or someone you just met.

The heart of your Facebook experience, completely thought up.

10:30 Launching Timeline

The story of your life.

So lets take a look.

The first thing is that it’s a lot more visual. Down at the bottom, all your stories. A nice visual… bottom section is visual. The right is years to get to any point in your life. In the middle are visual tiles to see apps and other stuff you’ve done. On top of is the cover photo.

All your stories, all your apps, a new way to express who you are.

Then you can scroll past and see tiles that keep going all the way to the bottom.

Here’s what it looks on a mobile device. Smaller view of the scroll.

Biggest challenge was telling whole stories on a single page. But don’t want to show every single thing.

Starts off with recent, as you go further back it starts summarizing. Further back you summarize more.

Last month a little less, etc.

You can see the timeline running down the middle here. Blue dots are highlighted, gray dots are for less important.

See something that’s hidden, hover over. But all right here. See everything in 2007, click on the link and it’s all there.

It’s so simple.

10:35 Exactly how you want to browse through time, and discover what people have done through their whole lives.

But how to add? Say I want to add a photo from my childhood. Pop up composer, post.

Creating completely new type of timeline for life event. Getting a dog — add Beast’s info and it’s there.

This is the main timeline.

What do you do if you want to see content filter down. Here’s the photos timeline view. Here’s some people working at Facebook.

People visiting. Much nicer than anything we have today.

You can see all sorts of trips, where you were. Go all the way back to where you were born. All about apps, tell the story of your life on your timeline.

Perhaps the most common thing people had used was to add boxes of things to their profiles. A lot of people had 50 or 60 or even 100 boxes. Add to the bottom of profile, quickly became unwieldy. We learned that people really want to use apps to express themselves.

Even though they couldn’t all fit into the old profile design, we took those lessons and now apps can be used to express on the timeline.

The way is that they’ll rely on apps to help them out.

What kinds of content can go on the timeline? You can start sharing like before. Here’s an example: post about cooking bison burger. No activity is too big or too small to share.

You can add a box right at the top.

This is a report of everything that I’ve cooked in September — summary is more interesting than every single thing. Apps can help roll up every activity. Get a nice summary, really interesting. We think people are really going to like these.

Take me to a timeline view. All the way back in time.

10:40

If the app has history, you can see everything in there.

Here’s Bret’s timeline. Using a running app. Pretty cool. Nice pop-up.

That’s how apps can help you tell the story. I’ll get into more detail about building these apps in a bit.

In your timeline, not just a place for adding stories and apps. Where you tell your story online is very personal.

Gives ability to highlight and curate stories so you can express who you really are. Cover photo. Nice big photo right at the top. Still have a profile pic. So cover can be something else. Great way to learn about someone without having to read anything at all.

You can change the cover as often as you like. Really easy: hover, pick photo, switch. Some people in testing are doing every day.

Vacation photo — how to highlight in timeline? Hover over any story in the timeline.

Calls up all the important stuff. Switch to blue dot from gray.

Shows sample profiles for travel-lover, musician. Showed most on web. But all works beautifully on mobile devices. Works beautifully. See all the photos.

10:48 This means a new kind of app.

Last year we introduced the concept of the open graph. A map of all of the connections in the world. You could add anything. Connect to it by liking it. Connect to order of magnitude versus before. This year we’re taking it to the next step: you can connect to anything, anywhere.

Not just “Like” but “Read” a book. “Watch” a movie. “Eat” a meal. “Hike” a trail. “Listen” to music. Language for anything you want.

Every year we make some new social apps possible, express themselves in new ways.

People have things they want to share, but don’t want to annoy their friends. If the problem is that, then Ticker.

Lightweight stream of everything going on around you. Something might catch your attention out of the corner of your eye, but not annoy your friends. Share post goes into news feed, but activity goes to Ticker and Timeline but not news feed unless there’s a particularly interesting pattern that you want your friends to see.

Until today, no socially acceptable way to express lightweight activity.

Next version of Open Graph. Connect to anything you want. Define action and publish. This will make it possible to build a completely new class of social apps. What kind? A lot. We believe almost all will be social. But in real world there’s a spectrum.

Naturally social — turn into social apps first.

10:55 Communication, games. Other side of spectrum are health care and finance that I don’t think there’ll be social apps for a long time.

Expand to new stuff: media. Music, movies, TV, news, books. Really great open graph apps.

Next is “lifestyle” apps: helping you keep track and express everything about your lifes. Bike rides, cooking, apps.

New class of apps, rethink a lot of industries.

Open graph, enable apps that do two types of things: fill out timeline and discover new things through friends.

Frictionless Experiences

Sharing super mario app that let’s you share activity. In the middle of some app that makes you share.

If you’re using new open graph apps. Add activity without prompts. Still publish to stream, but if your goal is to just share lightweight activity — connecting timeline together.

To make this work, we completely redesigned permissions.

App says what kind of activity it will publish. Now Spotify won’t have to prompt me every time I do something. How is this going to help you discover new things through friends.

Turns out they’re already doing a lot of things around you.

Real-Time Serendipity:

Tick right in. Friends hover over, can see what to listen to. Now listening to song with a friend. Music is synched up with friends.

News feed can show patterns of friends. Seem flow of music from friends.

11:00 Finding Patterns and Activity

Sometimes you discover new songs from friends across platforms. See any music player. Any patterns. Discover really neat new things.

Shows shared music listening.

Can see notifications from friends who share.

Next wave is music companies trying to help you discover new songs, not blocking existing ones.

Devs are using Open Graph. But rethink music industry.

11:05 Daniel Ek from Spotify is on stage.

Big day for everyone who loves music. First time that I used in Facebook in Sweden back in the day. Like serendipity.

Music is important part of my life. People discovered through friends.

A bit over ten years ago, big change: Napster. Didn’t work for music industry. So we worked a music that fairly compensates artists. And lets you see what your friends are listening to.

With social, spotify has: more music, more variety, twice as likely to pay.

Huge list of new music partners.

TVs and Movies

Really similar to music. See friends who are watching Glee on Hulu in news feed. Hover over, click, new social canvas app shows. Everyone who uses it will be FB user, will have social experience. Further down page, four friends have recently watched movies with Johnny Depp in them on Netflix.

Can click through and watch a Depp movie.

Here is a friend’s timeline. Carl’s video timeline. Can see all the things he’s watched.

Not just watching with your friends.

11:10 Reed Hastings, Netflix CEO and Facebook board member, is on stage.

Netflix algorithm shows lots of friends watching Breaking Bad. Shows lots of info, but social also helps.

Facebook-Netflix integration is live in 44 countries, but not in US due to outdated privacy law — but Congress is working on that.

11:15 News

Social news app with Open Graph to discover what your friends are reading first. Really interesting patterns that are possible to show. Here are all of the most popular articles. Yahoo News article on astronaughts — will use open graph to discover more news stories through friends. Back to the feed, I can also see that 30 friends are reading about f8. Can see all the articles.

See one from Washington Post. See news in real-time as it’s breaking in the Ticker. More than a dozen devs worked with us to build news apps. Rethink a lot of the way that the industry works.

Social games are killing it.

Games are biggest on platform — will get bigger.

Now with open graph, nice clear dialogue up front. Will see real things that they’re doing. Not just “this person is playing a game” — Mike playing Words With Friends with Carl. Can see game board and word on it. Possible because every piece of content in open graph has picture associated with it. Zynga’s Words With Friends.

Social games, using open graph.

11:20

Lifestyle apps. Running, cooking. Covers what he’d mentioned at the start.

New class of social apps. Things with friends.

11:25 Bret Taylor, Facebook CTO, on stage.

Detail on how to build these apps. How your apps fit into new vision.

Open graph apps are about more than sharing. Self-expression, serendipity. As great side effect of normal behavior. Lightweight way that goes beyond shared dialogue.

Open Graph goals

- Simple user experience
- Simple developer experience
- Engaging apps

Adding app to timeline is one-click experience.

No step two — just add and start listening.

11:30 Social by design

- Model your app’s social actions
- Design your timeline integration
- Add to timeline

Model Your App’s Social Actions

Big question is how it fits in. Expanding social graph to all social actions. Listening, watching, reading, etc.

That’s what it means to be part of social graph. What activity do I want to see?

See songs I’m listening to, and stations I’m plahing. Also creating a few custom radio stations. Imagine creating list and sticking next to graduation photo. Now every time I listen to song in iHeartRadio, using data structure, tapping into all experiences that Mark showed earlier.

By using same underlying structure as what f8 uses. That cooking app. All recipes I’ve added, recipes that friends have bookmarked.

Design Your Timeline Integration

List of music that user listens to. Or list of artists most often played. Aggregations — query of trends.

All sorts of other info — 6 layout styles, flexible query engine. I can pick and choose which of these stories I want to show my friends. Really one simple step next.

But a timeline button in your app. Work on every device conceivable — all web and mobile apps.

Moment you get access to dev beta, you can start adding all these platforms.

Engaging Apps

How to build them right? We’ve heard over and over that it’s just too hard right now. Shouldn’t need PhD in engineering and psychology to do it. Not tricks and gimmicks either.

The more engaging, the more people will discover. Ambitious considering where we are today.

Graph Rank — AI system that manages discovery of all open graph. What is most interesting to me? What is right to see?

Different for colleagues.

11:40 Chris Cox, vice president of product at Facebook, on stage.

Data as narrative. Story of wikipedia growth on one Page. Infographic are part of way that news is expressed. For any data-rich topic, can find one-page topic.

Not just topics. Nothing we love to summarize more. News publications do it all at the end of December.

Scrapbooking before ended up on bookshelves. But combine with information design.

Nicholas Felton data and business partner Brian Case developed new version for us. Hired Sam Lessin as well.

Accidentally tested Memories view for an hour this spring — lots of people loved it. What is the modern vehicle for scrapbooking?

Goes over how to use the new scrapbooking feature.

11:55 Zuckerberg back on stage

Timeline: beta starts now.

Developers will get access now, everyone else will sign up and it’ll get rolled out widely in the next few weeks.

Facebook Pushes the Hybrid News Feed to its iPhone App, Android App, and Mobile Site

Facebook has updated its mobile site m.facebook.com with the hybrid news feed launched for the web version of the site that it had launched on Monday. Since the Facebook for iPhone and Android apps both pull the news feed from the mobile site, the 93 million daily active users of the two apps now also see a single feed with Top Stories followed by Recent Stories. Users of these mobile interfaces no longer have the option to view separate Top News and Most Recent feeds.

For most users, there’s now no escaping the sweeping changes Facebook implemented this week. While those who never realized they could switch between relevancy-sorted and reverse-chronological feeds will now be more likely to see fresh, compelling updates, others who grew accustomed to bouncing between the feeds may be displeased that they need to alter their behavior.

At the top of their feed, mobile users will see now Top Stories, followed by Recent Stories, and finally “From Earlier Today” which includes older Top Stories and Recent Stories. Since the two popular smart phones apps pull the news feed from the mobile site, Facebook was able to make just a single code changes to update both the iPhone and Android app interfaces without requiring users to download a software update.

Facebook uses a variety of signals to determine what updates become Top Stories, denoted with a blue triangle in the top left corner. On the web version users can mark and unmark updates as Top Stories. Mobile users don’t have this option, and must accept the decisions of the EdgeRank news feed sorting algorithm.

However, users can filter the news feed according to type of update, such as Status Updates, Events, or Photos. Facebook has also made its new Smart Lists available as mobile news feed filters in addition to all of a user’s manually built Friend Lists. These give users some options if they’re not content with what they’re seeing in the new default “All Stories” feed.

The hybrid news feed feels a bit more natural on mobile, where a quick, lightweight experience works better than having a ton of options like on the web. While many users are still complaining about the web interface changes and the introduction of the Ticker, we believe some of the announcements made later today at the f8 conference will illuminate the importance of the recent redesign.

Users shouldn’t expect the mobile changes to stop, as we hear Facebook may release a major redesign of its popular smart phone apps. It might also launch the standalone mobile photos app that leaked in June. We’ll be providing deep analysis of what the announcements at f8 mean to users and developers, so check back later today.

Facebook Adds Per Post Impression Data to Page Insights Exports to Help Brands Track Their Performance

Some Facebook Page admins are now seeing a new tab called “Per post” in the data exports from Page Insights. Data in the tab includes impressions per post and the total percentage of a Page’s fans that left feedback on the post. Previously, admins could only see daily impressions and feedback data in Insights. Per post data could only be found on a Page’s wall below the posts themselves, forcing admins to manually copy down impression and feedback data.

If rolled out to all Page admins, the addition of per post data to Page Insights will make it easier for brands to track what kinds of posts and timing result in the higher exposure and engagement. For example, admins could determine what hour of the day is the best for publishing. The newly available could also encroach on the business of some Facebook Page analytics providers, though these companies also offer advanced analysis of the data.

Amit Lavi, Social Media Director at Abagada was the first to spot the new data. He tells us that “Now, everyone with knowledge of Excel will be able to find the right time of day and day of week to post content. Also, with a bit of manual categorization, admins will also be able to assess which content works better for their Page.”

Facebook added per post data the admin view of Page walls of authenticated Pages with over 10,000 fans in January. Oddly, it didn’t simultaneously begin showing the same data in the Insights user interface or the .XLS or .CSV data exports. We’ve received information that the per post data in the exports doesn’t always go back as far as requested. This means there’s a chance that that Insights data on post impressions and feedback might not be totally reliable, at least at first.

Page management companies that offer analytics services and dedicated Page analytics providers could lose some of their more budget-conscious customers to Facebook Insights. However, to pull actionable lessons from the Insights data, admins will have to do some legwork in Excel.

Professional analytics providers will likely be able to crunch the data more efficiently, derive more sophisticated best practices, and provide benchmark data aggregated from across their clients. For example PageLever used its own collection of per post impressions data to determine that the average Page receives only 7.49 news feed impressions per post per 100 fans. Buddy Media used per post data to figure out that shorter post receive more engagement and that Thursday is the best day to post when looking across industries.

If Facebook makes per post data more easily accessible to all admins, it could also raise awareness of the need to analyze the data, which could in turn drive business for the providers of enterprise analytics tools and services. Either way, with time the data will help brands improve their Page post strategies. This could lead to more engaging branded content in the news feed, improving the Facebook experience for the average user. The next step will be for Facebook to provide data on clicks per post.

New This Week on the Inside Network Job Board: TinyCo, TBG Digital, King.com and More

The Inside Network Job Board is dedicated to providing you with the best job opportunities across social and mobile application platforms.

Here are this week’s highlights from the Inside Network Job Board, including positions at Arkadium, TinyCo, TBG Digital, Games Cafe Inc., King.comLolapps, Wild Needle Games, Majesco Entertainment Company and 5th Planet Games.

Listings on the Inside Network Job Board are distributed to readers of Inside Social Games, Inside Facebook and Inside Mobile Apps through regular posts and widgets on the sites. Your open positions are being seen by the leading developers, product managers, marketers, designers, and executives in the Facebook Platform and social gaming industry today.

Viral Media Site BuzzFeed Launches Facebook App Edition to Gain Exposure

Today, viral media hub BuzzFeed is launches a Facebook app that aims to recreate the experience of discovering content on its website. Through the app, users can browse humorous images, interesting articles, and shocking videos, leave reactions using “LOL”, “Cute”, “Fail” and other buttons, and share BuzzFeed posts with friends via Facebook’s social plugins.

Along with yesterday’s release of the Wall Street Journal’s canvas app, the BuzzFeed app indicates a growing trend of publishers maximizing the exposure and referral traffic they gain from Facebook by creating standalone versions of their sites within the social network. BuzzFeed’s President Jon Steinberg tell us the company sees Facebook as “another type of news stand, and we want BuzzFeed to be available on every news feed stand people frequent.”

BuzzFeed was founded in 2006 by Jonah Peretti, who previously cofounded the Huffington Post. The New York City-based site populates itself by algorithmically determining what content is trending on the internet, taking user submissions, and publishing picks by its editors. It now reports 15 million monthly unique visitors, and offers mobile app versions.

The company generates revenue in an innovative way. Rather than showing traditional display ads, it allows advertisers to sponsor BuzzFeed posts that mention them or relate to their business. BuzzFeed then dynamically selects the post related to a sponsor that is receiving the most engagement and shows it on the home page and as a “Partner” post amongst lists of organic content. In this way, BuzzFeed doesn’t actually show ads, just more content its visitors might have wanted to see anyway. BuzzFeed also has a program called Extensions that advertises for sponsored content on Twitter, Facebook via the Ads API, and other open inventory around the internet.

The BuzzFeed site displays Facebook’s Like, Send, and Comments Box social plugins as well as sharing buttons for several other platforms. Steinberg tells us that “Facebook is one of our largest sources of referral traffic, accounting for millions of referral visits a month.” With Facebook users already reacting well to its content, BuzzFeed saw a big opportunity in creating a native version within the social network that made sharing with friends even more seamless.

The BuzzFeed Facebook app streamlines its website to create a more laidback experience. Rather than bombarding users with choices of which post to view or channel to browse, users are immediately presented with a single post. They can choose to leave feedback or share it, or simply move on to the next post. This addictive, StumbleUpon-style flow keeps users constantly discovering new content they might want to share instead of navigating around the site.

BuzzFeed drops barriers to usage by not showing the permissions request for a user’s data until it absolutely needs it. To drive app growth, when users who granted permissions click an “OMG” or “Win” button on a post, they’re shown one friend and prompted to send them the post including a link to the app.

Though users must return to the website to add their own posts, search posts, or see channels such as “Hot on Facebook”, the lightweight app works well for killing time while waiting for a friend to respond to a Chat message or more stories to be added to the news feed. If the BuzzFeed and Wall Street Journal apps succeed, expect more publishers to build native versions of their sites on Facebook.

Strategies to Optimize Facebook Ad Spend, Protect and Boost Brand Reputation, and More Recent Updates at the Facebook Marketing Bible

Facebook Marketing Bible

The Facebook Marketing Bible, September 2011 edition, now includes even more strategies and updates for marketing your brand on Facebook.

Recent Updates to the FMB

    • Minimizing Your Facebook Ad CPC Bid Prices by Avoiding Bid Competition. When running ads on Facebook, advertisers need to think about more than just creative and targeting to achieve optimal performance at the lowest cost. By avoiding periods of high advertiser competition, the same performance can be achieved for lower bid prices. This guide shows you how to get the most from your Facebook advertising budget.
    • How to Use Facebook Hidden Wall and Other Page Moderation Tools to Protect Brand Reputation. Highly engaging Pages can quickly blossom into a valuable community that will raise awareness of the brand through positive word-of-mouth. But, the messages posted to your Wall by fans will not always be positive. This is our guide to managing your brand’s reputation on Facebook using the “Hidden Wall” and other Page moderation tools.
    • Increasing Virality of your Page’s News Feed Posts Via the Share Button. Making the posts you publish stand out in the Facebook news feed is crucial to maximizing primary key performance metrics such as brand lift, clicks, impressions, Likes, comments, and reposts. Your updates are competing with highly compelling content published by the friends of your fans, so you need every advantage you can get. Here we’ll walk-through how the View Shares link works, and provide strategies for how you can attain Shares and the benefits they bring for your business.
    • The Latest Featured Facebook Campaigns, including coverage of campaigns from Best Buy, Zynga’s CityVille, Maybelline and Bonobos.

About the Facebook Marketing Bible

The Facebook Marketing Bible has enabled thousands of marketers, social application developers, publishers, and entrepreneurs to navigate and get the most out of the increasingly sophisticated marketing opportunities on Facebook.

The web edition of the Facebook Marketing Bible is comprised of detailed resource pages, comprehensive how-to guides, and case studies analyzing today’s most successful marketing and advertising campaigns on Facebook.

Now that Facebook is beyond the 700 million monthly active user mark, there’s never been a better time to reach your target audience through marketing on Facebook.

Learn more about the September 2011 edition of the Facebook Marketing Bible at FacebookMarketingBible.com.


Table of Contents excerpted from the full September 2011 Edition

Recent Featured Facebook Campaigns

  • Food Network, Pizza Hut, Coca-Cola and Cost Plus
  • Alamo Rent A Car, National Geographic Channel and Fox
  • Craftsman, Unilever and FarmVille Chinese, American Express and El Pollo Loco
  • Bucca di Beppo, Bissell, Bank of the West and the NBA
  • Coca-Cola, Qatar Ariways, Clearasil and Esurance
  • Marriott Resorts, The National Guard, Discover Boating, Bravo, and Nike

Building Your Brand through Facebook Pages

  • Facebook vs Twitter – What’s Different, What’s The Same And Why Smart Marketers Use Both
  • Page Destination Tab Ad Campaign Strategies
  • Facebook Pages and Public Profiles
  • The Profile Page – A Walk-Through

Designing Your Facebook Page

  • Improving Your Facebook Page With Customized Tab Applications: 10 Examples
  • Facebook Page Redesign 2011: Marketing Stategies and Best Practices
  • The Wall Tab for Making Pages Dynamic and Viral
  • How to Choose a Landing ‘Tab’ for your Facebook Page
  • Adding Custom Modules to Your Page

Communicating Through Your Facebook Page

  • How to Sync Your Facebook Page Updates With Your Twitter Profile — and Why You Shouldn’t
  • How to Get Facebook Users to Like Your Page: The First Step to Engagement
  • How Your Business Should Reply To Facebook Comments
  • Demographic Targeting for Status Updates
  • How to Avoid Having Your Page, Open Graph Object, or Application Unliked, Removed, Muted, or Blacklisted

Growing Your Fan Base and More Ways to Promote Your Facebook Page

  • Gaining More Fans With Facebook’s New “Merge Duplicate Pages” Feature
  • How Facebook Pages Can Use “Invite Friends” to Gain Fans
  • How Brands Can Advertise within Social Games
  • The Basics of Status Updates for Pages
  • Increase Engagement and Insight through Status Tagging
  • How to Grow Your Page’s Audience through Page Invitations
  • SMS Subscription Service for Pages
  • Branded Virtual Gifts on Facebook Pages for Viral Advertising

Advanced Strategies for Facebook Pages

  • How Top Brands Conduct Ecommerce on Facebook: Best Practices
  • Facebook Ecommerce: What Features Are Important in a Page Storefront Application
  • The Best Facebook Page Strategies and the Pages That Use Them
  • Strategy: How to Promote Your Page in 6 Steps
  • Marketing Strategy: 4 Reasons Why Marketers Should Invest in Pages Before Groups
  • 10 Key SEO Strategies Every Facebook Page Owner Should Know
  • 8 Best Practices for Retailers on Facebook
  • Marketers Actively Bidding for Generic Facebook Pages

The Facebook Open Graph for Marketers and Content Publishers

  • The Like Button Style Guide: How to Pick the Design That’s Right for Your Website
  • How to Choose Open Graph Tags That Maximize the Value of Your Like Buttons
  • Facebook Connect Integration Best Practices from the Platform Showcase
  • Implementation Options: Like Button
  • Facebook CTO Bret Taylor Discusses the Open Graph

More Ways to Market on Facebook: Questions, Places, and Deals

  • How Pages Can Use the Relaunched Facebook Questions Product
  • How to Create a Deal with Facebook Deals
  • The Places We’ll Go: How marketers can use Facebook’s new location features
  • Facebook Questions – A Walk-Through
  • How Marketers Can Get The Most Out Of Facebook Questions
  • Groups and SEO – a Quick Overview

Advertising on Facebook

  • Page Destination Tab Ad Campaign Strategies
  • Sponsored Stories Ads: Walk-Through and Marketing Campaign Strategies
  • Facebook Ads: Read Before You Get Started
  • Facebook Ads – A Walk-Through
  • The Facebook Ads Manager
  • Facebook Self-Serve Ad Types: Page Ads
  • Facebook Self-Serve Ad Types: Event Ads

Ads Targeting on Facebook

  • 10 Powerful Targeting Methods Facebook Ads Every Performance Advertiser Should Know
  • Friends of Connections Targeting
  • Facebook Ads: Language Targeting
  • 4 Connection Targeting Tests Every Advertiser Should Run
  • From Keyword Targeting to People Targeting: Understanding Performance Advertising with Facebook’s Tim Kendall
  • Time Scheduling

Tools and How-Tos for Marketers

  • Facebook “Insights” Metrics Dashboard for Page Managers
  • Using Third Party Tools to Manage Your Facebook Page
  • How Page Owners Can Restrict Content for Underage Users
  • How to Export Your Facebook Page Updates to Twitter

Policies, Privacy, and Guidelines to Watch

  • Promotional/Sweepstakes Policies for Facebook Pages
  • The Future of Sharing on Facebook: A Hybrid Public/Private Model
  • Facebook’s Guidelines for Promoting Pages Outside Facebook

Join the Facebook Marketing Bible at FacebookMarketingBible.com

Facebook Allows Users to Comment on Pages Without Liking Them, Adds Friend Activity Tab to Pages

Facebook has made two significant changes to how users interact with Pages. Now, users don’t need to have Liked a Page to be able to post on a Page’s wall or comment on its updates. This allows more users to join conversations, which could add more perspectives to discussions but also dilute them with unrelated comments, or drown them with complaints.

Facebook also reached out to us today to announce that users will now see a Friend Activity tab on Pages. This shows users the Likes and comments on the Page’s posts and any mentions of the Page by friends, even if a mention is just text and not a tag. The tab creates a more personalized, relevant view of a Page that might be more engaging than seeing activity from strangers, especially for Pages that receive thousands of comments per post.

Page Walls Now Open to the Public

By previously reserving the right to comment to those who had Liked a Page, participation in a conversation was a value exchange. Users got to share their opinions, and Pages got to reach those users through the news feed and appear on their profile. This made it easier for Page admins to predict the volume of user posts they’d receive and need to moderate.

Now, any user can post or comment on a Page. This may be related to Facebook’s change to privacy around public posts and the new Subscribe feature. Users can Like and comment any public post, and all Page posts are public. This means if a user discovers a conversation or wants to post on the wall of brand’s Page they discovered through a friend or heard about in the news, they don’t have endorse the Page with a Like to join the conversation.

This could help Page’s get more people talking about them, but it could also lead them to have to moderate more negative feedback. A brand experiencing a public relations crisis could see thousands or even millions of users descend on its Page to leave complaints or insults without gaining any new fans.

Friend Activity Tab

Facebook has been showing a Friend Activity tab on Places Pages for a while, allowing users to see the check-ins to that Place by friends. Now Facebook has expanded the Friend Activity tab to all Pages. The tab’s name shows a counter of new activity from friends. Once clicked in a Page’s navigation menu, users see a list of all the Page’s posts that have been engaged with by friends, and all posts by friends that mention or tag the Page.

Popular Pages can often receive thousands of comments on their posts, or wall posts every few minutes — too much for most users to wade through to find posts or comments that interest them such as those by friends. The Friend Activity tab filters out strangers, providing a personalized view of how a user’s network has been interacting with the Page. This could help them find discussions to join, or inspire them to leave their own post because friends are more likely to see it.

By altering the way the site works, Facebook is inviting users to develop new behavior patterns. Similar to how the increase of the post character limit from 500 to 5,000 encourages deeper discussion, opening Page walls and the Friend Activity tab could make interacting with Pages more accessible and inviting. At the same time, changes to the social norms of Facebook could force users to reassess why the site is valuable to them.

Luck, Love, Page Tabs, Birthdays, Mobile, iPad and More on This Week’s Top 20 Growing Facebook Apps by DAU

Page tab applications, as well as those that publish stories to the stream, birthday apps, YouTube, Bing, ICQ, iPad and mobile apps were also on the list of the apps that grew the most by daily active users this week. The titles on our list below grew from between 94,900 and 4.4 million DAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook.

Top Gainers This Week

Name DAU Gain Gain,%
1.  Luck Daily! 1,428,461 +1,359,945 +1,985%
2.  The Sims Social 11,299,942 +624,678 +6%
3.  Samsung Mobile 3,031,527 +579,385 +24%
4.  Text Page 535,875 +535,509 +146,314%
5.  Static HTML: iframe tabs 3,223,399 +503,523 +19%
6.  MyCalendar – Birthdays 976,601 +454,128 +87%
7.  MeinKalender – Geburtstag 635,830 +423,966 +200%
8.  MyPad for iPad 1,030,180 +267,563 +35%
9.  YouTube 905,270 +266,798 +42%
10.  Adventure World 3,947,666 +246,973 +43,027%
11.  Static HTML… [Second Tab] 434,782 +217,121 +100%
12.  How Attractive Are You? 195,036 +187,779 +2,588%
13.  TopFace 663,427 +175,063 +36%
14.  MonCalendrier – Anniversaires 194,432 +139,139 +252%
15.  RewardVille 638,566 +120,534 +23%
16.  Static IFRAME Tab : ThumbsUp Icon 240,430 +116,496 +94%
17.  Bing 3,659,531 +113,794 +3%
18.  Love Quotes 119,272 +109,480 +1,118%
19.  Words With Friends 3,579,635 +107,107 +3%
20.  ICQ Feeds 948,498 +104,142 +12%

First, the apps that published to the stream to grow their numbers included Luck Daily!, which publishes a luck “score” to the stream, growing by 1.3 million DAU this week. How Attractive Are You? is an app that grew by 187,800 DAU and publishes a percentage of attractiveness to the stream. TopFace with 175,100 DAU publishes your ratings of friends’ photos to the stream and Love Quotes grew by 109,500 DAU in the United States and Philippines by inviting users to share love-related quotes to the stream and inviting their friends to the app.

Page tab apps included Static HTML: iframe tabs with 503,500 DAU, Static HTML… [Second Tab] with 217,100 DAU and Static IFRAME Tab : ThumbsUp Icon with 116,500 DAU. There were calendar apps, too, which basically ask users to invite their friends to the app so you can keep track of their birthdays. MyCalendar – Birthdays grew by 454,100 DAU, MeinKalender – Geburtstag with 424,000 DAU and MonCalendrier – Anniversaires with 139,100 DAU.

Finally there was a mixed bag of other apps. Samsung Mobile grew mostly in India and Indonesia by 579,400 DAU. Text Page is an app that grew by 535,500 DAU but is currently disabled. MyPad for iPad is an app that grew by 267,600 DAU and says it’s a way to use Facebook and Twitter on iPad. YouTube grew by 266,800 DAU and Bing by 113,800 DAU. Lastly, ICQ Feeds grew by 104,100 DAU and appears to be some sort of Connect app; it notes that the app could be used to connect Facebook to your ICQ feed.

All data in this post comes from our traffic tracking service, AppData. Stay tuned for our look at the top emerging apps on Friday.

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