Facebook page? Website? Both?
Design credit: Me. Image credit: Adobe Images. I think.

Facebook page? Website? Both?

When your potential customers come across your business for the first time, what do you want them to think?

Would you like them to think “What a professional business!”??

Or would you be happy with your potential customers and clients thinking “That company looks like it’s run by someone who doesn’t really know about whether their business is going to last and whether it’s any good”?

It’s a rhetorical question, of course. Nobody seriously wants their potential clients thinking their business isn’t professional.

That’s why we go to networking meetings dressed smartly, have decent business cards printed, pay graphic designers good money to design us logos and think about what to say to people when they ask us what we do.

So here’s the thing.

Why do so many businesses have Facebook pages instead of websites?

I understand the advantages of Facebook pages, I really do. I tell all my clients to get one.

They’re brilliant for advertising, for keeping in touch with your clients, for getting pictures out there super quickly and for asking your current customers to share your business with their friends.

But a Facebook page (or a LinkedIn page, come to that) shouldn’t be seen as a replacement for a website.?

I’m a web designer, so you may well be thinking “He would say that, wouldn’t he?”, but hear me out. I’ve got reasons.

A website opens up your business to all those people who aren’t on Facebook.

Only? 5 out of 10 adults in the UK has a Facebook account. By contrast, as far back as 2020, 9 out of 10 households used a computer at home and more than 9 out of 10 adults had a mobile phone.

A website will match your brand.

Colours, fonts and images tell people the kind of business you are before they’ve read a single word on your site.

Your Facebook page allows you to upload images, but that’s about where the customisation ends.?

Is branding important? You decide – but virtually every major organisation (including Meta, Facebook’s owner)?has stringent guidelines covering its colours, logos and fonts and how they are to be used. They seem to think it’s important – shouldn’t you?

On Facebook, Meta owns your information, not you.

If you’ve ever tried to change the name of your Facebook page, you’ll almost certainly have discovered that Meta makes you jump through a good few hoops before it will allow it.?

Meta is also completely at liberty to take down your page should it decide to. If you like the idea of staying completely in control of your online presence, then a website is by far your best option.

There's nothing wrong with copying others' business models.

Recently, I talked about copying the top brands when it comes to designing a website – giving the Apple website as an example. When it comes to marketing, there really is nothing new under the sun – so copying what the most successful companies do is common sense.

Do you know any big, successful businesses that have a Facebook page and no website? I don’t.

Please don’t hear what I’m not saying.

  • I’m not having a go at you if you’ve only got a Facebook page
  • I’m not saying your business isn’t professional if you’ve only got a Facebook page

What I am saying, by contrast, is this: If you’ve got a Facebook page for your business but no website, you should strongly consider changing that.

That’s why I came up with a package for business owners who have Facebook pages but no website.

It’s called, wait for it, the “Website from a Facebook page” package.

Snappy title, huh?

Snappy service, though. Once you’ve signed up, I can get your website built and live within a working week.

(That means that if you tell me to get started on Monday, you’ll be showing off the site to your friends by the weekend).

All the work will be taken off your hands – I won’t be bothering you asking for words, photographs or anything else.

Your new site will be optimised for desktops, laptops, tablets and mobiles, will come with a domain name (like bakemydayupton.co.uk) and will help your business get found by the hundreds of thousands of people searching for your services every single day.

(I've mentioned bakemydayupton.co.uk, by the way, because it's a perfect example of a website built entirely from a Facebook page).

As one business owner said recently, “What a great service!”

Want to find out more? Of course you do.?

Visit beeswebsites.co.uk/facebook-page-to-website/ and you can.


(PS you can also get in touch by typing the word Hello in the comments. I'll get back to you in two shakes of a lamb's tail.)

Pete Evans

Business Growth Specialist ★ Sales Effectiveness Expert ★ High-Performance Sales Coach ★ Sales Growth Specialist ★ Sales Mindset Specialist

10 个月

Very insightful post Andrew. From a sales perspective, we used to talk about needing to have at least 7 touch points. Now it is significantly more.

Mark Summers

Standing out from your competition is not just an option; it's a necessity. We specialise in creating success stories for businesses like yours, ensuring you rise above the rest.

10 个月

Yep totally agree with you on this Andrew Greenhalgh This is why I'm starting to do more newsletters. Not quite got there but I have a plan of topics to talk about.

Paul Fitzsimmons

Master of Dad Jokes, HR Support, Commercial Conveyancing, and Criminal Mastermind. 0114 478 6269

10 个月

I agree its all about consistancy

Anita Olsen

Content marketing og online kommunikation | Skaber meningsfulde forbindelser mellem brands og deres kunder ?

10 个月

I used to combine the two. However, I recently experienced loosing my FB profile - and there is absolutely no one to turn to for help. This has definately made me focus more on less fragile solutions such as email lists and websites.

Athole Forbes

?Setting You and Your Business Up For Success - with simple understandable tools and frameworks that you can actually do! ?

10 个月

For behavioural change it’s 21 times! I’m actually surprised that no is so low ?? I would have thought it was higher Andrew Greenhalgh ??

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Andrew Greenhalgh的更多文章

  • What should be on a website?

    What should be on a website?

    Recently I was invited by a local school to go in and talk to their students about building websites and being a…

    8 条评论
  • Website tips from a web designer

    Website tips from a web designer

    Website tips from a website designer I’m calling this an “occasional series” because although I’m planning to write an…

    7 条评论
  • Grammar's not that important.

    Grammar's not that important.

    If you went to a school where they were particularly keen on English grammar, you will almost certainly have been…

    18 条评论
  • And Me? And I? Who? Whom?

    And Me? And I? Who? Whom?

    I absolutely love the English language. As I sat down to write this newsletter, I thought to myself: “I’m not going to…

    10 条评论
  • How to become known as an expert

    How to become known as an expert

    Let me tell you a story. It’s Sunday morning at Greenhalgh Manor* and we are tootling about, getting ready for church.

    15 条评论
  • Do words REALLY matter?

    Do words REALLY matter?

    What is/are the greatest TV adverts of all time? The Guinness ones starring Rutger Hauer, who was intended to look like…

    15 条评论
  • Keep your sentences short...

    Keep your sentences short...

    Keep your sentences short, but your copy long. OK, so it’s not quite up there with the “Keep your friends close but…

    16 条评论
  • Keeping your website up-to-date

    Keeping your website up-to-date

    As many of you may know, I am not just a copywriter. Copywriting is my main thing because I love to write and always…

    12 条评论
  • Website copy.

    Website copy.

    I have many bugbears. Too many, my wife says.

    8 条评论
  • Affect vs Effect

    Affect vs Effect

    Recently a very lovely person asked me to explain something. I know they were very lovely because anybody who leaves a…

    31 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了