Are you looking a multiple personal facebook acounts for your business?

Buying personal Facebook accounts for your marketing strategy?

 

Why Personal Accounts "Work" (and How to Replicate It Safely)

 

Personal accounts often feel more relatable and can organically reach friends or niche groups, but this can be replicated legally:

  • Leverage your single personal account (the one tied to your real identity) to:

    • Share business page posts to your timeline or in relevant Facebook Groups (without spamming).

    • Use Facebook Stories to tag your business page or products.

    • Engage with local buy/sell groups as your authentic self (e.g., “Check out my shop for more!”).

  • Avoid creating fake accounts—instead, encourage loyal customers to follow your business page and share your posts organically.


2. Strengthen Your Business Page’s Organic Reach

 

If your business page isn’t driving enough traffic on its own, optimize it to work harder for you:

  • SEO for Facebook:

    • Use keywords in your page name, description, and posts (e.g., “Best Vintage Furniture in [City]”).

    • Add location tags to attract local buyers.

  • Post Consistently: Share a mix of listings, customer testimonials, and behind-the-scenes content.

  • Engage Actively: Reply to comments and messages within 15 minutes to boost Facebook’s “responsive” ranking.


3. Ads That Competitors Can’t Spy On (or Steal)

 

Run ads through your business page but keep them under the radar:

  • Use “Dark Posts” (Unpublished Posts):

    • Create ads via Ads Manager that don’t appear on your page’s timeline, so competitors won’t see them unless targeted.

  • Exclude Competitors:

    • Upload a list of competitor emails/usernames to exclude them from your ad audiences.

  • Rotate Creatives Frequently:

    • Change ad visuals, copy, and offers weekly to stay unpredictable.

  • Use Engagement Custom Audiences:

    • Retarget users who’ve interacted with your page or website (competitors likely aren’t in this group).


4. Collaborate Instead of Compete

 

  • Partner with Influencers or Micro-Influencers:

    • Have them share your business page/products to their audience (e.g., “Check out my favorite local shop!”).

  • Cross-Promote in Groups:

    • Join niche Facebook Groups as your business page (if allowed) and contribute value before promoting.


5. Direct Traffic Outside Facebook

 

Reduce reliance on Facebook’s algorithm by building owned audiences:

  • Email/SMS Lists:

    • Offer discounts for signing up (e.g., “10% off when you join our newsletter”).

  • QR Codes:

    • Add QR codes linking to your business page on product packaging or receipts.

  • Cross-Platform Links:

    • Add your Facebook Shop URL to Instagram, TikTok, or WhatsApp bios.


6. Competitor-Proof Your Strategy

 

  • Private Offers for Repeat Customers:

    • Use Facebook Messenger to send exclusive deals to loyal buyers, bypassing public posts.

  • Unique Bundles/Pre-Orders:

    • Sell limited-time bundles or pre-orders that competitors can’t replicate quickly.

  • Focus on a Niche:

    • Specialize in a subcategory (e.g., “Handmade Leather Journals”) to dominate a smaller audience.


7. If You Must Use Multiple Accounts...

 

If you still rely on personal accounts temporarily:

  • Use a Business Asset Partner:

    • Add trusted friends/family as “Partners” to your business page via Meta Business Suite, so they can share posts legally from their personal accounts.

  • Stay Under the Radar:

    • Avoid identical posts across accounts, use unique IP addresses, and never link accounts.


Key Takeaway

 

The long-term goal is to centralize trust and traffic on your business page while using your real personal account and other compliant tactics to amplify reach. This builds a sustainable brand, improves customer trust, and avoids the stress of policy violations. Competitors can’t spy on what they can’t see—focus on dark posts, retargeting, and owned audiences to stay ahead. 🔒