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BREAKING: Facebook Announces New Subscribe Button

 

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This afternoon, Facebook announced the release of a brand new feature, the Subscribe Button for profile pages. Ultimately, the new feature enables Facebook to support and provide even more publicly available content, which is a huge stride for its position in the search market.

Up until now, users haven't had much control over what see in their News Feed. On a user-by-user basis, the Subscribe Buttons gives you the ability to choose whether you'd like to see all updates, most updates, or just important updates from another user.

3 Main Functions of the Subscribe Button

The Subscribe Button, which Facebook promises to start making available on users' profiles over the next few days, will allow you to:

1. Choose exactly what you can see from people in your News Feed. Facebook users can already view updates from their friends in their News Feed, but using the new button, users can now choose how much will get displayed. They will now have the option of seeing all of that particular friend's updates, most (the amount that they currently see) of their updates, or only important updates (e.g. just highlights like a new job change or a move). Furthermore, users can also choose how much of what type of content will get displayed, such as photos, games, or nothing at all.

subscribe button

2. Subscribe to people who aren't your friends. As long as the user enables the Subscribe Button on his/her profile, you can subscribe to view updates from those people in your News Feed as well. This is a bonus for political figures, journalists, artists, bloggers, etc. who don't want hoards of friends but do want the ability to spread their messages to others.

3. Allow others to subscribe to your updates. Conversely, you can enable the Subscribe Button on your own profile and start generating subscribers to your updates as well. This will allow you to share your updates and content with more than just your friends. You can get even more granular with it, too. If you've enabled subscribers, you can limit what the public can see compared to what your friends can see using Facebook's post-by-post sharing options (e.g. public vs. friends vs. custom). To enable the Subscribe Button on your own profile, visit Facebook's Subscription Page and click "Allow Subscribers."

public updates

Marketing Takeaway

With the new Subscribe Button getting rolled out to personal profiles, the availability of the new feature will mean more publicly available data on Facebook. In addition, as people start enabling the Subscribe Button for their own profiles and try to attract subscribers, Facebook's search function will become substantially better. Up until now, Facebook's search functionality has been fairly limiting and not very useful due to the lack of publicly available content. This will soon change, making Facebook even more powerful from a search standpoint.

As a marketer, make sure that when you're promoting your business content on Facebook, you make it publicly available. This will ensure it can be indexed by Facebook search, thus expanding the reach of the content you share on Facebook.

Additionally, Facebook's introduction of the Subscribe Button will likely have future implications for business pages as well as Facebook's advertising platform. Marketers should keep an eye on Facebook's future announcements to stay on top of how new features can potentially affect their Facebook marketing efforts.

What do you think about Facebook's new Subscribe Button? Will you add it to your profile?

intro-to-facebook

Posted by Pamela Vaughan on Wed, Sep 14, 2011 @ 01:55 PM

COMMENTS

Wow, this is going to be awesome for social media. But one thing to be careful of for personal accounts is internet safety.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 2:11 PM by Michael Fokken - Marketing Ideas


Giving consumers choice and control is always a good thing.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 2:30 PM by Chad Wiebesick


I'm curious if you subscribe to a non-friend's status updated and see an update in your news feed... what happens when you try to comment on that update? Can you comment? Does a message say no comments allowed as a non-friend?

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 2:35 PM by Dino


Dino: If you enable the Subscribe Button on your profile, you have the option of enabling comments or not. It's up to the user who has added the button.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 2:39 PM by Pamela Vaughan


Several concerns -- Internet safety and privacy are the main ones. But all of this "filtering" -- this means that there's something else brewing behind the scenes. If FB is the new Google -- how people find information -- how will restricting news feeds help marketers? Also strange that they would introduce this on profiles and not on pages (formerly fan pages.) Seems that having the option to subscribe to a feed would be a more desired thing on pages than profiles. And finally, how is this subscribe functionality ultimately going to impact marketers using FB? There are already ways for FB users to restrict FB ads. Now they can restrict what they see in their feeds. It will be interesting to see how this will all play out.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 2:41 PM by Kris Evenson


@Kris - I initially thought the same thing regarding "introduce this on profiles and not on pages", but then after further thought, and using a musician's fan page as an example - sometimes having to maintain a profile page AND a fan page can be a lot to manage. Some users never create a fan page, and just accept all friend requests, whether they mind the public viewing all their personal stuff or not, that's still a lot of friend requests to accept, and takes away from the "honor" of being an actual friend. Will definitely be interesting to see how things pan out.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 3:42 PM by Robert Sansom


@Robert -- Understand, but isn't the whole purpose of being able to "toggle" between your profile vs. page (e.g. "use Facebook as PAGE NAME) when issuing status updates to make this easier? I guess this toggling will only be applicable if you are managing a brand or company page (for example). Seems a little discriminatory toward brands and companies who may have multiple people admin-ing their pages. Those folks will have to still do the toggle back and forth.

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 5:25 PM by Kris Evenson


This is massive and a great move on facebooks part and I wanna thank you guys for bringing it to my attention

posted on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 at 8:22 PM by Albert F A Matthews


Yeah, but at this point there is a problem. 
Let's say a politician or a public figure wants to use it... he has probably already a fan page. They should give the opportunity to merge the fan page with the "subscribed to the personal profile" thing. And also call it "Like" and not Subscribe.

posted on Thursday, September 15, 2011 at 6:50 AM by Alessandro


FB are playing a very clever game here -- they are taking all the best bits of Google+ and incorporating them into their offering.  
 
Google+ on the other hand has been very slow to evolve over the last few months, with no significant new features.

posted on Thursday, September 15, 2011 at 3:14 PM by David @ theOnlyCog


Will they be having this for Business pages??

posted on Friday, September 16, 2011 at 6:27 PM by mick


Maybe I'm just dumb....but I can't get the subscribe to work on my fan page. Only on my personal page. Is that a limitation for the button?

posted on Wednesday, September 21, 2011 at 10:47 AM by Sandy Allnock


Sanday: The Subscribe button feature is only for personal profile pages. Essentially though, when a person likes your business page, they are subscribing and will see your updates in their news feed, which is why the Subscribe button would be pretty redundant for business pages.

posted on Wednesday, September 21, 2011 at 10:50 AM by Pamela Vaughan


Gotcha - I haven't had caffeine yet and was trying to peruse quickly - lol. Thanks! 

posted on Wednesday, September 21, 2011 at 11:00 AM by Sandy Allnock


I'm subscribed to several folks, Mark Zuckerberg, for example. Can Mark Z see my posts or "likes" in his ticker? I would think not, but I'm curious to know for certain. Thanks :)))

posted on Wednesday, October 05, 2011 at 8:16 PM by Lee


Comments have been closed for this article.