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The New Stuff

Let me guess – you’ve been having trouble reaching your followers with the content you post on Facebook. 
You’re not the only one.
About a month ago, Facebook changed their News Feed algorithm to show its users more “relevant and engaging content.”

The new algorithm prioritizes posts from friends and family with a focus on content from accounts users have engaged with previously. The algorithm also “learns” over time to highlight posts that each Facebook user finds informative or entertaining based on what they’ve engaged with previously.
Engagement is more important than ever – particularly for businesses looking to increase their organic reach on Facebook. Because the social media heavyweight has increased the emphasis on personal accounts within its News Feed, it’s becoming increasingly difficult for brands to connect with the fans they’ve amassed over time.

While doing my research, I was surprised at the distinct lack of engagement. Most Pages with tens of millions of Likes were getting, on average, only a few hundred engagements on each post.
That being said, many of Facebook’s biggest brands are doing creative things to fight the influence of the platform’s recent algorithm change.

I decided to take a look at a few of them to see exactly what they’re doing and how you can use their strategies for your own business, whether you’re trying to increase your Likes or better connect with the fans you already have.

Unique, Tailor-Made Content
Tasty, Buzzfeed’s food-focused Facebook Page, is a rare exception when it comes to Facebook’s crippled engagement. With 66 million Likes and counting, Tasty has 8 times more Likes than its parent page and has continued to shine in what feels like the Dark Ages for Facebook businesses.
Despite the new algorithm, Tasty’s videos consistently collect hundreds of thousands of Likes and receive hundreds of thousands of shares – an anomaly among giant brands struggling to amass even a couple hundred engagements.

If you’ve never seen anything from Tasty you’ll know that it’s unabashed food porn. Unlike many other brand pages, Tasty has no singular product – its goal is simply to direct the impressions it generates on Facebook to Buzzfeed.

The content the Page posts consists primarily of Buzzfeed’s food-related articles, as well as their bread and butter (pun intended) content: short videos of delicious recipes along with links to these recipes.

From a marketing perspective, the type of engagement Tasty receives is incredible. Because of its universal appeal, the content Tasty posts is much more likely to be shared. Their entire content strategy is built to be viral, and it works.

Having fans like, comment on, or share your content provides a huge boost in reach. Like I mentioned earlier, content users have engaged with previously has a better chance of making it to the top of users’ News Feeds. If your content is good enough to share, your organic reach will skyrocket.
Not convinced? Behold the engagement they got on this video of a chicken parmesan recipe and tell me you’re not at least a little impressed:


So why exactly is Tasty so successful?
Their content checks all the boxes. It’s:
  • Easily digestible (ha) due to its short-form videos and simple articles
  • Universally appealing in its topic of food
  • A provider of high-value content to its audiences through its recipes
Though this strategy has clearly shown the biggest returns, not just any business can pull it together. Tasty is a specially-built, finely-tuned machine for content marketing, and not every business has a product that appeals to so many people.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for your Business:

Devote your Facebook marketing strategy to creating unique, engaging, and universally appealing content.
In the past, it was much easier to get away with posting a ton of your own content, most notably things like blog posts. Because what people see on their News Feeds is so heavily based on engagement, it can actually be a detriment to focus on posting blog-centric content.
Like Tasty, try to find or create content that’s universally appealing to your target audience that isn’t directly linked to your product. Stop using Facebook as an extension of your website and instead, focus on driving engagement and generating buzz around your brand as a whole.
By posting content that appeals to a larger number of users, it makes sense that you’ll start to attract more Likes, comments, and shares. This is key to reaching customers when it counts. When the time comes for you to post product-focused content, you’ll reach a much larger number of users due to the increased engagement on your previous posts. Because of its new algorithm, you’ll need to update your Facebook content strategy to match.

Incentivize Engagement
Frankly, almost every other brand’s efforts pale in comparison to Tasty’s, particularly when you look at the engagement these brands attract.
However, it’s obvious that other brands are trying a variety of different things to combat the effect of the algorithm on their Facebook success.
For example, soft drink company Coca-Cola reaches out to its fans and followers to beat the new algorithm. Recently, the world-renowned soft drink company hosted a Facebook contest on its Canadian Page featuring a prize with a getaway to the Montreal music festival, Osheaga.

To participate, entrants need to take a selfie with one of Coca-Cola’s new “Play a Coke” bottles and post it to Facebook, tagging Coca-Cola’s Facebook Page and using the hashtag #FestivalWeekend. Though this seems pretty standard as far as social strategies go, social media contests have special applications when hosted on Facebook.
So what does this do for Coca-Cola?
Essentially, this contest is a means to curate user-generated content and, more importantly, increase organic reach.
How? Well, as I’ve said on a few times in this article, the new Facebook algorithm prioritizes content from friends and family. By getting its fans to post personalized images featuring people enjoying Coke products, the brand creates a network of people spreading the word about Coca-Cola. And because it’s a contest, chances are people will put a little extra effort into their images, meaning the average quality of the photos is higher.


Most importantly, however, is the fact that Coca-Cola can rely on other people to increase its contests’ organic reach. Participants’ families and friends see their entries, and word spreads about the contest (the hashtag helps with this) leading to more entries.
Coca-Cola isn’t fighting the algorithm head-on, it’s taking a detour right around it.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for Your Business:

Let’s face it: it’s probably not the best idea to throw your time and effort into a black hole, continuously pumping out content that isn’t reaching your target audience. For better or worse, we’re stuck with Facebook’s new algorithm for the foreseeable future.
You’re better off looking for other ways to reach people. Running contests to attract user-generated content like Coca-Cola did is an awesome way to connect with potential customers for several reasons.
Firstly, it provides you with genuine, true-to-life content you can use in future marketing materials on Facebook (or on other platforms like Instagram or Twitter) to show the public how your customers use and interact with your product.
Secondly – and more importantly – it allows your product to reach customers without the impedance you’d normally experience through the new Facebook algorithm. Because users’ friends will be sharing content related to your business, they’ll be more likely to see it.
For more on user-generated content, check out our article User-Generated Content: How to Get It and Why You Should.

Leverage New Forms of Content
Consistently one of the slickest brands on social, Red Bull has looked towards another type of content to increase its Facebook reach: live video.
If you’re unfamiliar with Red Bull’s social strategy, here’s a quick refresher from my article Trending Titans: 6 Facebook Tips for Your Business. The brand deliberately shies away from referencing its extensive range of energy drinks, instead focusing on the culture it has built around extreme sports. This bold marketing strategy helps Red Bull differentiate itself from its numerous competitors in an industry where products have been largely commoditized.
So, in typical Red Bull fashion, the energy drink giant teamed up with adventure filmmaker Sebastien Montaz and shared live video with its fans and followers from the summit of Mont Blanc, the highest peak in western Europe.
Red Bull climbed its way to the top of Facebook users’ News Feeds using Facebook Live in a few ways:
  • It capitalized on the algorithm’s preference for Facebook Live video over YouTube, meaning users were more likely to see it amongst the other content on their News Feeds.
  • It catered to social media users’ inclination towards “instant” content, made clear through the popularity of other platforms like Snapchat and Instagram that emphasize quick content sharing.
  • It provided a unique experience to viewers. For twelve minutes, Sebastien shared what it was like to be atop Mont Blanc as it was happening. There’s something more visceral in watching something happen live as opposed to after the fact.
The effect live video had on Red Bull’s engagement was immediate and apparent. The video garnered over 37 thousand Likes, a significant increase above the Page’s average of five to ten thousand Likes on its regular videos.


What’s the lesson here? Well, Red Bull found success by responding directly to the changes Facebook made to its News Feed algorithm. Simple, right? When Facebook says do live video, you do live video.
The key, however, is that Red Bull took this new content type and approached it in a unique manner. Unless you’re a celebrity, you’re probably not going to get much engagement talking to your phone from your desk.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for Your Business:

As marketers, we’re well aware of first-mover advantage: the attainment of a competitive advantage, often characterized by technological leadership.
In less stuffy terms, it’s about being the first to adopt a new technology.
Though this often relates to product development, it’s just as relevant when considering content. Think about it – while scrolling through your feed, you’re much more likely to stop and look at a piece of content if it’s in a format you’ve never seen before. This, in combination with Facebook’s tendency to prioritize newer content forms in its News Feed, are strong indicators that you should be trying out these new features.
Still, my takeaway for you here isn’t just to use live video or whatever new-fangled feature Facebook introduces next. No matter the content type – whether it’s live video, 360° video, even VR – you need to use it in a manner that leverages the strengths and differences of the platform to connect with your customers.

Think about creative ways to share this new technology with customers. Selling a new bathing suit? Grab a waterproof case, start streaming on Facebook Live, and dive deep to show off your product in a whole new light. Looking to experiment with 360° video? Explore new heights to bring your viewers an experience they’d never get on their own. And go figure, Red Bull did that too.
Use new technology to provide new value and your content will spread like wildfire.

Conclusion
With Facebook, you have to play the cards you’re dealt. These are just three of the ways Facebook’s best are trying to stack the deck in their favor.

I’ll be honest with you – it’s getting tougher and tougher to break through to audiences on Facebook without crafting an inventive strategy or spending a couple bucks on advertising.

As marketers, we need to keep our eyes and ears open for creative ideas. If we’re not sure where to look – well, Facebook’s biggest brands aren’t a bad place to start.

So what do you think? What are your experiences with Facebook’s new algorithm? Any other brands you think are doing cool things? Let me know in the comments below!

How Facebook’s Finest Brands Are Reacting To The News Feed Algorithm Change

Let me guess – you’ve been having trouble reaching your followers with the content you post on Facebook. 
You’re not the only one.
About a month ago, Facebook changed their News Feed algorithm to show its users more “relevant and engaging content.”

The new algorithm prioritizes posts from friends and family with a focus on content from accounts users have engaged with previously. The algorithm also “learns” over time to highlight posts that each Facebook user finds informative or entertaining based on what they’ve engaged with previously.
Engagement is more important than ever – particularly for businesses looking to increase their organic reach on Facebook. Because the social media heavyweight has increased the emphasis on personal accounts within its News Feed, it’s becoming increasingly difficult for brands to connect with the fans they’ve amassed over time.

While doing my research, I was surprised at the distinct lack of engagement. Most Pages with tens of millions of Likes were getting, on average, only a few hundred engagements on each post.
That being said, many of Facebook’s biggest brands are doing creative things to fight the influence of the platform’s recent algorithm change.

I decided to take a look at a few of them to see exactly what they’re doing and how you can use their strategies for your own business, whether you’re trying to increase your Likes or better connect with the fans you already have.

Unique, Tailor-Made Content
Tasty, Buzzfeed’s food-focused Facebook Page, is a rare exception when it comes to Facebook’s crippled engagement. With 66 million Likes and counting, Tasty has 8 times more Likes than its parent page and has continued to shine in what feels like the Dark Ages for Facebook businesses.
Despite the new algorithm, Tasty’s videos consistently collect hundreds of thousands of Likes and receive hundreds of thousands of shares – an anomaly among giant brands struggling to amass even a couple hundred engagements.

If you’ve never seen anything from Tasty you’ll know that it’s unabashed food porn. Unlike many other brand pages, Tasty has no singular product – its goal is simply to direct the impressions it generates on Facebook to Buzzfeed.

The content the Page posts consists primarily of Buzzfeed’s food-related articles, as well as their bread and butter (pun intended) content: short videos of delicious recipes along with links to these recipes.

From a marketing perspective, the type of engagement Tasty receives is incredible. Because of its universal appeal, the content Tasty posts is much more likely to be shared. Their entire content strategy is built to be viral, and it works.

Having fans like, comment on, or share your content provides a huge boost in reach. Like I mentioned earlier, content users have engaged with previously has a better chance of making it to the top of users’ News Feeds. If your content is good enough to share, your organic reach will skyrocket.
Not convinced? Behold the engagement they got on this video of a chicken parmesan recipe and tell me you’re not at least a little impressed:


So why exactly is Tasty so successful?
Their content checks all the boxes. It’s:
  • Easily digestible (ha) due to its short-form videos and simple articles
  • Universally appealing in its topic of food
  • A provider of high-value content to its audiences through its recipes
Though this strategy has clearly shown the biggest returns, not just any business can pull it together. Tasty is a specially-built, finely-tuned machine for content marketing, and not every business has a product that appeals to so many people.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for your Business:

Devote your Facebook marketing strategy to creating unique, engaging, and universally appealing content.
In the past, it was much easier to get away with posting a ton of your own content, most notably things like blog posts. Because what people see on their News Feeds is so heavily based on engagement, it can actually be a detriment to focus on posting blog-centric content.
Like Tasty, try to find or create content that’s universally appealing to your target audience that isn’t directly linked to your product. Stop using Facebook as an extension of your website and instead, focus on driving engagement and generating buzz around your brand as a whole.
By posting content that appeals to a larger number of users, it makes sense that you’ll start to attract more Likes, comments, and shares. This is key to reaching customers when it counts. When the time comes for you to post product-focused content, you’ll reach a much larger number of users due to the increased engagement on your previous posts. Because of its new algorithm, you’ll need to update your Facebook content strategy to match.

Incentivize Engagement
Frankly, almost every other brand’s efforts pale in comparison to Tasty’s, particularly when you look at the engagement these brands attract.
However, it’s obvious that other brands are trying a variety of different things to combat the effect of the algorithm on their Facebook success.
For example, soft drink company Coca-Cola reaches out to its fans and followers to beat the new algorithm. Recently, the world-renowned soft drink company hosted a Facebook contest on its Canadian Page featuring a prize with a getaway to the Montreal music festival, Osheaga.

To participate, entrants need to take a selfie with one of Coca-Cola’s new “Play a Coke” bottles and post it to Facebook, tagging Coca-Cola’s Facebook Page and using the hashtag #FestivalWeekend. Though this seems pretty standard as far as social strategies go, social media contests have special applications when hosted on Facebook.
So what does this do for Coca-Cola?
Essentially, this contest is a means to curate user-generated content and, more importantly, increase organic reach.
How? Well, as I’ve said on a few times in this article, the new Facebook algorithm prioritizes content from friends and family. By getting its fans to post personalized images featuring people enjoying Coke products, the brand creates a network of people spreading the word about Coca-Cola. And because it’s a contest, chances are people will put a little extra effort into their images, meaning the average quality of the photos is higher.


Most importantly, however, is the fact that Coca-Cola can rely on other people to increase its contests’ organic reach. Participants’ families and friends see their entries, and word spreads about the contest (the hashtag helps with this) leading to more entries.
Coca-Cola isn’t fighting the algorithm head-on, it’s taking a detour right around it.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for Your Business:

Let’s face it: it’s probably not the best idea to throw your time and effort into a black hole, continuously pumping out content that isn’t reaching your target audience. For better or worse, we’re stuck with Facebook’s new algorithm for the foreseeable future.
You’re better off looking for other ways to reach people. Running contests to attract user-generated content like Coca-Cola did is an awesome way to connect with potential customers for several reasons.
Firstly, it provides you with genuine, true-to-life content you can use in future marketing materials on Facebook (or on other platforms like Instagram or Twitter) to show the public how your customers use and interact with your product.
Secondly – and more importantly – it allows your product to reach customers without the impedance you’d normally experience through the new Facebook algorithm. Because users’ friends will be sharing content related to your business, they’ll be more likely to see it.
For more on user-generated content, check out our article User-Generated Content: How to Get It and Why You Should.

Leverage New Forms of Content
Consistently one of the slickest brands on social, Red Bull has looked towards another type of content to increase its Facebook reach: live video.
If you’re unfamiliar with Red Bull’s social strategy, here’s a quick refresher from my article Trending Titans: 6 Facebook Tips for Your Business. The brand deliberately shies away from referencing its extensive range of energy drinks, instead focusing on the culture it has built around extreme sports. This bold marketing strategy helps Red Bull differentiate itself from its numerous competitors in an industry where products have been largely commoditized.
So, in typical Red Bull fashion, the energy drink giant teamed up with adventure filmmaker Sebastien Montaz and shared live video with its fans and followers from the summit of Mont Blanc, the highest peak in western Europe.
Red Bull climbed its way to the top of Facebook users’ News Feeds using Facebook Live in a few ways:
  • It capitalized on the algorithm’s preference for Facebook Live video over YouTube, meaning users were more likely to see it amongst the other content on their News Feeds.
  • It catered to social media users’ inclination towards “instant” content, made clear through the popularity of other platforms like Snapchat and Instagram that emphasize quick content sharing.
  • It provided a unique experience to viewers. For twelve minutes, Sebastien shared what it was like to be atop Mont Blanc as it was happening. There’s something more visceral in watching something happen live as opposed to after the fact.
The effect live video had on Red Bull’s engagement was immediate and apparent. The video garnered over 37 thousand Likes, a significant increase above the Page’s average of five to ten thousand Likes on its regular videos.


What’s the lesson here? Well, Red Bull found success by responding directly to the changes Facebook made to its News Feed algorithm. Simple, right? When Facebook says do live video, you do live video.
The key, however, is that Red Bull took this new content type and approached it in a unique manner. Unless you’re a celebrity, you’re probably not going to get much engagement talking to your phone from your desk.

Actionable Facebook Strategy for Your Business:

As marketers, we’re well aware of first-mover advantage: the attainment of a competitive advantage, often characterized by technological leadership.
In less stuffy terms, it’s about being the first to adopt a new technology.
Though this often relates to product development, it’s just as relevant when considering content. Think about it – while scrolling through your feed, you’re much more likely to stop and look at a piece of content if it’s in a format you’ve never seen before. This, in combination with Facebook’s tendency to prioritize newer content forms in its News Feed, are strong indicators that you should be trying out these new features.
Still, my takeaway for you here isn’t just to use live video or whatever new-fangled feature Facebook introduces next. No matter the content type – whether it’s live video, 360° video, even VR – you need to use it in a manner that leverages the strengths and differences of the platform to connect with your customers.

Think about creative ways to share this new technology with customers. Selling a new bathing suit? Grab a waterproof case, start streaming on Facebook Live, and dive deep to show off your product in a whole new light. Looking to experiment with 360° video? Explore new heights to bring your viewers an experience they’d never get on their own. And go figure, Red Bull did that too.
Use new technology to provide new value and your content will spread like wildfire.

Conclusion
With Facebook, you have to play the cards you’re dealt. These are just three of the ways Facebook’s best are trying to stack the deck in their favor.

I’ll be honest with you – it’s getting tougher and tougher to break through to audiences on Facebook without crafting an inventive strategy or spending a couple bucks on advertising.

As marketers, we need to keep our eyes and ears open for creative ideas. If we’re not sure where to look – well, Facebook’s biggest brands aren’t a bad place to start.

So what do you think? What are your experiences with Facebook’s new algorithm? Any other brands you think are doing cool things? Let me know in the comments below!


Facebook Messenger is continuing to raise the bar on customer engagement and customer experience. As more and more brands are onboarding Messenger into their digital customer relationship plans, Facebook is implementing certain “rules” to ensure that the customer experience isn’t put into jeopardy and that brands can really transform this messaging app into the number one service channel. Facebook has over 1 billion users to serve, and it seems they are doing everything right to ensure that engagement does not decline with the insurgence of bots and customer care, but rather that the experience thrives.
Brands who are adding Messenger to their suite of service channels are experiencing amazing gains in service volume and performance on important metrics such First Response Times.
Read on to learn how to navigate through Facebook’s newest release of specifications for brand engagement on Messenger. Below we’ve outlined the 5 most important takeaways from the new platform policies.
1) The customer must initiate relationships on Messenger
Brands can only engage with a customer once the customer has taken certain actions. A customer must “opt in” on this channel by sending a message directly to a business in Messenger, by tapping “Get Started” from the welcome screen on a businesses’ Messenger window, or by agreeing during checkout on the brand’s website.
This is a smart move by Facebook. With the expected influx of bots and brand conversations, Messenger users are protected from spammy, unwelcomed messages from random pages. Instead, they get to decide who they communicate with on this coveted channel and, as stated in the next, very important principle, who they don’t.
2) Customers can always opt-out
Once a customer initiates a relationship with a brand on Messenger, they can decide to opt out at any time. Right inside of the app, they can either select “Block Messages” or discontinue communication by simply deleting the conversation thread with the business.
This isn’t revolutionary per se, but it shows that Messenger is adopting features that more established support/relationship channels have included for years. Without unsubscribe options on emails or block features on SMS, customers would be at risk of receiving a bombardment of unwelcomed content by brands. Similarly, Facebook is ensuring that Messenger will remain a channel that provides value and delivers service. Brands that don’t adhere to these guidelines and instead opt for promotional messages at too high of a volume will quickly get blocked and miss out on this versatile engagement channel.
3) Businesses are on the clock when it comes to response times
Messenger has rolled out a new 24 hour window for messaging. Once a customer initiates a conversation or sends a message on this channel, brands have one full day to respond. But after the 24 hour window, time is up for contacting customers.
There is one caveat to this policy: businesses are permitted to re-engage an inactive user one time only after the 24 hour window. This favors brands getting the most of this channel by reawakening sleepy customer relationships on Messenger and ensuring that they provide people with the most relevant and timely information that was requested.
This time limit also encourages faster response times on Messenger. Brands need to be sure that they have the proper resources in place to respond to customers within that 24 hour window. However, best practices dictate that the lapse in response time should not exceed 15 minutes! Don’t forget that Facebook awards a “Very responsive to messages” badge to brands who respond to 90% of messages within fifteen minutes.
Brands who implement Messenger via Conversocial have full live chat functionality as well. Your agent/customer chat windows show when the other party is typing, so it feels native to a regular Messenger chat conversation. This new channel should be resourced identically to chat, to enable real-time conversations with consumers.
4) There are special allowances for transactional messages
While brands must follow the 24 hour response rules for responding to queries on Messenger, transactional engagements—including receipts and airline templates — are another story.
This allows brands to use Messenger as a viable channel for repetitive customer interchanges. This also helps brand utilize the power of Messenger in the same way that private users do: the one thread conversation. Now the entire customer relationship can be followed on one thread on Messenger, if the user so desires. This makes it easier for customers to reference important data, transactional archives and receipts on one place, instead of having to defer to email in order to dig up important account details.
5) Subscription Messaging Allows for Regular Content Streams
Brands can keep their customers tuned in to important information with Messenger’s Subscription Model. This completely bypasses the 24 hour rule and allows for a richer customer relationship on Messenger. The specific instances where subscription engagement is permitted for brands is:
  • News: Bots whose primary purpose is to inform people about recent or important events or information in categories such as sports, finance, business, real estate, weather, traffic, politics, and entertainment.
  • Productivity: Bots whose primary purpose is to enable people to manage their personal productivity with tasks such as managing calendar events, receiving reminders, and paying bills.
  • Personal trackers: Bots that enable people to receive and monitor information about themselves in categories such as fitness, health, wellness, and finance.
This new and exciting platform is admittedly still being closely monitored by Facebook to ensure that it truly reflects the best way to manage relationships on Messenger. They will closely observe user behavior in order to tweak rules and specifications to better suit engagement on this channel.
If you haven’t entertained the idea of adding Messenger to your service suite, you are missing out on an enormous opportunity. Many Conversocial brands have taken on this unstoppable channel and have seen amazing results. Sprint for example, saw an incredible surge in engagement on private engagements on Messenger with a simultaneous decrease in public Facebook posts. See below:


5 Things You Need to Know About Messenger’s New Rules of Engagement

Facebook Messenger is continuing to raise the bar on customer engagement and customer experience. As more and more brands are onboarding Messenger into their digital customer relationship plans, Facebook is implementing certain “rules” to ensure that the customer experience isn’t put into jeopardy and that brands can really transform this messaging app into the number one service channel. Facebook has over 1 billion users to serve, and it seems they are doing everything right to ensure that engagement does not decline with the insurgence of bots and customer care, but rather that the experience thrives.
Brands who are adding Messenger to their suite of service channels are experiencing amazing gains in service volume and performance on important metrics such First Response Times.
Read on to learn how to navigate through Facebook’s newest release of specifications for brand engagement on Messenger. Below we’ve outlined the 5 most important takeaways from the new platform policies.
1) The customer must initiate relationships on Messenger
Brands can only engage with a customer once the customer has taken certain actions. A customer must “opt in” on this channel by sending a message directly to a business in Messenger, by tapping “Get Started” from the welcome screen on a businesses’ Messenger window, or by agreeing during checkout on the brand’s website.
This is a smart move by Facebook. With the expected influx of bots and brand conversations, Messenger users are protected from spammy, unwelcomed messages from random pages. Instead, they get to decide who they communicate with on this coveted channel and, as stated in the next, very important principle, who they don’t.
2) Customers can always opt-out
Once a customer initiates a relationship with a brand on Messenger, they can decide to opt out at any time. Right inside of the app, they can either select “Block Messages” or discontinue communication by simply deleting the conversation thread with the business.
This isn’t revolutionary per se, but it shows that Messenger is adopting features that more established support/relationship channels have included for years. Without unsubscribe options on emails or block features on SMS, customers would be at risk of receiving a bombardment of unwelcomed content by brands. Similarly, Facebook is ensuring that Messenger will remain a channel that provides value and delivers service. Brands that don’t adhere to these guidelines and instead opt for promotional messages at too high of a volume will quickly get blocked and miss out on this versatile engagement channel.
3) Businesses are on the clock when it comes to response times
Messenger has rolled out a new 24 hour window for messaging. Once a customer initiates a conversation or sends a message on this channel, brands have one full day to respond. But after the 24 hour window, time is up for contacting customers.
There is one caveat to this policy: businesses are permitted to re-engage an inactive user one time only after the 24 hour window. This favors brands getting the most of this channel by reawakening sleepy customer relationships on Messenger and ensuring that they provide people with the most relevant and timely information that was requested.
This time limit also encourages faster response times on Messenger. Brands need to be sure that they have the proper resources in place to respond to customers within that 24 hour window. However, best practices dictate that the lapse in response time should not exceed 15 minutes! Don’t forget that Facebook awards a “Very responsive to messages” badge to brands who respond to 90% of messages within fifteen minutes.
Brands who implement Messenger via Conversocial have full live chat functionality as well. Your agent/customer chat windows show when the other party is typing, so it feels native to a regular Messenger chat conversation. This new channel should be resourced identically to chat, to enable real-time conversations with consumers.
4) There are special allowances for transactional messages
While brands must follow the 24 hour response rules for responding to queries on Messenger, transactional engagements—including receipts and airline templates — are another story.
This allows brands to use Messenger as a viable channel for repetitive customer interchanges. This also helps brand utilize the power of Messenger in the same way that private users do: the one thread conversation. Now the entire customer relationship can be followed on one thread on Messenger, if the user so desires. This makes it easier for customers to reference important data, transactional archives and receipts on one place, instead of having to defer to email in order to dig up important account details.
5) Subscription Messaging Allows for Regular Content Streams
Brands can keep their customers tuned in to important information with Messenger’s Subscription Model. This completely bypasses the 24 hour rule and allows for a richer customer relationship on Messenger. The specific instances where subscription engagement is permitted for brands is:
  • News: Bots whose primary purpose is to inform people about recent or important events or information in categories such as sports, finance, business, real estate, weather, traffic, politics, and entertainment.
  • Productivity: Bots whose primary purpose is to enable people to manage their personal productivity with tasks such as managing calendar events, receiving reminders, and paying bills.
  • Personal trackers: Bots that enable people to receive and monitor information about themselves in categories such as fitness, health, wellness, and finance.
This new and exciting platform is admittedly still being closely monitored by Facebook to ensure that it truly reflects the best way to manage relationships on Messenger. They will closely observe user behavior in order to tweak rules and specifications to better suit engagement on this channel.
If you haven’t entertained the idea of adding Messenger to your service suite, you are missing out on an enormous opportunity. Many Conversocial brands have taken on this unstoppable channel and have seen amazing results. Sprint for example, saw an incredible surge in engagement on private engagements on Messenger with a simultaneous decrease in public Facebook posts. See below:



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