The Difference Between a Facebook Page and a Facebook Profile

Search Engine Marketing

Facebook is now a household name (especially for those with teenagers in the house) and as business owners become more aware of the effectiveness of using social sites to market their business, there are many frequently asked questions about how to put your business on Facebook.

Let’s start by noting the difference between a Facebook Profile and a Facebook Page.

Facebook Profile:

  • Strictly for people (not a business or product) to interact with friends and family
  • Any individual can create a profile, just not a commercial business or product
  • A business that opens a profile page is in direct violation of the Facebook Terms of Service and will be disabled
  • Other users become FRIENDS of a Facebook Profile
  • A Facebook Profile can upload pictures, videos, status updates, and can invite people to become friends

Facebook Pages:

  • Designed for businesses, brands, companies, products, and celebrities
  • Other users become FANS of a Facebook Page
  • Can upload pictures, videos, status updates, host a discussion board, display wall posts, and other features
  • Can track metrics like fans, page views, interactions, gender, age, location, language, and more
  • Can not invite other members to become a fan

Example of Facebook Page metrics:

facebook-page.png

The reason for keeping companies and individuals separate on Facebook is to reduce the amount of spam. If a business was able to invite you become a fan of their page, users would be flooded with businesses looking to inflate their number of fans.

The purpose is to make the user experience as enjoyable as possible. Sites like MySpace and Twitter do not have such strict boundaries between individuals and companies. This unrestricted access has contributed to the ongoing decrease in MySpace’s traffic and could lead to the death of Twitter if stricter rules are not put into place.

This points back to the first three rules of social media marketing:

  1. Content
  2. Content
  3. Content

If you don’t provide interesting content with a positive experience for your readers and fans you will never achieve success in developing a strong online following. It wouldn’t be good business practice to cut corners in your trade, so it’s equally unprofessional to break social networking etiquette.

Questions? Comments? Let us know in the comment box below. Or contact us here.

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