Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Open.com Navigation
If you missed this week's show or want to catch up on past episodes, you can find the videos on OPEN Forum.
View videosI recently wrote about the importance of multiple sales channels for small business owners and how the economics of sales channels is an important consideration when determining which channels to use. Traditional sales channels like retail stores and wholesale distributors now also work in conjunction with e-commerce. Selling via your website or a third party site is accepted as a standard. Several years ago mobile commerce—selling to consumers on their mobile devices—became common and is today growing exponentially. Today, it’s clear that your company’s next sales channel will be Facebook. Welcome to f-commerce.
How big is Facebook?
The statistics are nothing short of staggering. According to the company there are over 500 million active users on Facebook with half logging in to their accounts every day. 200 million of these users access Facebook via their mobile devices. In total, users spend nearly 12 billion hours per month on Facebook. Beyond just being logged in, users are interacting and engaging information on Facebook. Over 30 billion links, news stories, notes, photos and blog posts are shared each month.
With the launch of social plug-ins in April of last year, Facebook’s reach now goes beyond its own website. Over 2.5 million websites have integrated with Facebook via social plug-ins and this number is expected to increase dramatically with the recent launch of the Comments box social plug-in.
Want to read more about Facebook and small business? Check these out:
How can your company sell via Facebook?
As an initial step your company can use Facebook as a lead generation tool, enticing users to engage with your company’s fan page and inviting them to visit your existing ecommerce website to execute a transaction. If you are feeling truly innovative, there are a number of new online tools that can convert your company’s fan page into an e-commerce enabled point of sale. Companies like Payvment and Storefront Social offer configurable tools to create these f-commerce points of sale.
The Payvment e-commerce solution is currently free: There are no upfront fees or on-going frees. This will most likely change in the future but as of right now it’s a low-cost method to experiment with Facebook sales. Payvment also powers a Facebook shopping mall which currently attracts over 15,000 active monthly users. The number is small but it’s very new and like anything on Facebook, if it grows, it grows very quickly. Storefront Social offers template-based online storefronts for Facebook that range from $10 per month to $50 per month for up to 500 products. Custom solutions are also available.
Can you make money on Facebook? Is it worth it?
Buzz and engagement don’t necessarily translate into sales in the short-term. This appears to be the case with Facebook for the time being. The experience of most marketers actively selling on Facebook is that it works for selling more to existing customers but doesn’t work as well for new customer acquisition.
Is it worth it? For most companies my opinion is yes—assuming you have developed other sales channels that are working and you have an existing customer base. Relying exclusively or mainly on Facebook as a sales channel is not the right approach for most companies. But having a presence in anticipation of the future is definitely worth the small investment required.
I disagree with reliance on Facebook or any other medium other than your own website as a point of sale facility. You can put an enormous effort into Facebook and other social sites, but you don't OWN the information you put on there, nor do you have ultimate control over it. One indiscreet breach of the Terms of Service and you can find your site pulled down.What I do believe in is using these social sites as a means of pulling potential customers into your sales funnel and driving them to your own website where you have more control. Get them on a list, mail them regularly with quality and valuable information and specials.By all means use Facebook, Twitter et al to form a social presence, that is the intelligent thing to do. In the end however, make sure you control your own lists and website information.
I looked into these services (they are enticing). Payvment continually crashes IE8... Too bad.
Nice article! I'm running a "free lesson giveaway" promo right now which has gotten great participation. My company (Gruv Gear) has been blessed with several high-profile artist endorsers, so I thought how cool would it be if we could give musician friends a chance to win a free lesson with one of their heroes! I'm focusing on bass players for the first 7-week run, then perhaps leverage guitar players or drummers. We pay the instructor their 1-hour fee, winner gets a free lesson (Skype or face-to-face), and the word gets spread as they enter on our website.Would love more Facebook-specific ideas!Thanks,Jay
There is no denying that power of Facebook and as businesses work to increase security and shopping features on Facebook it becomes more exciting to track the movement of commerce. Facebook provides a great opportunity for businesses to have another channel to shop online, considering 1 out of every 8min spent online is spent on Facebook. It will be interesting to watch the movement of businesses to Facebook over the next coming months.Great article!Molly Griffinhttp://www.dydacomp.com
Think you're paying too much in business taxes? Learn more about some possible deductions with our latest crash course.
Javascript is currently disabled. Please enable javascript for the optimal OPEN Forum experience.
Mike Periu 11 months ago
Thanks Ric for your comments. Control of the sales channel is very important and all things being equal, its better to sell via your own website versus someone else's from a control perspective. But I would point out that as the article states most FB sales that take place are from existing customers. So you already have the relationship with them. If you don't have an organic source of new customers then going to FB with hundreds of millions of users is a place to start.