Why Shares, Likes and Comments All Count in Facebook
If you have a Facebook Share or a Like button on your site, you will see a number alongside it which is âthe sum of:
- The number of likes of your URL
- The number of shares of your URL (this includes copy/pasting a link back to Facebook)
- The number of likes and comments on stories on Facebook about your URLâ
Thus the Facebook number you will most commonly see is the total for all interactions including likes, shares and comments. However, are total Facebook interactions a good indication of content resonance?
Many people have argued that Facebook shares are more powerful than âlikesâ and you should really just look at Facebook shares to see what content is resonating with people. From our research things are not quite so simple and there are benefits in looking at total Facebook interactions.
âLikesâ are the quick and easy way to share
According to Facebook âthe Like button is the quickest way for people to share content.â
The FB developer pages go on to say âA single click on the Like button will âlikeâ pieces of content on the web and share them on Facebook. You can also display a Share button next to the Like button to let people add a personal message and customize who they share with.â
Facebook also says to users that âa âLikeâ is a way to give positive feedback or to connect with things you care about on Facebook. You can like content that your friends post to give them feedback or like a Page that you want to connect with on Facebook.â
Do âlikesâ tell us anything about users and content resonance?
Some people argue that the likeâ is the âlazyâ option and means very little. It is quick and easy to âlikeâ something, unlike commenting or sharing where users need to spend some time writing about the post they are sharing. This is definitely true, shares are harder to earn. However, for many busy users this is the advantage of the âlikeâ button and it means they can share more content than they would otherwise.
A Marketo and Brian Carter study found that people were eight times as likely to âlikeâ as share or comment.
The degree to which people âlikeâ content was revealed in a Pew Research Center survey. The survey asked thousands of Americans about their social media sharing and found that 44% of Facebook users âlikedâ content posted by their friends at least once a day, with 29% did so several times per day.
A further separate study published by the National Academy of Sciences found that by analyzing the âlikesâ of 86,000 volunteers they could predict the characteristics of the person with incredible accuracy. They could predict whether someone was:
- white or African American with 95% accuracy
- male or female with 93% accuracy
- a gay male with 88% accuracy
They found they could also predict a personâs political leaning, Democrat or Republican, with 85% accuracy. This would appear to indicate quite strongly that people âlikeâ content that resonates with them.
Thus maybe, and I accept this goes against much conventional wisdom, the frequency and nature of âlikesâ is a more important indicator of content resonance than is often thought. However, letâs look at the argument for shares and why these may be a better indicator.
The argument for valuing Facebook Shares over âLikesâ
Marketers generally place a higher value on Facebook sharing than on âlikesâ according to this AdWeek article. The argument for the greater value of shares runs along the lines that sharing involves greater commitment and is more likely to mean content is shown in News Feeds.
The first argument about commitment is certainly true, as whilst a âlikeâ is frictionless, to share can require more effort, although there is now a âone clickâ option in Facebook to simply share with Friends without commenting, see image below.
However, to share wider you get a dialogue box which allows you to comment along with your share and to control the image that gets displayed with the share. You can also control where you share and who sees your share.
The second argument for shares is the potential for shared content to be seen by far more people. A share will for example show more clearly on your own profile page than a âlikeâ which comes under recent activity. However, it is unlikely many people will go to your personal profile page. What most people will see is their News Feed. It is claimed that the Edgerank algorithm, which determines what shows up in the News Feed, gives far more weight to âsharesâ than âlikesâ leading to more visibility for content shared than âlikedâ. However, whilst this may be the case, the appearance of articles in News Feed is a complex matter.
Facebook say:
âThe goal of News Feed is to show you the stories that matter most to you. To do this, we use ranking to order stories based on how interesting we believe they are to you: specifically, whom you tend to interact with, and what kinds of content you tend to like and comment on.â
Thus the Edgerank algorithm looks at many factors. Facebook is also constantly updating the algorithm and the control a user can exercise over what appears in a News Feed. For example, the following are two recent updates:
June 2015 â Time spent viewing stories is added as a factor
Facebook commented:
âWeâve discovered that if people spend significantly more time on a particular story in News Feed than the majority of other stories they look at, this is a good sign that content was relevant to them.â
July 2015 â Introduction of more user controls over news feeds
Facebook commented:
âTo help prioritize stories, and make sure you donât miss posts from particular friends and Pages, you can now select which friends and Pages you would like to see at the top of your News Feed.â
Facebookâs aim is to ensure what appears in a News Feed, other than sponsored paid content, is relevant to the user. This clearly takes into account many factors as we can see from above, including an individualâs privacy settings. Shares and likes are just one part of a more complex picture about what appears and where in News Feeds. As organic reach declines there is a view that to make sure your content is seen you really have to pay to play.
Shares may also be more valuable as they can be driven by different reasons to âlikesâ. The Marketo and Brian Carter study found that people share content to share tips and advice, to warn people, to pass on deals, to show they are part of a community and to entertain their friends with amusing or inspirational posts. âLikesâ may be used more, as Facebook indicate, to give positive feedback to people and things you care about.
I think there is another potential argument in support of shares over âlikesâ namely that shares are a little less easy to automate than âlikesâ. Whilst Facebook is constantly rooting out false accounts, âlikesâ may be slightly more at risk to exaggeration than shares through automation and non-human activity.
Do shares correlate higher with Google rankings?
Searchmetrics produce a respected report each year looking at the factors that distinguish well-placed sites from those with lower positions in the Google search results. We took a look at the 2014 report and its correlations for Facebook activities.
The report found, not surprisingly, that relevant, quality content ranks better on average, and is âidentifiable by properties such as a higher word-count and semantically comprehensive wording.â However, the report also looked in detail at the correlations of various factors with rankings.
The top ranking correlations from their latest survey are shown below. Please remember, as the reportâs authors are at pains to point out, that correlation does not mean causation.
I have highlighted the Facebook correlations which are of interest to us here. We can see that Facebook shares have a slightly higher correlation than comments or âlikesâ to Google rankings. However, we can also see that the correlation of total Facebook interactions; namely shares, likes and comments; is the same as that for Facebook shares. This does not mean that higher Facebook activity causes higher Google rankings but it does show that total Facebook interaction activity has the same correlation as Facebook shares.
Summary
There is little question that to share content on Facebook or to comment requires more time and commitment than to simply âlikeâ content. However, âlikesâ are an important social currency. As Facebook say a âlikeâ is the quickest way to share content and this results in much greater volumes of âlikesâ than shares which we can see from the Pew research. There is also value in the âlikeâ data to the extent it can accurately predict not only peopleâs characteristics and interests but the political nature of stories that resonate with them.
There will of course be times when it is useful to break down Facebook activity into shares, comments and likes. However, as a single indicator it appears that total Facebook interactions (the combined total of âlikesâ, shares and comments) provide a good indication of content resonance.
This article first appeared on www.business2community.com: http://goo.gl/wmgFiM.
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