Over the last 2 months, I've driven well over 6,000 organic Facebook visits to my site.
It's not coming from a Facebook Page; it's coming from a Facebook Group.
Several months ago I started my own Group, Digital Marketing Questions — this week we hit 3,000 active, engaged, spam-free members.
In this post, I'm going to retrace my steps and tell you exactly how to build your own Facebook Group.
What are the benefits of building a Facebook Group?
Before I tell you how to build one, I quickly need to talk about why you should build one.
Facebook might not be "cool," but it's crazy effective
All the kids left Facebook years ago for Instagram (now Snapchat) and a number of businesses gave up on Facebook marketing efforts when "organic reach" plummeted.
Despite this, there are still hundreds of millions of users still on Facebook.
In fact, Mark Zuckerberg posted a status a couple of months ago stating that for the first time in the network's history, Facebook had over 1 billion active users in a single day.
Let that marinate for a second.
Facebook is a powerhouse that isn't going anywhere anytime soon — it's time to re-invest back into the network.
Group updates send notifications to members
Facebook pages and personal posts rely completely on the Newsfeed algorithm for organic exposure. Facebook Groups send users a notification whenever someone posts to the Group, thus driving traffic to each post.
On mobile as well:
Facebook gives users the option to silence these notifications. However, if your Group consistently adds value, they won't.
Groups have more organic "reach" than Pages
A while back I ran a test:
- My page had 660 likes; My Group had 660 members
- I took a link from my blog and tagged it with 2 different CIDs in the URL Builder
- I called tagged the first URL as "Group Test" and the second as "Page Test"
- I took both appended URLs and posted "Group Test" to my Group and "Page Test" to my Page at the exact same time
- Results: Group = 122 visits, Page = 8 visits
- That's over 15 times the traffic!
Owning a quality Group is a bargaining chip
Let's piggyback off the previous point for a second.
- When the Group had 660 members, we were driving 122 visits per post = 18% visit rate (CTR)
- A recent post when the Group had 2,700 members drove 600 visits = 22% visit rate (CTR)
With the ability to drive quality traffic with a single post, you've got a powerful value proposition. I do a ton of link outreach for clients — including the Group in my pitch has skyrocketed success rate.
I mean, which outreach email would you respond to?
Outreach email 1:
Hey [Editor's name],
I came across your post [insert URL] and really enjoyed it. I noticed you're linking out to some posts about [insert topic] and wanted to pitch you on my latest guide that fits in perfectly.
If interested, let me know and I can send you the URL to check out for yourself.
Outreach email 2:
Hey [Editor's name],
I came across your post [insert URL] and really enjoyed it. I noticed you're linking out to some posts about [insert topic] and wanted to pitch you on my latest guide that fits in perfectly.
If included, I'd be happy to share it with my active Facebook Group [insert link] that regularly drives over 600 visits every time I post.
Link building (and marketing, really) is about the exchange of value. When you've got a solid value proposition in exchange for the link, your acceptance rate goes through the roof.
Can you say... free content?!
Despite the lack of organic reach, Facebook Pages are still a tremendous marketing resource. However, you need invest time into creating content to be successful. This is a full-time job in itself which requires you (or someone else) to spend time managing it.
When properly managed, Facebook Groups run themselves because the content is crowd sourced from members.
All you need to do is stay active on threads and make sure you're keeping a close eye on spam.
How to build your own active Facebook Group
Hopefully I've convinced you about the benefits of building a quality Group. Now, let's talk about the how...
Step 1 – Create a Group
I'm not going to go into detail on how to create your Group because it's easier than setting up a Facebook Page.
I do want to talk about creating the context of your Group. In other words, what should your Group be about?
Unless you're a brand, don't make it about you.
Shopify has a number of helpful Groups geared towards customer support, marketing, general tips, etc. They're able to build communities based on their brand.
For those of us who aren't brands, we don't have that luxury.
In the grand scheme of things, I'm a nobody. If I would've made my Group "Ryan Stewart's Digital Mastermind", I wouldn't be writing this article right now because nobody would've joined.
Focus the context of your Group on the value it provides to members. I like to approach it like I would content strategy:
- If you own a coupon website, create a Group focused on exchanging couponing tips
- If you own a local bakery, create a Group about recipes, holiday treats, etc.
- If you own an oil-changing business, create a Group for motorheads
Facebook Groups shouldn't be approached with a conversion or direct marketing mindset. They work best when approached as a branding tool.
If you can create a valuable resource, your brand will grow with the Group by association.
Step 2 – Keep your Group active
Remember, Groups are communities—they need to be focused on what engages members. That means hold off on promoting yourself, your business, and links until you've earned the Group's trust.
How do you build trust? By delivering value.
Create native content for the Group
Some Facebook groups are just a feed of links to the admin's blog articles.
Don't do that.
Instead, create native content specifically for the group. Keep ALL the content and engagement within the Group, instead of trying to drive them to your latest post.
In fact, I went a full month without posting a link directly to my site.
Things to try:
- Polls
- Images
- Native video uploads
Make it obvious you're there to help them.
Do this well and when you do post a link to blog/promotion, people will trust you enough to click it.
Step 3 – Promote your Group
A Facebook Group can grow much faster than a Facebook Page (my Group grows 20x times faster than my Page). However, they don't grow on autopilot. They need a significant investment of time, energy, and resources to drive members.
The key to growing a Group (or anything, really) is making it a priority. If you foresee value in owning a Group, take it seriously by investing the necessary resources into growth.
Get influential people to join
First, let me say this...
DO NOT add people to the Group without their permission.
2 reasons:
- It's annoying.
- Facebook's algorithm is heavily based on engagement. If you add people who don't want to be there, they won't participate. If they don't participate, your Group's content will get poor engagement, i.e. poor visibility.
Instead, target influencers in their space and share their content.
Tag them in the post so they know you shared it.
They'll most likely join the Group on their own. This is a huge bonus for Group members and incentive for more to join.
Promote the Group on your site
You've got your Facebook Page on your website, right? Why not add (or replace) this with a link to your Facebook Group?
If your website does significant traffic, this is a great way to grow your Group.
Data shows the standard logos in the header attract little to no attention. Instead, I added a link to my Group in the bottom right-hand corner of my footer and tagged the link with a tracking CID.
Over 3 months, it drove 346 clicks. Not a massive amount, but every little bit helps.
Create "gated content" to entice people to join
It's not uncommon to create a great piece of content to entice email opt ins (aka "gated content"). Instead of asking for emails, you can drive people to your Facebook group.
For example, I wrote a post about how to create an SEO proposal. I also took the time to create a free proposal template for visitors to download for their own use.
I hosted the proposal template within the "Files" section of the Group.
To download it, they had to join the Group. Of course, just creating content isn't enough, we've got to promote it as well.
I chose to use organic channels like Inbound.org, GrowthHackers, Warrior Forum, and a few others.
This was by far the most effective method I used, not only to gain members, but quality ones as well. Try and focus your promotion efforts in places where your target users are spending their time.
We want to focus more on building a quality, engaged member base as opposed to a massive, inactive one.
Facebook Ads are extremely effective
It took me some tinkering to figure out how to promote the Group with Facebook Ads.
You can't promote a Facebook Group the way you can with a Page.
Here's how to get around it:
- Write a post on your Facebook Page and drop a link to the Group
- Create a new Ad, select "Boost your posts"
- Select the post with a link to your Facebook Group
I started by targeting by remarketing list and then expanding to lookalike audiences after that was exhausted.
In honor of full transparency, exact results from the ads are difficult to track.
"Results" are calculated by post engagements, i.e. Page likes, comments, shares, etc. Not included in "results" are people who clicked through and joined the Group.
From my own calculations, the Group grew 300 members during the 1 week we were boosting the post — that's three times the organic growth rate.
Even though you can't directly track new members with analytics, Facebook ads are no doubt a valuable promotion tool.
Drive [indirect] traffic to it
I write a lot of guest posts. Within my posts I often link to my personal website.
That site has a big ol' call to action to join the Facebook Group:
This helps to strategically reach new audiences without directly promoting the group within the post.
You can also use guest posts to drive traffic to your post with "gated" content. Both tactics work well, but this one is slightly more direct.
Cross-promote with other Groups
If you're consistently adding new members, you can pitch other Group admins to exchange cross promotion posts. I've had good success using Facebook's internal search to find similar groups.
It takes a while to find spam-free Groups, but once you do it's just a matter of tracking down admins, adding them as friends, and sending them a quick pitch.
If you've got a different audience base, you can add tremendous value to each other by exposing your Groups to new audiences.
Step 4 – Keep your Group spam-free
The biggest knock against Facebook Groups is spam. A Group can turn into a discount Ray Ban marketplace overnight if not carefully watched by the admins.
It's your job to set and enforce the rules.
It starts with a strong Group description
Leave no room for guessing. If someone joins the Group and immediately promotes a link, they're banned, no questions asked. It's entirely too much work to give individual warnings to people.
Encourage Group members to flag spam if they see it — stand firm on your no spam rule.
Remind members of the rules from time to time
Some people are in a lot of Facebook groups. They don't always remember what they can or can't do in each group.
If you get an uptick in spam in your group, post a reminder about the rules. This has the added benefit of pulling the group together, since the members genuinely want a spam-free place for questions and discussion.
I got tired of repeatedly posted warnings so I created a video and pinned it to the top of the Group. Since doing that, we've seen a significant drop in spam posts.
Handle rules infractions via PM
Even established members of the group will occasionally break the rules. Usually it's because they forgot or weren't sure if something was okay to promote.
In those cases, delete the post, but also PM the offending member and let them know what happened.
Often the person will apologize and that's all you'll need to do. If they argue with you, just remember it's your group, not theirs. You get to decide who stays and who goes.
Occasionally let people know when you ban someone
When you ban someone from the Group, it's an opportunity to reinforce the pride people feel at being part of the "inner circle."
They get to stay, because they followed the rules. The other people broke the rules, so they got banned.
This also reminds people to report spam or rules infractions when they see them.
Moderate disputes by PM
Sometimes a passionate discussion devolves into an ugly argument. When that happens, PM to the parties involved and let them know it's not okay to have a big public fight in the Group.
Usually that will calm things down. If things got really nasty, you also have the option to just delete the entire thread.
Consider getting a full-time moderator
Finally, when your group gets big and active, you might not have time to properly moderate it.
That's the time to hire a moderator. Often you can find someone who's already active in the group, knows the rules and is willing to do it for free.
Bottom line — a Facebook Group can turn to spam quickly. Make sure you're prepared to invest some resources to make sure it stays clean over time.
Conclusion
The numbers don't lie — my Facebook Group is the strongest brand asset I have.
If you're looking to build an active, engaged community around the problems your business solves, I strongly suggest you look into creating one of your own.
I can totally vouch for Ryan's group. I'm in it and I enjoy it a ton since it has an immense value of information. If you guys haven't joined, please do so!
Great Post! Buidling Facebook groups can be very beneficial in communicating with like minded people and enhance your brand.
Agreed
Really great stuff here, Ryan! I especially liked the tip of gating your content within the group. Definitely going to use that one!
Another method I've used for promoting my Facebook group is by adding an invitation to join on my "thank you" page after someone signs up for my email list. (My copy tries to make it sound playful and exclusive. The headline reads, "You're in! Now join our covert operations." and under that, it reads, "Thanks for confirming your email! Expect to get some cool stuff from me soon. Meanwhile, the backdoor to our community is over at our private Facebook group... and you now have the key." Then I have a big CTA button that reads, "Unlock the private conversation!") That way, you get 'em in while you're hot... I've gotten a lot of group members this way!
I've also done Facebook ads, but slightly differently... First, I create an opt-in landing page specifically for the Facebook group (they have to enter their email before they get the link to the group). Then, I set up the campaign with the goal of "Website Conversions". That way, I collect email addresses at the same time, plus I can easily see my conversion stats.
Thanks again for the great post. I really enjoyed this!!
Mary
Hi Mary, I'm wondering if you could provide some more info on how you create the opt in landing page for the group? You're saying that users will need to subscribe to your mailing list by entering their email address before they can request membership to the group? Any info would be much appreciated!
Its really nice to read this article about building facebook groups. I would definitely try and start a group in my photography domain with your suggestions!
I am not convinced really.
For me Facegroup group are just that...groups for communication. If you got a communication-need within an excisting community without a forum/chat/etc, i'm sure you can give it a try.
Otherwise you would have to have either a huge website or a huge amount of spare resources to really make this effective. 6.000 organic referals...that's 1 properly designed pin on pinterest.
Personally I think Facebook really is a dead end. You can and will see results. They will just be more expensive and more time consuming than on any other marketing channel. If you know your audience is 30+ you will, however, have the chance to engage a tiny part of that audience via one additional channel. Certainly something to consider, but important...i dunno.
Me neither. This just gives data about people visiting your website, however there is no data on bounce rate or ROI. What are you to do with this massive visit?
Thanks in advance!
Best,
PopArt Studio
These are communities, not conversion channels. This is a community to help build my brand, fans and give back to the community. I'm not looking to sell (as CLEARLY stated) from my colleagues.
Thanks for a quick reply, Ryan.
It's probably my misconception of the meaning of the article, but the first sentence states completely the opposite of what you've just said. In other words, visits, not branding, was your aim.
I was just interested in what was the effect of this massive visit, that's all.
Best,
PopArt Studio
I think it all depends on the audience you are trying to reach and what you are trying to do (some ideal clients really enjoy playing FarmVille on Facebook still, while others have different hobbies on Pinterests). Either way, nice article Ryan.
I agree with you about the audience, and respect everyone's right for an opinion. :)
I can see why this wouldn't be a great marketing channel for you, but as Ryan said, it's about connections. As a single person business, I find that connections are HUGE, I have made friends with past clients, and gotten months of work from their referrals - I think that Ryan's point was to expand your network, while increasing visits to pertinent sites (maybe for SEO, maybe for future sales), all while being a part of an active and productive community.
Aside from the comments on pages like this, some dwindling subreddits, and my buddies from business school, I find it's difficult to connect with people who aren't trying to sell you something - as I think this post may have been about. How do you increase your knowledge and circle of connections?
Its really nice to read this article about building facebook groups. In early i have lots of doubts regarding FB group, now its clear, I would definitely bookmark this page and start a group in IT company domain with your suggestions!
Ryan,
Like you, I've found Facebook Groups to be one of the biggest, most valuable yet most underutilized assets in content marketing. The groups can help brands grow reach and audience, and make them more aware of potential holes in their marketing efforts.
Great job in breaking the process down for us, in addition to making it clear what the most important and most effective steps are.
RS
Nice work with this post. It's great to read about your success, and you have shared a few tips that could only come after being in the trenches with this.
A point to make about what you've written here, and I don't mean to be a sour grape, is that you've described the outcome of this work as site traffic. It would be useful (for everyone) to understand the benefit derived here, because (obviously) site traffic isn't a benchmark that ascribes value to a marketing vehicle like a Facebook group. Have you found the group traffic to be more valuable to your business? How is value measured? Etc. etc. I'd love to know...
Same happens in G+ with their groups too. If they are used correct way and keeping spam free they are shockingly effective.
Only drawback there is moderation, but with good moderation team with few members this will be fixed.
G+ can be even better, they grow much larger and have slightly better engagement. Howveer, the spam factor can be MUCH worse there.
I agree peter.. Even G+ groups can do worders if well managed!
Thanks for unleashing the Facebook Group secret for marketing
You're welcome John!
Hello Ryan Stewart…
Awesome Post here, Ryan I love this post for talked Facebook Group.
Ryan, one thing is you talked about Facebook Group invite but you know all people one by one in group invite and more time spend. Right?
Everybody Guys know you short cut method? Don’t worry.
Process: - First Open your Page Group.
Thank Ryan - this is a great article. I am in network marketing and run a lot of my "parties" and business through facebook groups using good solild engaging content, humorous and how to videos and photos. However, I an noticing a dramatic decline in who is actually aware of the posts that are happening in the group! Do you have any advice on this? Thanks!
I've been using page advertising for a couple of years now on a small budget just to promote events and certain posts, it took a while but I've got a somewhat decent strategy in terms of engagement and money spent.
On the screen shot of your ads manager, I see $5 daily, was it that ad alone that grew your members 300+ in one week?
I was looking for something like this.
Now I'll put into practice.
Thanks!
Hi Ryan.
Love your post.
Thing is…
I have tried and tried
But not been successful
At building a FB group.
I can get people to join.
But after that
They do not interact.
Anyways, like your post.
Will work some more
On building a group
After reading your post.
Regards.
I couldn't agree more. My group has nearly 10,000 members and all I do is give stuff away. People love to visit, they keep their notifications turned on, and group status updates are in their feed. Pages have become useless so groups took over
Great ideas Ryan. Google Plus groups were great but have taken a huge hit in engagement.
makes the test!
Ryan! This is awesome strategy! thank you https://www.mtasdemir.com
I'm thinking about do this kind of group for our Magazine https://quetediga.com but Ryan, how do you do with troll?
I have been creating a Facebook group for a client of mine at Teckle Digital. We only have a few members but around some of them are constantly contributing to the group.
We have yet to invest money into ads but its certainly on the to do list! Thanks for the information! :)
Great tips Ryan!
Interesting read. I'm a member of a few groups and am active on a handful. I am going to try this out for a new joint venture. Thanks!
I understand this and really want it to work for me. But comparing this with Facebook Page's likes(audience) which can increase buy Facebook ad campaigns, which is not possible for groups on Facebook.
I mean, to increase the members in a group is very hard.
Thank you for the insightful article.
If I own a local property management company do you suggest to call it:
"Property Management Questions" or
"Property Management <name of the city>"
We always have to remember that Social Media is networking not selling. And my favorite motto about Networking is "Givers Gain". period!
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Thanks Ryan! This was a great post.
I wanted to get advice on something I am struggling with. I have a wonderful Facebook group with over 1,000 members but it is not nearly as engaged as I would like it to be. Do you have any tips on getting people to post their questions and such? They are pretty quiet... And I have tried asking questions, posting my own photos, sharing first... anything else?
Thanks so much!
Marina
oh, good understanding. Really social media is intelligent enough to understand low value profiles. :)
On parallel side one should be equally active on business portals . like IndiaBizClub etc.
This is a very timely post because today I formed a FB group to answer questions. I feel like I am making a mistake because my method of promoting it is a sign up form linked to email automation which provides the link to the group. I'm thinking it is too many steps (not really for me but I'm used to steps:).
I read and skimmed the article a couple times and may have missed it <late at night learning> I know where your saying to get members but am not seeing the mechanism of getting their emails (or does that come later) or if there is just a direct link to the group.
I am new to this but encouraged my idea is supported by you...and the info on moderation was really helpful. I am trying to entice people by mentioning the need for moderators, interns, and potential work.
Anyone care to share if they send people to a 1 step funnel and follow up, or just a direct link and collect an email later? Thanks
OMG I'm famous!
Facebook is now common everywhere. Some of my friends also make a joke that it is about the end of the world without Facebook. However, I think that Facebook is such the place where people are connected and have a chance to do business, add friends, etc. So, we should not overdo this social network!
Very informative post Ryan, thank you! I made a hobby group - Vocalists - in the early days of Facebook without giving much thought and I've seen it organically grow as most content is just crowd sourced; but I think one of the main reasons I had a lot of people join this group was also because of the fact that this was at a time when FB was just getting popular & I was merely just an early adopter.
So I think it is also important to be strategic in choosing a name & theme for your group if it is for a business/brand as these days there seems to be a lot of 'generic' groups and it might be difficult to offer unique content!
Wow, that's amazing !!! Thank you Ryan
I'll get going now!
Hi, could you suggest a facebook page name for my business?
my company is a dealer for a brand, lets say for brand "A". in my region (B), (C) is my city. a competitor took the name ACB in facebook. what will you suggest for me to counter it? as the word "official" or "Authorized Dealer" is not usable.
Thanks,
Hoe
Thanks Ryan, great post. Facebook groups can also be a great way to transition some people who want more in depth help into a paid monthly membership community.
Another way around promoting the group through an ad is to create a URL on your website that redirects to your group. For instance I have https://karynwithay.com/group which redirects to my Facebook group and I use that URL in a clicks to website ad. It allows you to create the ad without having to run it as a boosted post type.
You could also track it more through using one of your trackable links you spoke of above (that sounds cool I need to try it!)
Thanks again!
Karyn
Nice looking FB group you got there. Tuff stuff Ryan :)
I spent $200 on Facebook advertising and sell 12 ebooks and I also spent $350 on adwords with great results finally I spent $100 on warriors and results were shocking, means nothing is Permanent online, FB's groups are good to get few likes but not for sales at least every second some one posts and new arrives old disappears, groups are great for associates but not for random visitors I guess
Wow this is golden (like most of your stuff Ryan).
Very good post on groups and its given me some great idea - I'm going to try and find all my and clients old groups (before pages were introduced) and see if they are still active. Starting new groups and building communities from scratch again can be quite daunting.
twitter.com I think that it is no longer active is Foursquare? when I visited and saw the error
First off thanks Ryan excellent article. We have recently discovered the power of Facebook and have been using it to drive traffic to our site with much success and have increased the amount of sign-ups On our real estate site. I have been wanting to create a Facebook group for sometime but I don't want it to be cheesy, nonproductive and of little value. I agree we need a full-time admin to eventually manage the page after it is off the ground to ensure that it is successful and offers value to members. The next problem is what would be the best subject for a real estate group any ideas would be welcome from the group thank you respectfully James
Great post! FB has been off my radar for a while but I'm going to give this technic a try.
Thanks for the great article Ryan! I am a member of your facebook group and love what you do!
Interesting read. I drive a lot of traffic from my Facebook page, but haven't really tried building any groups. Might need to experiment with it for my new site https://www.listsforall.com/ Thanks for the article.
Thank you for this article, Ryan. I have a small Facebook Group that I am growing and as a result of your article, I have added a few things to my rules. I believe that email is the #1 priority for me...but I'm really trying to grow my Facebook group as #2. Most people in my Group come from my list though I do promote it on social media. Excellent article. Thank you.
I've also added FACEBOOK GROUP to my site's navigation and footers!
https://markstruczewski.com/
Good job building that group!
I think Facebook is the worst network for groups/communities. I profiled several a couple months ago. Most have low engagement, lots of spam. Searching for SEO/content marketing/social media groups on Facebook is tough as well. Even finding blog posts with lits of groups is often a pain. Hopefully the network can do better with groups.
Great post!! Congratulations
So far, I've used my facebook account just for personal stuff and I'm still deciding whether to use it now for my personal brand or to create a new account from scratch (each one has its own advantages and disadvantages). In any case, as soon as I set up my online in Facebook, I will follow the recommendations of this post: seems pretty useful.
Thanks for the post Ryan, very interesting. As far as I understand your end goal of using Facebook is to drive traffic to your website (putting it in simple terms), which is what 90% of businesses in the end use Facebook for. My experience, however, is very similar to yours showing that no matter how well targeted the content is, when a Facebook user lands on your website the bounce rate is too high (usually around 70-80%, which is also what we see from your screenshot above). Since the goal is not to just drive traffic (because we know there are simpler ways to do it), but to drive engaged users to your website, this method fails to do that as well. So far I have not seen successful methods of using Facebook for generating engaged users to your website.
It would be interested to see such cases of Facebook traffic with low site bounce rate. If you have some, please share :)
Looking forward and thanks again!
Ani
Good read, the behavior you describe when being in-charge of a Facebook group can be applied to any community based website.
I don't like getting notifications every time someone posts in a Facebook group, so personally I would never (willingly) join one.
If your goal is to create a community, I would think Slack would be a better option.
This is depend on your content/post which is you are sharing in fb page or communities.
Yes, Facebook group is the second way to increase social media activity,engagement and promotion.My Facebook also in good reputation.by the way thanks to shared awesome information on this topic .many online user not aware about this.
Very useful article, although i do not 100% agree with all your conclusions.
I run a facebook page that i built with little ad and i am posting useful content once a week (and sometimes once in two weeks)
The page has 3000 fans and every article has a mean reach of 2500 people (some articles reach 5000~7000 people, numbers that i consider quite good.
I think facebook users do not even chech their messages from groups, mainly because of group abuse (entering members without asking, spam links e. t. c.).
But after seeing your results, i will give it a try.
Thanks for the article and have a happy new year.
Really interesting post, thank you. What do you think about opening a closed group just for people who are already your clients? As a way to keep them closer to your company...
Anyway that you can provide value, go for it.
Awesome Work Ryan Stewart, Sounds Fantastic and I would definitely try to work with Groups this way!
Thanks Vishal
Great tutorial.
Very good article Ryan. The trouble is start to grow a group...
Thanks for the article it's very interesting. I would like to create a Fb Group but I dont hace yet the right name. This is a pending task!
Well, I think groups are way better for engagement. Me personally I comment and interact with people in various groups rather than pages. However I never tried the tactic for my own benefit!
Viral Facebook Group depend on your topic & what matter you are posting on it.
Thanks Ryan. 2016 is going to be a game of war between Social Media Marketing and Video Marketing Platforms - Facebook Vs YouTube for branding, promotion, lead generation and more.
Best!
Maria
https://www.tweakabit.com/