The post last week on approaching stores about selling your wares got a lot of love, so I thought I’d do a few more of these posts about crafty biz life.

Someone emailed over the weekend with a few questions about setting up her Facebook fan page, and it reminded me of what I went through setting up mine. No one should have to go through that! Here are a few helpful hints to save you some heartache:


Setup

The first thing I had trouble with was actually creating the page. There doesn’t seem to be a handy link anywhere to the fanpage creation area. To set up a fan page go here.

For the category, “Brand, Product, or Organization” is a good one. It keeps things nice and broad. You might want to check the box to keep the page private until you’re ready to publish. That way, you can add photos and customize things, and folks won’t stumble onto your work in progress. Once you’ve done that, you just name your page and you’re ready to roll!

Customizing and Maintaining

You’ll want to upload at least one profile picture – maybe a picture of your products or a logo – so folk can quickly see what the page is about. A description box really helps with this, too. Clicking over to the Info tab and adding a blurb about your business helps, too! That blurb should also show up in a box on your page’s sidebar.

If you have an Etsy shop, there are a couple of cool ways that you can integrate that into your fan page! My favorite app for this is called RSS Graffiti. Once you install that app, you can set up any RSS feed to go to either your personal Facebook account or any fan page you’ve got set up! To get the RSS feed for your Etsy shop, head over to your shop’s main page. On the bottom of the right sidebar, there should be a link that reads “Subscribe to Shop’s Feed:”

Just copy that url, paste it into RSS Graffiti, and every time you list something in your shop it will show up on your fan page, too! This is also a handy way to feed your blog updates onto your fan page.

There’s also a super-handy My Etsy app that you might want to add. It adds a tab to your fanpage that’s basically a snapshot of your shop. You can also use the My Etsy page to feed your listings onto your fan page. If you decide to do this, learn from my mistake! Remove the rss feed of your shop from the RSS Graffiti app. Otherwise, every shop update will show up twice on your page.

While we’re on the topic of learn from my mistake, keep your fan page in mind if you’re doing a large shop update. Do folks want to see ten or 15 new items clogging up their Facebook feed? Probably not. If you’re doing a big shop update, I’d recommend removing your shop’s rss feed from RSS Graffiti, then adding it back when you have just one or two items left to add. That way, your fans can see that you’ve updated your shop, but they don’t get bombarded. You could also add it back after you’re all done, then post a status message on your page saying that you just did a big shop update.

A frustration that my friend had, which I share, is that Facebook doesn’t send fan page admins any notifications about the page’s activity. That means you have to monitor the page to see if anyone’s liked or commented on your updates there. This is a little cumbersome! What I’ve seen some folks do is “like” all of the updates on their fan page, because Facebook will send updates to users about things they “like.” Sort of a weird workaround, but at least it’s something?

Promotion

There are a few different tools that I’ve used to promote my fan page, and I’m sure there are hundreds more that I haven’t used yet.

The easiest is that handy “Suggest to Friends” that’s right underneath your profile photo:

Just pick the friends who you think would be into adding you as a fan, click send, and wait!

You can also add a link to your facebook fanpage on your website, maybe as a widget in your sidebar? Facebook makes it really easy to add a fan page badge to your sidebar.

If you use any other social media, like Twitter or Stumble Upon, you can share your facebook fan page there, too! You might also want to update your blog with a post about your new fan page.

Above that handy “Send to Friends” button is a “Promote with an Ad” link, that I have to confess I’d never clicked before. I played around with it some. Basically, it lets you set up a sidebar ad on Facebook that targets a specific audience. It gets pretty detailed, so if you’re interested I recommend playing around. It also lets you choose your rate and if you’re paying per click or CPM. If paying for ads isn’t something you have in your budget right now, this probably isn’t for you. It seemed like it bore mentioning, though!

So here’s where I turn to you guys, since I bet a lot of you have fan pages already. Do you have any apps you’re using, setup tips, or promotional advice to share that I missed here?

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2 Responses to Shop Talk: Creating a Facebook Fan Page for Your Crafty Biz

  1. [...] from Glue and Glitter recently wrote a great post on How to Create a Facebook Fan Page for Your Crafty Business. Lately I’ve been seeing a lot of questions pop up about this very topic, particularly in the [...]

  2. Poppy Scott says:

    facebook marketing will be dead soon coz facebook is craking markerters on the FB network”..