Do you want more people to watch your YouTube videos?
Are you looking for an easy way to improve the quality of the content you share on Facebook?
All you need is some great content and a cool Facebook technique that I recently discovered.
By leveraging Facebook’s Open Graph and using this technique, I’ve seen phenomenal results!
I shared this tactic with a brand operating in the travel industry and they generated more than one million aggregated views of their product videos on YouTube (and significant website traffic) in a matter of weeks.
Using this technique, you can see in the image below that when you like an article on a blog, the story that’s automatically generated on Facebook for your friends to see already has a video embedded into it.
And this video is ready to be clicked and played in the Facebook newsfeed, ticker or personal timeline of the person who liked your content.
This can be valuable to your business. It’s a very smooth way for you to combine useful and interesting content with a video showcasing your products or services!
Imagine how you can use this tactic to get your product videos shared automatically with useful content throughout the social web.
In this article you’ll learn how to use Facebook’s Open Graph to get more views of your videos on YouTube.
You’re also going to learn how to get everyone who likes your Facebook Page or one of your blog posts to automatically share one of your videos on Facebook.
For this tactic, simply installing the Like button is only half of it; you must also insert Open Graph meta tags into the source code of your website or blog page to optimize the sharing of your content on Facebook.
These meta tags let you control the manner in which your web page is shared on Facebook when your visitor likes it, comments on it or sends it to friends via the Like, Comment and Send plugins provided by Facebook.
If you’re not familiar with Open Graph meta tags and their importance, I encourage you to watch Facebook’s video on the subject.
I also encourage you to consult the official Open Graph protocol page. There you’ll find out about all of the different meta tags, their uses, their functions and the advantages they give to your content.
Of course, if all that seems a bit too technical, don’t hesitate to hand over the reins to your agency or technical director.
But let’s continue so you can fully understand the role this tactic can play in your social media marketing and what it can mean for your business.
Here’s what you need to know.
You need to think about the different sections of the post that automatically appear on Facebook when someone likes content on your website.
For example, here’s what the optimal sharing of a blog article would look like:
As you can see, the essential meta tags are the following:
You’ll find out how to use this technique below.
Let’s compare the two Facebook Like Stories below:
These two posts correspond to the same action: a click of the Like button on a web page for a product—in this example, a vacation resort. But in the first case, the action displays a 200-pixel–wide image. The second displays, within that same image, a Play button for a video. As you can guess, viewers are more inclined to click on that image if it displays a video Play button.
This is the primary difference between these two posts, but it doesn’t stop there.
You see, the simple act of clicking on the Play button immediately shows a video, without having to leave the post. As a savvy marketer, you’ll know how to use this to your advantage to market your business.
This technique makes it very easy for marketers to have a useful product video appear inside the Facebook update about liked content. With the right content mix, this can be a strong marketing strategy.
But a tactic like this is not just for vacation resorts. It can be very useful for a number of products.
In the case of a blog, you can use this tactic to enrich Facebook posts when a person likes one of your articles.
For example, if you have video tutorials introducing the functions of your products or showing them in action, you can use these videos to highlight products related to the content in your blog articles.
As you’ve seen above, the minimum necessary meta tags are the following:
Each of these three plugins lets you easily add the meta tags you need to share your videos with each Like on the pages of your site or blog.
1. If you host the video on your own servers, you must host the file in the .SWF format. Be careful not to host the file in .FLV or any other traditional video format, as the video player that works with Facebook will not read it.
Then you simply need to set the Open Graph meta tag value as the URL of the .SWF file that you previously put online.
You’ll be able to see the number of views your video has on Facebook!
The good news is that YouTube offers an impressive amount of statistical data on your videos, including details about the sources for views when videos are embedded on third-party sites like Facebook. This is great to evaluate the effectiveness of one source versus another.
The bad news is that the source statistics of a view are complicated to find on YouTube. To make it easy for you to find, here’s a short screencast:
And there you have it! I hope you’re inspired to use this technique to come up with creative campaigns and make the most of the potential visibility offered by Facebook!
Are you looking for an easy way to improve the quality of the content you share on Facebook?
All you need is some great content and a cool Facebook technique that I recently discovered.
A Quick Overview
This technique lets you automatically attach your videos to the updates that appear on Facebook after someone likes content on your website.By leveraging Facebook’s Open Graph and using this technique, I’ve seen phenomenal results!
I shared this tactic with a brand operating in the travel industry and they generated more than one million aggregated views of their product videos on YouTube (and significant website traffic) in a matter of weeks.
By
integrating this Open Graph tactic, Marmara, a French travel company,
generated 93K likes on its website, which in turn generated 13 million
impressions of their videos in the Facebook newsfeed! Not to mention the
16K clicks they got back to their website. All in just 2 weeks and for
free.
Using this technique, you can see in the image below that when you like an article on a blog, the story that’s automatically generated on Facebook for your friends to see already has a video embedded into it.
With this feature, each blog article that you write automatically shares a video of your choice.
This is a great way to boost the visibility of your YouTube channel! If you want to see this example live, you can click here.And this video is ready to be clicked and played in the Facebook newsfeed, ticker or personal timeline of the person who liked your content.
This can be valuable to your business. It’s a very smooth way for you to combine useful and interesting content with a video showcasing your products or services!
Imagine how you can use this tactic to get your product videos shared automatically with useful content throughout the social web.
In this article you’ll learn how to use Facebook’s Open Graph to get more views of your videos on YouTube.
You’re also going to learn how to get everyone who likes your Facebook Page or one of your blog posts to automatically share one of your videos on Facebook.
Understanding the Open Graph
If you have a website or blog, you’ve probably already integrated social sharing buttons, and in particular the Facebook Like button on your site.For this tactic, simply installing the Like button is only half of it; you must also insert Open Graph meta tags into the source code of your website or blog page to optimize the sharing of your content on Facebook.
These meta tags let you control the manner in which your web page is shared on Facebook when your visitor likes it, comments on it or sends it to friends via the Like, Comment and Send plugins provided by Facebook.
If you’re not familiar with Open Graph meta tags and their importance, I encourage you to watch Facebook’s video on the subject.
I also encourage you to consult the official Open Graph protocol page. There you’ll find out about all of the different meta tags, their uses, their functions and the advantages they give to your content.
Of course, if all that seems a bit too technical, don’t hesitate to hand over the reins to your agency or technical director.
But let’s continue so you can fully understand the role this tactic can play in your social media marketing and what it can mean for your business.
Here’s what you need to know.
#1: Understand the Anatomy of a Facebook Like Story
Once your Open Graph meta tags are integrated into your web page, you can control the way your content is displayed when it is shared using Facebook’s social plugins (Like, Comment, Send).You need to think about the different sections of the post that automatically appear on Facebook when someone likes content on your website.
For example, here’s what the optimal sharing of a blog article would look like:
Here are the different sections of the update that appear on Facebook after someone likes your article.
By customizing each Open Graph meta tag in your content, you control the way it’s displayed on Facebook when someone likes it!As you can see, the essential meta tags are the following:
- The title of a shared page (meta property=”og:title” content=”Your title”)
- Its description (meta property=”og:description” content=”Your description”)
- Its URL (meta property =”og:url” content=”Your URL”).
- The image illustrating this page (meta property =”og:image” content=”http://link_of_an_image.jpg”)
Here are the Open Graph meta tags needed for this technique.
When
the meta tags are entered correctly and a visitor clicks Like on your
web page, the content is automatically and properly displayed on
Facebook.You’ll find out how to use this technique below.
#2: How It Works
If a photo is worth a thousand words, then a video is worth a thousand photos! This is especially true in the case of a Facebook newsfeed story generated by a Like of a web page.Let’s compare the two Facebook Like Stories below:
The Facebook post on the top has a photo, and the post on the bottom has a video embedded in it that is ready to play.
Depending on how you use Facebook’s social share buttons and Open Graph meta tag code, the same Like can generate two different posts on Facebook: one with a single 200-pixel–wide picture, or one with the same picture but with an embedded video!These two posts correspond to the same action: a click of the Like button on a web page for a product—in this example, a vacation resort. But in the first case, the action displays a 200-pixel–wide image. The second displays, within that same image, a Play button for a video. As you can guess, viewers are more inclined to click on that image if it displays a video Play button.
This is the primary difference between these two posts, but it doesn’t stop there.
You see, the simple act of clicking on the Play button immediately shows a video, without having to leave the post. As a savvy marketer, you’ll know how to use this to your advantage to market your business.
This technique makes it very easy for marketers to have a useful product video appear inside the Facebook update about liked content. With the right content mix, this can be a strong marketing strategy.
Click
on the Play icon located on the picture and you will automatically
watch a video showcasing the product that you liked: a vacation resort.
For
a vacation resort, a one-minute video highlighting all of the
destination’s attractions has a larger impact than a 200-pixel–wide
image.But a tactic like this is not just for vacation resorts. It can be very useful for a number of products.
In the case of a blog, you can use this tactic to enrich Facebook posts when a person likes one of your articles.
For example, if you have video tutorials introducing the functions of your products or showing them in action, you can use these videos to highlight products related to the content in your blog articles.
How this works.
Here’s an example of how I used this.
Each time a reader likes this blog article, it automatically shares a video tutorial explaining how to manage Facebook Page admin roles with the aid of a Facebook Page management software tool.
This way, you have the best of both worlds: interesting content + relevant product promotion.
What makes this tactic so effective is that the Like automatically shares the video in Facebook, not only in the newsfeed:
Are you interested in doing this on your website? Here’s how to set it up.Here’s an example of how I used this.
- I wrote an article introducing the different page administrator roles created by Facebook, discussing their advantages and limitations.
- I created a video tutorial demonstrating how AgoraPulse offers richer admin role management features than the ones offered by Facebook.
This is how the update appears in Facebook when someone likes my article published on my website.
It’s easy to increase the value of a blog article by attaching a video. This makes your content much more attractive.Each time a reader likes this blog article, it automatically shares a video tutorial explaining how to manage Facebook Page admin roles with the aid of a Facebook Page management software tool.
This way, you have the best of both worlds: interesting content + relevant product promotion.
What makes this tactic so effective is that the Like automatically shares the video in Facebook, not only in the newsfeed:
Newsfeed before the click.
But also the ticker:
The ticker view.
And even on the personal timeline of the author:
The profile view.
Do you want to see this in action for yourself? It’s easy. Simply go to this blog article, click Like and then go to your Facebook profile to see the result.#3: Use a Plugin to Add the Meta Tags
It’s easy to get each click of the Like button on your website to automatically share and display a video on Facebook. You just need to add two additional Open Graph meta tags after the existing tags in the code of your page.As you’ve seen above, the minimum necessary meta tags are the following:
meta property=”og:title” content=”Your title”Simply add these two meta tags:
meta property=”og:description” content=”Your description”
meta property =”og:url” content=”Your URL”
meta property =”og:image” content=”http://link_of_an_image.jpg”
meta property=”og:video” content=”http://link_of_your_video” /So, how do you do all this? It depends on your situation:
meta property=”og:video:type” content=”application/x-shockwave-flash” /
- If your site was created by an independent contractor and you don’t have access to the source code, you need to ask the contractor to integrate the meta tags.
- If you created your site with WordPress, you can customize the Open Graph meta tags of your pages (and of each blog article) yourself using specific plugins.
Each of these three plugins lets you easily add the meta tags you need to share your videos with each Like on the pages of your site or blog.
Specific WordPress plugins will allow you to personalize the Open Graph meta tags for each page or blog article.
The only field you really need to fill in is the video link. Facebook will take care of the size and video type.#4: Where to Host Your Videos and How to Share YouTube Videos
To display a video on the web, it has to be hosted somewhere on the web. You’ll be in one of these two situations: either you host the video file on your own servers, or you use a self-service video hosting service such as YouTube.1. If you host the video on your own servers, you must host the file in the .SWF format. Be careful not to host the file in .FLV or any other traditional video format, as the video player that works with Facebook will not read it.
Then you simply need to set the Open Graph meta tag value as the URL of the .SWF file that you previously put online.
Insert the link to your self-hosted .SWF video file here if you use the Like Button plugin for WordPress, for example.
2. If you prefer to use YouTube to host your videos, you’ll need to follow these steps:- In a web browser, navigate to the YouTube page with your video.
- In the URL, identify the YouTube ID of your video. This is the series of letters and numbers found between the “=” and the “&” symbols of the URL. In the following case, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlQasgOjaxU&feature=plcp, the ID of the video is “dlQasgOjaxU“.
- Insert this ID into the following URL: http://youtube.googleapis.com/v/[yourID]Once you have your new URL format, insert it in your browser to test it out. If the URL is right, the video should be displayed full screen (and fit your entire browser window).
- Add this URL to your Open Graph meta tags and you’re all set!Insert the link to your YouTube-hosted video here if you use the Social Graph Protocol Plugin, for example.
#5: Track the Statistics of Your YouTube Videos
If you’ve opted for hosting your videos on YouTube (something I strongly recommend), you’ll also have a clear advantage with access to your YouTube statistics.You’ll be able to see the number of views your video has on Facebook!
The good news is that YouTube offers an impressive amount of statistical data on your videos, including details about the sources for views when videos are embedded on third-party sites like Facebook. This is great to evaluate the effectiveness of one source versus another.
The bad news is that the source statistics of a view are complicated to find on YouTube. To make it easy for you to find, here’s a short screencast:
And there you have it! I hope you’re inspired to use this technique to come up with creative campaigns and make the most of the potential visibility offered by Facebook!
Thank you so much for providing these valuable information. I’m looking forward to the next time that I get to come to your blog.
ReplyDeleteYou'll basically receive the up-dates from the individual who you happen to be following and the person will not receive any update of yours, whereas when you're a friend the two of you will get updates of each others posts and can exchange thoughts and events effortlessly. buy facebook follows
ReplyDeleteYou can acquire USA Facebook Likes on extremely pocket pleasant prices. buy usa facebook fans
ReplyDeleteTo encourage more users to download your applications on the Application store is not simple. It bores, lengthy, and often also futile. As a developer, you do not have direct power to change or produce app testimonials. paid app store reviews
ReplyDeleteNo longer delaying to get famed today. Buy Facebook Followers as a strategy to gain status and authority online in a small span. facebook followers
ReplyDeleteHave you been hunting for valid YouTube subscribers? Forget your fears, we shall diligently help you to buy YouTube subscribers. bu youtube subscribers for channel
ReplyDeleteHere you could constantly choose services that entail genuine UNITED STATE Facebook Suches as for adding beauty into your facebook ID. buy facebook likes usa
ReplyDeleteTo find a greater exposure for your facebook account, Persons expend bucks to Buy Facebook Followers to very easily obtain exposure online. facebook followers service
ReplyDeleteLifetime Replacement is something that you rarely find, any time you Buy facebook reviews. Solitary a few excellent agencies give this. buy facebook fanpage ratings
ReplyDelete