8 Reasons Google Plus Is Better Than Facebook For Business



If you’re using social media for business purposes, the giant Facebook seems logical because there’s more people there. However, it turns out that Google Plus is actually a better tool for business users. Though Google hasn’t come near the following of Facebook (at least not yet), there are many distinct advantages of using Google Plus for business even now.


1. No Ads (Yet) - Facebook started out with no ads, but this went the way of the dodo when Mark Zuckerberg saw those ginormous dollar signs. Surely, Google Plus will eventually cash in with ads, too, but for now it’s blissfully free.


2. View More Posts - Facebook limits the number of posts you can see at once. While business accounts can view higher numbers of posts than personal users, Google Plus makes it easier to see all the posts at once. This makes it less likely you’ll miss an important post by a colleague or industry leader you’re interested in networking with.


3. Don't Need Permission To Follow Someone - It’s frustrating when you friend request someone on Facebook and you never get a reply. Are they not interested in connecting with you, or are they simply never online? With Google Plus, you can follow whomever you wish. If they see you and want to add you to a circle, all the better.


4. Meet More People - The nature of Facebook is to find people we already know about. Google Plus makes it much easier to find people you’d never know existed on Facebook. This feature has allowed people from around the world to conglomerate around their passions, such as cooking, writing, music, or film.


5. Google Hangouts and On Air - Of course, Google isn’t the only video chat out there, but its incorporation into the Google Plus platform makes it one of the easiest to use. Once you find people with whom you share interests, you can get to know them in a way almost impossible through Facebook feeds alone.


6. Circles - Perhaps the greatest feature of Google Plus for the business user is the concept of circles. This powerful tool allows you to post to your friends who love to cook, without bothering your business associates. Better yet, you can share white papers and articles with your business friends and leave your band members out. This lets you enjoy Google Plus for family, friends, and business associates without looking unprofessional or boring.


7. Unfriending Is Less Personal -  Unfriending someone on Facebook is the modern-day equivalent of exiling them to Elba. There’s a strong stigma attached, which can be particularly harmful to business relationships. With Google Plus, you can switch them to another circle or eliminate them from your circles entirely, and they’re never the wiser. This is the ideal solution to someone who’s posting controversial political or religious ideas that could damage your reputation. The beauty of having so many social networking sites to choose from is the ability to get one that works in your situation. For the business person, the obvious solution is Google Plus.


8. Rank/Relevancy - Quite possibly the most powerful reason is the ability to enhance your rank and relevancy from those that +1 your content in search results. Many overlook this advantage and while the social medium may not have taken hold (and may never take hold) with basic end-users, it still hold value to include in your overall digital/social strategy.


Like what you've read? Comment and let me know what else your interested in reading. I take comments VERY seriously and want to write about, well, what people want to read about in the digital space.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hmm. I can't say that I agree completely. I think Facebook is quickly becoming very competitive, particularly on search itself. I think Google+ is very over-hyped. But when you look under the hood-and closely at exactly what kind of numbers Goodle trumpets- it gets pretty clear that G+ is not really all that it is claimed to be. I do not yet even use google plus for business, and don't really plan to.

That said, I completely agree with you -- there are many social media options. Interestingly enough, they are all beginning to look more and more similiar. Take the recent update of Twitter. It looks like a Facebook clone. And I predict this "morphing" of popular social tools will continue. In the end, IMHO, this means that it is just not necessarily urgent to focus on any one of them. Choose three, maybe four, and really take care of them. my2c