Facebook Fan Page, Group Page, Community Page or Places?

When you set up a page on Facebook, it can be quite confusing. Why does Facebook have 4 different types of pages?

For the purposes of authenticity, profiles on Facebook should represent real people and only real people. A person is only allowed to have one user profile on Facebook. But a single user can administer and become a fan of multiple pages, become an administrator or member of multiple groups and community pages and also claim an official Facebook places page for a business location and create Facebook deals.

Facebook Pages: Facebook (fan) pages enable official businesses, organizations, public figures, and other entities to create a public presence on Facebook. Although similar to personal profiles, Facebook pages are different because Facebook Pages are visible to everyone on the internet by default (unless only available to admins) and are indexed by Google. Any Facebook user can become a fan of these pages. After becoming a fan, they can receive updates in their Facebook news feed. Only the official representatives of a public figure, business or organization should create a Facebook Page. New page features allow you to use Facebook as a page instead of a user/profile. This allows you to like and post to other pages on Facebook as a page instead of a user.

Facebook Groups: Facebook Groups are dedicated to group discussion on topics of common interests. Facebook group pages can be made public, where anyone can join, closed or secret. And can require administrator approval for new members. Similar to Facebook fan pages, new posts by members are included in the news feeds of its members. Due to their security features, and size limitations (only groups under 5,000 members can send email blasts), Facebook Groups are set up for more personal interaction. When you post something as a group administrator, it appears to be coming from you and is attached to your personal profile. Note: Facebook does not currently allow custom apps and landing pages for groups.

Both Groups and Pages allow you to create related Events, which show up under the users’ Request (and later in the upcoming events page on the sidebar of their dashboard if they’ve RSVPed). Neither have any added functionality beyond the generally available Facebook Events application.

If someone posts spam or unwanted comments on your Group or your Page, you have to remove it manually, and you can also remove/ban specific members.

Community Pages: If you want to set up an unofficial Facebook page for a general topic that’s more ambiguous, something like “I love pickles” or “ races in Detroit ”, a Facebook community page is a good option. If a page becomes popular enough, administration will be handed over to the Facebook community. In other words, Community Pages become a whole lot like a wiki once they reach a certain threshold.

Facebook Places: brings location-based check-in functionality to mobile users for you business’s location. Places can only be claimed by official representatives. Verifying a Place claim requires uploading some kind of official document. Once you’ve claimed your place your can set up location-based deals for your business. Such as check is three times to receive a special offer. Here is a great blog post on Facebook Places by Basil C. Puglisi.

It should be noted you can have a page, places page and group for the same business, but beware you are dispersing fans to multiple which can complicate your marketing efforts and separate your audience. However, taking advantage of each of the page type features can be beneficial.

Custom Apps and Pages

Facebook pages and community pages can have custom apps and landing pages (formerly tabs) such as fan gated offers, group deals, contests, games and other custom branded pages. Groups cannot have custom apps/pages. Facebook pages, groups and community pages all have similar wall updates, posts, photo and video content features that appear in the news feed.

Managing Permissions

Many organizations are concerned about profanity and unapproved posts appearing on their page. Manage permissions settings allows you to allow users to post updates and links, upload photos and videos to your wall or not. Moderation blocklist allows you to block certain keywords you don’t want to appear in posts such as competitor keywords or other terms. And there is an automatic profanity blocklist that you can set to none, medium or strong. Page administrators can delete comments made on posts and you can receive email notifications when a users comment on your posts. The whole purpose of creating a page on Facebook is for engagement and the like and comment features for posts are the same for all page types.

If you found this post helpful or have questions not mentioned here, please leave a comment.

More Facebook resources:

NEW! The Ultimate Guide to Facebook Marketing
Facebook Pages vs Facebook Groups: What’s the Difference?
Facebook Introduces Community Pages
A Field Guide to Using Facebook Places
How to Set Up A Deal for Your Facebook Place
Facebook Groups – A Walkthrough of Group Email, Docs, Chat, and More
How The New Facebook “Places” Feature Can Be Used As A Marketing Tool

Why Mobile Marketing Matters Right Now

Source: radianteventtechnology.com Mobile Video Activation

Mobile devices are always on and accessed everywhere. Portability makes mobile more personal and unlike any other form of media. There is an opportunity right now for your brand or business to get ahead and not get left behind.

Facts on mobile’s growth:

  • IDC reported that smartphones outsold PCs for the first time ever in Q4 2010.
  • Mobile paid search impressions increased 238% from January 2010 to January 2011 compared to only 13% growth in computer based search.
  • M-Commerce is predicted to reach US $119 billion in 2015.
  • Over 300,000 mobile apps have been developed in three years. Apps have been downloaded 10.9 billion times.
  • Morgan Stanley predicts mobile will be bigger than desktop internet in 5 years.


As mobile devices become more sophisticated and easier to use, mobile search has become the starting point for consumers on the go. Mobile search and mobile web are a good entry point for marketers just getting started with mobile campaigns. In 2011, Forrester predicts that marketers will take the training wheels off mobile programs and start investing in cohesive mobile marketing strategies.

From SMS ads to location-based check-in deals and mobile bar codes, mobile marketing opportunities require new creative and new thinking on how to best use them. The biggest challenge is understanding how these mobile marketing opportunities are best integrated with other mediums and overall marketing strategies.

Unlimited mobile marketing possibilities:

  • Mobile Web
  • Mobile search
  • SMS (text messaging)
  • Mobile advertising (banner, interstitial, video)
  • Mobile apps
  • Location-based
  • Mobile bar codes (QR)
  • Mobile commerce & shopping


The more you integrate your mobile and wireless marketing efforts into the overall marketing mix, the better your results.

  • Event sponsorship activation (photo blogging, offers, polling, lead generation)
  • Real-time loyalty
  • Promotions and games

What’s your plan to integrate mobile into your overall marketing strategy?

Google’s Mobile Advertising Right Now:

More on mobile marketing:
Are ad agencies holding up mobile advertising?
When Mobile Eats The Internet’s Lunch
Making Mobile Work for Your Brand: Five Expert Tips (free AdvertisingAge registration required)
How to create a mobile marketing strategy map