I've been trying very hard to solve this issue for the last days, but I really can't get through. I've found this question many times on this forum, but none of the solutions presented here solved my problem because they have been posted some years ago and Facebook is updating the way to solve a given issue very often. My facebook javascript SDK to check if a user likes my page is as follows:
The FB.init works and also the FB.getLoginStatus, where response['status'] is really 'connected'. But my FB.api does not work. The alert(response.error.message); line returns the following error: "(#10) This endpoint requires the 'manage_pages' permission or the 'Page Public Content Access' feature. Refer to -permissions#manage-pages and -PAGES_ACCESS for details.". I've been checking the manuals from Facebook for developers, but they are very incomplete, at least the ones in Portuguese (I am Brasilian). I'm really sick of trying to get this working by myself, so I'm looking for a help from the users of this forum.
How To Check Who Likes A Facebook Page
Download File
https://8crysunpstinro.blogspot.com/?xhl=2wXfIk
The /page-id/likes endpoint returns likes of a Page (for example, other Pages liked by the Page), NOT users who like your Page. And for getting that data, you need to own the Page, and you need to authorize with the manage_pages permission.
There is no way to get a list of Users who like your Page, the only reliable way to check if a specific User likes a Page is by authorizing that User with the user_likes permission. After that, you can use the /me/likes endpoint to get liked Pages. Although, you would need to get the permission reviewed by Facebook, and you would need a very good reason to use the permission.
The above script is the script that is called from the URL set in the Canvas URL in the "App on Facebook" section of the App's settings. The facebookLikeUs.html page is simply a page asking them to click "Like" to continue. If I'm in a situation that I want them to be redirected back into a website that requires the Facebook like I simply replace the // Wo0t! section with something like this:
Facebook insights already provides lots of useful analytics around how your Facebook page is performing, but looking at the sources of where your page likes and unlikes came from is particularly useful when planning your social media strategy.
The main Insights page serves as a handy dashboard to view big picture trends on your page. Using the date selector at the top, you can change the date range to view today, yesterday, the last 7 days, or the last 28 days. You can also click any post in the list to view that post on your page, along with its comments and likes.
Facebook specifically works to limit the distribution of clickbait, engagement bait, and deceptive landing pages, so trying to manipulate the algorithm with these strategies will only work against you. Buying likes can also reduce your distribution.
Today, you can see the Facebook app on every phone. The Facebook audience is spending hours and hours on it. You can check your timeline to see what your friends and pages share on their accounts. You can like different posts and photos shared by your friends and business pages that you follow on Facebook. But, how to see posts you liked on Facebook.
You can sort your activity log by clicking on story activity, page likes, following, added friends, videos searched, videos watched, search history, group searched, your comments, likes and reactions, and group posts.
Thank you for sharing this.
I have one very confusing question, the page shows I have 400 likes, and 420 followers, but when I enter the [setting page]-[people and other pages]. I got a list of people who likes my page with 400 people, but if I check people who follow my page, just 20 people, but why my page shows I have 420 followers, why the list only has 20 people. This is really confusing.
Hello Aimee Castenell,
Karola Karlson is right facebook does not disclose the exact names of the people who have engaged with your Like campaign but you have one option Click on the facebook page setting>people and page,
By contrast, fake likes can come from anywhere. Bots can find a Facebook like box on your website and like you through it. Running Facebook ads will get you fake likes. Buying ultra-cheap likes will most likely get you fakes as well. Clickfarm workers are even encouraged to organically like pages just to further hide their coordinated activity.
You might be wondering if there is a way to see who likes your Facebook page at this moment. The short answer is, yes, it is 100% possible, we are going to show you how in this Facebook page tutorial.
Page Impressions on Facebook is the sum of every possible impression related with your page. Not only does this include all the post impressions, but also impressions from people visiting your page, checking-in to your page, seeing your page tagged in other posts, seeing your page recommended in the News Feed. Impressions are non-unique, meaning if 1 person visits your page on 3 separate occasions, the page impressions will be increased by 3.
An even better way to get your friends to like your page is to private message them a personal request. We had a contest last year to see who in our office could get the most likes on our company's page. I pulled out all the stops after one of my co-workers dropped the gauntlet and said there was no way I could beat her. So I put my thinking cap on and crafted a personal message to my friends. I personalized each private message with their name and kept it short and sweet. I would sometimes put a single line about our connection or ask them a question so they would follow up with me. It was highly effective and got me more likes than any of the other methods. Another way I presented an invitation was through an image with a message in it. I unabashedly used my children to elicit support for my personal campaign. I had my kids pose on the steps of my home with signs that implied they were asking people to like our company page on their dad's behalf. Anytime you can leverage the power of cute kids or pets, I say, "Why not?"
In order to get access to more people, most businesses and organizations are having to experiment with the paid ad platform Facebook offers. You can do "Like" campaigns, but a better, more effective approach to getting likes is to find out what content has had the best unpaid response and engagement. Put some money behind that content and target people geographically that could actually become customers. Once you boost that content, implement the strategy we discussed in the previous section. Follow-up with every like, reaction, share, and comment. Invite people to like your page. You can get some serious results from combining a paid strategy with the follow up process for post engagement.
Using that PC Magazine page linked above as an example, you can see along the sidebar that the number of people who like the page and the number of people who follow it are different. They have 852,309 likes but only 842,617 followers as of this writing.
First of all, there is no way to see either the likes list or the followers list for a page you do not own. You can see the number of both, as I demonstrated with the PC Magazine link up above, but you cannot click on those numbers to see more information. The audience of a page is available as a targeting option in advertising, but you cannot pull a list of the people who follow or like that page. That means this is not a piece of data you can use for competitive intelligence.
So, if your main goal is to get store sales, you can run a conversion ad and still increase Facebook likes to your page. To learn more about Facebook advertising, check out this Facebook ads questions video.
I am having a difficult time with a Public Figure tagging my business page. I have an important post that they need to tag me in in the coming week or so and I need to figure out how to get it to work. We tried everything imaginable last night for a smaller post. I updated my URL and she tried tagging me a few different ways but no luck. Any advice? (
www.facebook.com/danielle.blewitt.photography)
0aad45d008