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Tag: Facebook Reactions

  • Study: Nobody Cares About Facebook “Reactions”

    Study: Nobody Cares About Facebook “Reactions”

    According to a study by quintly, Facebook Reactions are not a feature that Facebook users like. Facebook launched Reactions in February with 5 emoji options to expressing additional emotional reactions beyond the traditional “Like”. The new emoji options launched were Love, Wow, HaHa, Sad and Angry.

    It was thought at the time that people were frustrated with only being able to Like a post, especially when the post was about something that should provoke sadness or anger such as a death or a comment on a terrorist act.

    The quintly study shows that less than 3% of all reactions to a post that include likes, shares and comments include one of the new Facebook Reactions. So not really something that users were craving after all.

    The study analyzed 130,000 posts and found that of all reactions 76.4% were Likes, 14% were shares, 7.2% were comments and only 2.4% were the new Reactions.

    The study also notes that posts with videos received 40% more reactions (of any type) than video posts.

  • How Will Facebook Reactions Impact Pages And Reach?

    How Will Facebook Reactions Impact Pages And Reach?

    As previously reported, Facebook has finally launched Reactions globally. If you aren’t seeing them yet, you will very soon. Reactions are basically emoji that supplement the like button. Users can now not only “like” a post. They can express the following:

    reactions

    Users can choose from these when they hold down the like button on mobile or hover over it on desktop.

    Do you expect this to be a benefit or detriment to businesses? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Facebook says it has been conducting global research with focus groups and surveys to determine what types of reactions people would want to use most. They combined this with knowledge about how people already comment and post stickers and emoticons.

    The company has been testing Reactions with a few markets since last year, and says the feedback has so far been positive.

    Many businesses are no doubt wondering what this means for the content they post on their Pages and how it will impact reach in the News Feed. Facebook doesn’t really know how it will impact reach in the long run, but it stands to reason that the more of any of these emotions expressed, the more likely it will reach more people – at least for now. Engagement is engagement, and for now, Facebook will essentially treat any emotion expressed as a like. But that will probably change as time goes on.

    Product manager Sammi Krug explains that with News Feed, Facebook wants to “show you the stories that matter most to you. Initially, just as we do when someone likes a post, if someone uses a Reaction, we will infer they want to see more of that type of post. In the beginning, it won’t matter if someone likes, ‘wows’ or ‘sads’ a post — we will initially use any Reaction similar to a Like to infer that you want to see more of that type of content.”

    He says that over time Facebook hopes to learn how the different Reactions should be weighted differently by News Feed to do better at showing everyone the stories they most want to see.

    That’s probably the best way to go about it.

    The good news for businesses is that this range of emotions can help you analyze what your audience is responding to and how they’re responding to it. If you’re getting a lot of angry expressions, for example, you might want to make a change to your strategy (unless that’s what you’re going for).

    He says the feature can help businesses “better understand how people are responding to their content on Facebook,” adding, “Page owners will be able to see Reactions to all of their posts on Page insights. Reactions will have the same impact on ad delivery as likes.”

    He says they’ll learn from this rollout and use feedback to improve. “Overall, Pages should continue to post things that their audience finds meaningful and continue using our Page post best practices,” he says.

    In case you need a refresher on those best practices, they are:

    1. Post consistently.

    2. Target your posts.

    3. Keep post images and text fresh.

    4. Boost important posts.

    5. Publicize exclusive discounts and promotions with ads.

    6. Connect with words and images.

    7. Review post performance.

    You can see more explanation from Facebook about each of these here.

    With regard to targeting posts, Facebook recently added a helpful “audience optimization” tool to help you prioritize who should see a post first without limiting reach, which the previous post targeting feature did. You can target your “preferred audience” by interest, and those who fall into the categories you pick will be prioritized when Facebook determines who to show what.

    If you take advantage of this on a regular basis, hopefully you’ll see more of those heart/love reactions, which will undoubtedly be considered a hugely positive signal when Facebook does figure out how to weight each reaction in its ranking stew.

    Do you expect the reactions feature to benefit businesses? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Facebook Finally Makes ‘Reactions’ Like Button Extension Available Globally

    Facebook Finally Makes ‘Reactions’ Like Button Extension Available Globally

    Update: Facebook shares how it’s approaching Reactions when it comes to Pages and reach in the News Feed.

    Last fall, we learned that Facebook was preparing to give users “Reactions,” a new way beyond the like button to express what you feel about a post. Early rumors suggested a dislike button, but this goes further than that, allowing you to express empathy and other feelings.

    Finally, Facebook is acknowledging that not everything is a matter of thumbs up or no thumbs.

    To call it like it really is, we’re basically dealing with emoji. The choices are: Like (as usual), Love, Haha, Wow, Sad, or Angry. The like continues to be a thumb up while love is a heart, and the rest are faces. To use one, hold the Like buton down on mobile or hover over it in desktop to see the options.

    “We understand that this is a big change, and want to be thoughtful about rolling this out,” says product manager Sammi Krug. “For more than a year we have been conducting global research including focus groups and surveys to determine what types of reactions people would want to use most. We also looked at how people are already commenting on posts and the top stickers and emoticons as signals for the types of reactions people are already using to determine which reactions to offer.”

    Reactions have been testing in a few markets since last year, and Facebook says the feedback has been positive so far. The feature is now rolling out to everyone around the world.

    Image via Facebook