![]() ![]() ![]() On a more practical note, Facebook does limit personal accounts to 5,000 friends. Let’s be real, you can’t have your great Aunt Debrah commenting on your embarrassing college photos from ten years ago causing them to resurface in people’s timelines. You might think having more than one Facebook account helps you separate your personal life from your work, family, or school life. This advice applies to both your personal and professional activities on Facebook. Before we get to more advanced tips, let's set the record straight: Facebook profiles are meant for people, while Facebook pages are meant for businesses. This may seem elementary, but you'd be surprised by how many people make this mistake. ![]() Don't create a profile instead of a page for your business. Here's what not to do.ġ3 Facebook Mistakes to Avoid 1. To help you avoid these pitfalls and operate your Facebook page smoothly, we've listed some of the most common mistakes businesses make with their Facebook marketing. Many mistakes businesses make on Facebook are entirely preventable. How often should you post? When should you post? Why are your images all pixelated, and how can you fix them? Do you really have to respond to that troll? Searching for a business on Facebook and seeing they don't have a page garners the same reaction from users as searching for a business on Google and seeing they don't have a website: They just don't look legitimate.īut once you've created your business page, navigating the waters of building a Facebook presence is another matter entirely. The recommended model is for you to have each location within a separate Meraki network so that you can receive reports and presence analytics information, as well as run comparisons, on a per-location basis.These days, most businesses know they need to have a presence on Facebook. If you want to configure all locations to point to a single Facebook Page, all of those locations will need to be within a single Meraki network - you cannot point multiple different Meraki networks to the same Facebook page. Configuring each individual location to have its own Facebook Page is the recommended model as people can check-in at these specific locations, and you can drive visibility into each of your individual locations. There are more details in the Facebook Wi-Fi FAQ on how to get this set up easily. If you want to configure a unique Facebook Page per location (and you have configured multiple Meraki networks with one per location), you'll need to set up a Facebook 'Parent-child' structure for your main Facebook Page if you haven't already done that. Now when users sign onto this SSID, they will be redirected to your Facebook Page and asked to check-in. Once your Facebook page has been successfully paired with your SSID, the Access Control page will update the Splash page section with information about the paired page, along with an option to Unpair.ĥ. You can also select for your users to require a check-in with their Facebook credentials, or allow them to use Wi-Fi codes that can be issued from your Facebook admin panel (more info on that available here).ĥ. You must log in with the same admin credentials that are used to manage your Facebook Page (information on how to create a Facebook Page for your location or business is available here). Here, you can select which Facebook Page you want to pair your Meraki network with. Once you have logged in, you will see the following settings that will let you pair your Meraki network with your Facebook Page:Ĥ. ![]() If you are not logged into Facebook, you will be prompted to log into Facebook. Clicking on this link will take you to your Facebook Wi-Fi settings page.ģ. You will now see a link under the ‘Sign-on with Facebook Wi-Fi’ tab - ‘Configure Facebook settings here’. Select ‘Sign-on with Facebook Wi-Fi’ under the ‘Splash page’ section and press the ‘Save’ button:Ģ. Configuring Meraki Wi-Fi with Facebook LoginĪfter creating a Facebook page, Facebook Login is configured on the Configure > Access control page by taking the following steps:ġ. ![]()
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