Last month I’ve been interviewed by Mike Stelzner, the executive editor of Social Media Examiner. Among other questions around how Intel does social media, Mike asked me about my experience with managing Intel’s Facebook page and engaging with our fans. Below are the snippets from the interview. Read the full version and listen to the audio of our conversation here.

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Mike: Let’s talk about Intel’s Facebook page.  You have more than 115,000 fans on your page.  Would you share whom you’re targeting and how Intel is using Facebook?

Ekaterina: We created a Facebook page to provide a place for folks to talk about technology and, of course, Intel products.  The people that were immediately interested in dialoguing with us were the tech-setters—the ones building their own systems.  These were tech “geeks” in the best sense of the word.

Most of our growth is organic.  In the beginning, it was about 3% to 4% a month.  Then we decided to get more serious about engaging, posting more interesting content, answering questions and just posting more often. We started seeing about a 10% to 12% monthly growth.  This shows you how important the right type of engagement is for growing a fan base. Now we’re exploring ways to bring more of a mainstream audience to our page and add content that will keep them interested and be a little bit less techie.

Mike: You were experiencing a 10% to 12% growth once you started implementing some of these tactics and strategies.  You mean your numbers of fans were growing by that much?

Ekaterina: Absolutely, yes.

Mike: Let’s talk about your Facebook wall strategy. Can you share a little bit about what kinds of content you post on your wall and how the brand has benefitted from what you’ve been doing?

Ekaterina: Nowadays it’s all about news feed optimization.  It’s almost becoming the equivalent of SEO for Facebook. For those folks who are not really familiar, news feeds display the most popular stories on Facebook. According to Facebook, 0.02% of stories actually make it to the news feed, which is rather scary if you look at it as a marketer.

You want to be seen and heard. However, if your status updates are not getting into people’s news feeds, you might just as well not send them.

There’s a unique amplification effect that Facebook has, where if your friends see it, their friends might also see it, especially if you comment or engage on the brand’s wall.  Or if you “like” a brand, it’s also being seen by all of your friends.

Basically, you want your fans to see it, but more importantly, you want them to engage with you. Because of the news feed algorithm and the engagement they call fan growth, the higher the engagement with you (which are likes, comments, etc.), the more likely it is that your page will be picked up by the Facebook algorithm and make it into the news feed.

We try to keep all content interesting and fresh.  Way back, I asked our fans, “What do you want to see on our wall?  What kinds of updates do you want to see?” They told us they want to stay on top of technical news.  They want to be the first to know about Intel products that are coming out and what we were up to in general. They also liked the fact that they can chat with their fellow geeks and ask them for all kinds of advice about how build their own system.

It is important to learn our fans’ likes and dislikes.  Either it’s based on their reactions to particular posts or the polls that we run.  We alter our content strategy accordingly.

Another thing is we monitor engagement spikes and track “aha” moments. Sometimes you would be surprised at what type of content your fans respond most to.

The other thing is we try to be human by sending best wishes to our fans during holidays or asking them what their favorite holiday tradition is, which is quite often no different from how you would talk to your friends. That garners a lot of engagement and positive comments. Something like saying a simple “thank you” when they pay you a compliment or tell you how much they love your product is also extremely important. It’s anything that encourages and continues the dialogue.

Mike: If you had to give one or two of your best engagement tips, what would they be?

Ekaterina: It’s all about trial and error and learning what works for your audience.  An important thing to remember is that what works for some might not necessarily be the right thing for you, so you really need to try to play with it.

My favorite tip is to NOT automate your content.  At first we said, “We have several blogs that have awesome information that we’re providing.  Why don’t we just tie it to our Facebook page and feed that as an automated status update?  Then in between we’ll throw in some customized updates.” It did not work.  To make it work, you need a good editorial calendar and editorial strategy.  At times, we would have several updates a day and some days we didn’t have any updates.  It was difficult to coordinate this many bloggers.  In some instances, we would have updates that would be hidden just because there were six in a row. The other bad thing about automated content is the fact that the news feed doesn’t really pick it up.  So it’s not making it to people’s news feeds.  That is very important to remember.

First of all, when the update is customized, people comment on it much more.

The other thing is you can ask questions. You can post an announcement, post videos and ask people, “What do you think?” It really motivates them to be engaged and to answer. If you don’t ask, they would probably comment, but the engagement is not going to be as big.

There is another one of my favorites that I notice not a lot of people know about. Video is your secret weapon. I know everybody says that; however, not only do news feed algorithms prefer media like video and photos and favor them, there is another feature that has just been announced the end of last year, and for some reason it was just really quiet and not a lot of people picked it up.

If you upload a raw video file, not just linked from YouTube but uploaded on Facebook, and your fans share it with their friends, when somebody who’s not a fan or liker of your Facebook page actually watches the video, there is a sweet little thing—a button that pops up on the upper-left corner of the video that invites you to basically like the page, or in the old terms, to become a fan of the page. That is the fastest way for folks to just click on it and become a fan. It’s a really outstanding call to action, and so I do encourage folks to upload raw files versus just linking to YouTube, which is the easiest thing to do. However, it’s not as effective for your engagement strategy.

Mike: What would be the one single piece of advice you would give one of your peers who’s at a corporation that’s just now getting underway with social media marketing?

Ekaterina: You want to tell them so much, that one is hard. If I’d say one thing, it’s don’t let the opportunity to engage with your customers slip by just because you’re afraid of potential negative reactions or comments.

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