Your Checklist For Running Facebook/Twitter Contests

by Jennifer Dancy on Mar 29, 2012
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Social media is a great tool that allows you to interact and engage with your customer bases. Even better, using platforms like Facebook and Twitter to run contests or promotions is a highly effective way to establish your brand, reward your customers, generate sales, and build an ongoing relationship with your larger network. This means that if you’re not running contests already (or not running them correctly), you may get left behind.

Why You Should Run Contests

If you have been thinking about running a contest or promotion but haven’t done one yet, now is the time. Since Facebook and Twitter are the most socially used media platforms, we would recommend starting there. Facebook has 845 million monthly active users, and Twitter has over 100 million. But more specifically, Facebook reaches about 44 percent of all Internet users on a daily basis and Twitter reaches about 8.6 percent of all Internet users daily, according to web analytics company Alexa.com. What does this mean for you? That means you have the attention of a lot of people, each and every day. By using social media to send out promotions, you not only get to interact in a meaningful way (by offering them something they want and encouraging participation), you will likely gain new fans — it’s the best of both worlds.

Running a simple enter-to-win contest, offering discounts to those who promote to friends, or showing off your sense of humor by encouraging creative submissions are all great ways to interact with your customers. However, before you plan to run the promotion, verify that it complies with both Facebook and Twitter contest guidelines. Use these checklists to ensure you are following the rules for every promotion.

Contest Checklist for Facebook

Facebook emphasizes that it is up to you to ensure any contest or promotion you are running is legal, in addition to meeting the following guidelines:

  • Promotions must to be run though Apps on Facebook.com, either on a Canvas Page or an app on a Page Tab.
  • Each entrant must release Facebook of any liability.
  • You must acknowledge that the contest it is no way associated with Facebook.
  • Participants must know and acknowledge that they any information given for the contest is given to your business, not Facebook.
  • Facebook’s tools can’t be used for the contest, meaning you cannot encourage participants to enter by “liking” a page or using check-in. You also can’t require them to use FB features to be eligible (e.g., no requesting photo uploads, likes, wall posts). And the like button may not be used as a voting mechanism.
  • The contest must have its own registration or entry form.
  • You can’t notify winners through Facebook.
  • Ads can’t imply that Facebook endorses or partners in any way.

Contest Checklist for Twitter

Twitter also has its own specifications regarding contests and promotions, including:

  • Verify that the contest or promotion follows all laws and regulations.
  • Discourage users from creating multiple accounts to enter the contest more than once — your account can be suspended if you encourage this.
  • Don’t ask for retweets for contest eligibility. Posting the same tweet repeatedly is against Twitter’s rules, and can result in followers being filtered out of the Twitter search.
  • Use current and relevant hashtag topics (not #contest or #companyname)—this can also violate Twitter rules.

As long as your contest complies with these specific rules, then you can get started. Remember, make the contests creative and fun to draw more people in. Maybe encourage them to submit photos, videos, or essays that include your product in use. Remember: the more engaging the contest, the better the results will be.

Do you run contests or promotions on your social networks? Tell us how they work for you in the comments below.

  • http://www.nitrotek.co.uk/rc-cars/1-10-rtr-nitro-cars.html joedsivie

    Facebook and twitter contest held on the internet are good to get more fan following. There are lots of people are getting involving it. 

  • http://twitter.com/BagsUnlimited1 Bags Unlimited

    Great article!

  • http://www.ribbun.com/ Vikas Singal

    Jennifer, Thanks for the check list. Its seems easy to follow and doable .

  • http://www.brickmarketing.com/ Nick Stamoulis

    Contest in social media can work well, but you need to be careful.  Contests can attract the wrong audience.  They may just want to win something, but aren’t truly engaged with your brand.  Quality followers that may actually convert are worth more long term than followers that just want to enter a contest and win something for free.  

  • http://interactwive.com/ Thomas Buck

    For Twitter contests, it is also of vital importance that you ask entrants to @mention your Twitter account, rather than relying on a #hashtag alone. This is because Twitter’s search pages don’t always give you 100% of the search results, whereas the page that lists your mentions *does* return everything.

  • http://www.paulmillard.com/ Paul Millard

    Great way of building a list.
    Been running contests for months and have built up a sizeable list of prospects.

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    I totally agree
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    thanks for the advice

  • http://twitter.com/LynnSerafinn Lynn Serafinn

    Agree 10000% with this comment! People sometimes think that offering a ‘glossy’ prize like an iPad can help propel the contest, but then the contest becomes all about the prize and not about the brand. Offer a prize that is relevant to the brand and you are far more likely to attract the right audience. Give me 2000 relevant leads to 20,000 random ones any day.

  • http://www.winterolympics2014.org/ Benly Denver

    Great advice, but I think it can cost me alot maintaining contest with such poor audience.

  • http://www.youtube-converter.us/ James Pearl

    I am glad to found such useful post. I really increased my knowledge after read your post which will be beneficial for me.

  • http://www.youtube-converter.us/ James Pearl

    I really impressed about the quality of the content. I really increased my knowledge after I read this.

  • http://www.Minecraftmods.org/ Janine Estore

    tweeter really impressive and how people are do social.

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