Increase Your Facebook Presence
One issue many businesses have is increasing their Facebook presence. First, people think Facebook matters and it actually does, but it should only be used as one piece of your social media campaign. With that said, I hope to give some insight on how to grow a Facebook presence on the cheap. Yes, I will be breaking one of my cardinal rules in my advice and that means you may have to spend a few dollars. As my readers all know, I am one cheap bastard and I hate spending money on social media. My tips are geared around a frugal method on increasing your presence, but I will spend some of your money in this one as a potential option.
This was originally written as a short answer on a Facebook page to a friend of mine running for a city council seat. He wrote on his personal page that he only had 53 likes on his election page and that was out of his 200 or so friends. Actually, a 25% follow-back rate isn’t too bad for personal sharing only, but we need to look more into how to grow a Facebook presence quickly and easily.
The Meetup
Meet up with a couple friends at McDonald’s (or anywhere with wifi). Since this was written for a political campaign, I suggested McDonald’s as a way to be seen. Politicians need people to see them doing stuff in public and McDonald’s has so many people that come there on a regular basis that it just makes sense. Also, with the age of the people who sit around McDonald’s in the morning, it seems to have your potential voters right there. If you want to do this for a business, do so in a private place if you wish so as to keep this a secret. Have them bring their laptops and make them temporary administrators. This will allow them, like anyone, to invite people to your page. The difference is, when people get the invite it will say “Bob Smith wants you to like his page.” It becomes a personal endorsement from them and their friends view it as being an active partner in your campaign. Their friends will have a greater likelihood of liking your page than the standard invite from friends that says, “Bob Smith invited you to like a page.” There is a psychological component at play here and the only real difference is “his” verses “a” and that difference personalizes it for potential future likes.
Spend Money
Here it goes. If you spend about $25 or so, you can use the “promote my page” feature to get likes faster. Once you hit 50 likes, you can promote your page on Facebook. This is an advertising method that increases growth quickly. I recently saw one Facebook page spend $50 and added over 1,500 likes in five days after setting a maximum daily limit of $10. A month later, her engagement with her audience was phenomenal and she said it was well worth the money. You can target your advertisement to various groups and locations based on age and geography.
Pictures Sell
Okay, you wont actually make money with pictures. It’s more of a figure of speech, but pictures work. Add pictures and infographics slowly. An infographic is a picture with words that explains or inspires the viewer, like my Thirsty Thursday Tip of the Week. By Facebook default, hey stay in the newsfeed of fans longer than just a text update and increase the odds of your friends sharing your page’s post.
Share Bomb
We all know about the Ron (now Rand is doing it) Paul Money Bomb. They try and get supporters to get a little bit of money to them in a twenty-four hour period for usually a specific need. The share bomb is the same idea. Message your friends, arrange a share-bomb day, and have everyone share it at different set times throughout the day. Pick Tuesday to Thursday from 9am to about 6pm. Those are the most viewed times for Facebook and the times and days with the greatest interaction with Facebook users. Convince your friends to share a special post with their friends. Have them add it to groups, other pages, and with all of their friends on their Facebook walls.
A Share Deal
In a society, we all need to work with other people. Business campaigns are no different. You need others to promote for you and help raise awareness of your product and maybe you can help them. Mutual shares for each other’s pages can be beneficial for you and for them. They endorse your product and you endorse theirs. No, this shouldn’t be done with businesses that are in direct competition for the same product and customer, but take a supplier for instance. If you have a restaurant selling a specific brand of hot dog, work with the supplier to promote your Facebook page as you promote their product line. It can give you some new ideas on products to carry and they can get some new likes for you. This is the same for political campaigns; work with businesses. You need businesses to support you if you are a pro-business candidate. Some who publically back you will be willing to share your page on their site and you can talk up their business on yours. It’s good business for them to get new likes and it’s good for you to get that kind of exposure.
I really hope this gave some good insight for businesses and politicians to use in the future. This is not an exhaustive list of ways to increase your Facebook presence, but it’s a damn good start.
For more pieces like this please go to TheMichaelBeebe.com.

Picture a young Michael Beebe, fresh out of La Porte High School in ’93, diving headfirst into the world of hospitality with a busboy gig at the old La Porte Holiday Inn. That hustle led him to an Associate of Science from Purdue-North Central in ’95 and a Bachelor’s in Hospitality Management from Purdue-Calumet in ’97 (those schools are now merged into Purdue-Northwest, by the way). Michael’s early career was a whirlwind—running a 140-room hotel in Indianapolis, where he learned the ins and outs of the industry but realized it wasn’t his true calling. What did spark his passion? Teaching. He found himself thriving in front of students at Ivy Tech Community College and Lake Michigan College, sharing the art and science of hospitality management. Oh, and he also moonlighted at WIMS radio in Michigan City, juggling both on-air and behind-the-scenes roles with his signature high energy.
Politics? That’s been Michael’s sidekick since he was 18, registering to vote with a fire in his belly to make a difference. He threw his hat in the ring for La Porte County Council in 2010, where he got a crash course in the power of social media marketing. Undeterred by not winning, he campaigned for Indiana’s General Assembly in 2012 and took another shot at the County Council in 2014 and 2016. Though he hasn’t clinched a seat yet, Michael’s relentless drive to serve shines through. Lately, he’s been pouring that energy into helping other candidates who champion personal liberty, amplifying their voices with his knack for strategy.
Here’s a twist: Michael once co-owned a tattoo shop, despite having no ink himself. As the business manager and marketing guru, he leaned hard into low-cost, social media-driven campaigns to put the shop on the map. That experience fueled his love for digital marketing, and now he spends his free time crafting websites and boosting businesses online—a true labor of love.
These days, Michael’s living the dream as an independent contracted transporter, crisscrossing the country while getting paid to soak up new places and cultures. When he’s not exploring, he’s parked somewhere scenic, laptop open, building his digital consulting company, Spark Plug Strategies, or penning his thoughts. He even wrote a few books.
Based in La Porte County, Indiana, Michael’s embraced a “decentralized laptop lifestyle,” blending work, travel, and passion projects into a life that’s as dynamic as he is.