This is part two of a two-part post outlining seven tips for converting Facebook “likes” into buys. You can find the first three tips here.
4. Measure which posts engage customers best
We experiment with a range of different posts on our Shoes of Prey Facebook page. Two of the posts that we find work best are:
- A simple post briefly discussing a fashion trend, for example, “Loving vintage inspired trans-seasonal Mary Janes…” then displaying two shoes we’ve made that match that trend and asking which shoes people prefer, the ones on the left or right.
- Whenever Jodie is attending an event she’ll choose an outfit and Susie will photograph her wearing three different pairs of shoes to go with that outfit. We’ll then ask our Facebook page which shoes she should wear to the event.
Both of these posts are simple to put together, garner great engagement and most importantly lead to sales of the shoes in the photos.
5. Use targeting options to your advantage
We recently held a friends and family saleat our offices. Because this was an offline sale held online at our Surry Hills offices, we wanted to only target our advertising to customers who lived locally. We created a Facebook ad targeting people who like the Shoes of Prey page and live in Sydney. This was only 2,060 people, however the ad got an excellent click through rate and we had about 200 clicks for $70 of spend.
At the sale we asked customers who made a purchase how they’d heard about the sale and we recorded this information. Nearly $10,000 or revenue could be attributed to customers who heard about the sale via these Facebook ads, a fantastic return on our investment.
6. Time of day to post
This one is getting quite detailed. We created a custom report in Google Analytics that tracked sales referred by Facebook by the time of day those sales occurred. We then mapped that data to the time of day we were posting to Facebook. What we found was the times that converted into sales best for us were 3-4pm and 6-7pm. That makes sense, we’re a fun shopping experience so customers are shopping with us in their afternoons at work or when they get home in the evenings.
The times of day might be different for your business, so creating a custom report like we did to measure this for your own business could be worthwhile.
7. Multi-Channel Funnels
Google Analytics recently released a feature called Multi-Channel Funnels. Say a customer first visits your website after clicking a link on Facebook. A few days later they search for “design your own shoes” on Google and visit the site again. A week later they type www.shoesofprey.com directly into their browser and make a purchase. Most analytics software would track this sale to the last visit, in this case a direct visit and no attribution would be made to the Facebook or search visits even though these contributed to the sale.
Multi-Channel Funnels changes this and allows you to see which sites contributed to the sale as your customers moved through your various sales funnels. It’s very useful for seeing which sites, like Facebook, introduce customers to your brand who later go on to convert.
Using this report we’ve found that Facebook contributes to 8% of our sales while driving 4% of the traffic to our site, so it’s a marketing channel that’s well worth us continuing to invest in.
Are there any other tips you have for converting Facebook likes into buys?