Strength In Business

Do You Really Need All Those Facebook Apps on Your Phone?


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Battery vampires, data

gatherers, addiction boosters – these are some of the commonalities of today’s
social media apps. Does this also apply to the big family of Facebook apps? The
final decision as to whether you need or want to have all of them installed on
your phone is totally up to you.

A recent Pew Research Center study (Fall 2019) found that 70% of Americans are unaware that Instagram and WhatsApp are part of the Facebook group.

Just a quick recap:

Facebook acquired Instagram in April 2012 for $1 billion. (Source: TechCrunch)

Two years later, in early 2014, Facebook acquired the messaging service WhatsApp for $19 billion. (Source: Forbes)

Yet seven years later, the

vast majority of people continue to be clueless about the fact that these two
major apps, which they use on a daily basis, are part of Mark Zuckerberg’s
imperium. This is absolutely mind-boggling.

Facebook Apps You Might Use

Facebook holds a decent

collection of various apps. Some of them have been disabled like for example Facebook Groups, whereas others
continue to be updated and improved on an ongoing basis.

Here are some of the most

common Facebook apps:

  • Facebook
(Facebook Lite)
  • Messenger
  • (Messenger Lite)
  • Pages Manager
  • Facebook Ads
  • Manager
  • Facebook
  • Analytics
  • Workplace by
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • WhatsApp
  • Facebook

    is basically the parent app. You can scroll through posts, watch videos,
    interact with your friends and see whether there’s an interesting event nearby
    you might want to attend. If you have a lower end phone with less data or you
    prefer a lighter version with fewer features, you might want to try Facebook Lite.

    The next one on the list is

    the standard Facebook Messenger app
    that also comes with a ‘Lite’ version. This is where you can text your friends,
    make phone and video calls for free or interact with a business.

    If you’re an admin of

    several Facebook Pages, you will most likely use Pages Manager to easily manage and switch between pages, check
    different page notifications, interact with followers and even respond to
    messages.

    For those of you in the

    advertising business, the Facebook Ads
    Manager will certainly be one of your most ‘intimate’ companion apps as it
    allows you to create new ads, track ad performance, manage ad spend and get a
    glimpse into analytics. If you’re often on the road and need to take a deeper
    dive into analytics so that you can have more in-depth knowledge on specific
    ads and be able to make better decisions, Facebook
    Analytics will come handy.

    Workplace by Facebook is an app suited for larger businesses and global

    organizations with a lot of staff. It’s basically an Intranet, an internal
    social network that enables employees to collaborate and communicate with one
    another. So if you’re a solopreneur or a small business with a handful of
    employees, the likelihood of you using AKA benefiting from this app will be
    little to none.

    The photo and video sharing

    social media service Instagram has
    become one of the most popular apps. Although it works as a separate entity and
    doesn’t carry the Facebook name, the app still belongs to the overall Facebook
    ecosystem. The very same criteria apply to the world’s most popular messenger
    service WhatsApp. The app runs under
    the Facebook hood, allowing people to text, make calls, send photos and videos,
    and interact in groups for free.

    Which one of these apps do I use?

    Before I share some tips and

    recommendations, let me tell you which Facebook apps I use.

    If you’re not a first time visitor or reader of my blogs, you know that I’m an avid advertiser on Facebook and Instagram. Therefore, the main Facebook app that I use is Ads Manager. Along with it, I use two more apps: Pages Manager and Instagram. That’s it.

    What Facebook Apps Do You Benefit
    Most From?

    Which and how many Facebook

    apps you should use is a very personal and individualized decision as it
    depends on preferences, life circumstances, smartphone capacity, and many other
    factors. Therefore, there’s no ‘one-fits-all’ answer.

    If you value time

    tremendously just like I do AND you don’t subscribe to the current stigma that
    you have to be available all the time and answer to questions 24-7/ 365, then
    you might want to go with a minimalistic approach similar to what I’ve
    mentioned above.

    Although I run a lot of ads and consult with clients worldwide who advertise across Facebook’s platforms, I prefer to use the desktop version of the Ads Manager and Analytics. Especially when it comes to analytics, I very much value a larger screen. Even if I have periods where I spend vast amounts of time travelling, I stick to the desktop version and only have the Ads Manager app installed on my phone.

    For those of you who need to

    respond to messages but aren’t near a desktop and are looking for alternatives
    to the Messenger app, know that you can accomplish a pretty decent job from
    within the Pages Manager, too.

    Furthermore, if you don’t

    want to totally give up on the main Facebook app, you can add the Facebook site
    to your phone’s home screen. This is basically a shortcut, a bookmark from your
    browser. Although the Facebook icon looks like an actual app, it won’t be
    listed on your web app page. You’ll only be able to access it from your home
    screen. Occasionally you might be asked to log in again.

    An interesting decision

    remains whether to use Instagram or not on your mobile. As the desktop version
    isn’t particularly user-friendly thus pushing you towards either using the
    original app or some 3rd party tools, you might want to keep the app
    until there’s a better solution presented.

    Now, what to do with

    WhatsApp? So many people are addicted to it and yet, you’re well advised to sit
    down and assess whether you really need the app or not. You might want to look
    into other private messaging services if you don’t want all your data to be
    ‘centralized’ and ‘stored’ by one big blue guardian in Silicon Valley.

    All these apps are designed

    to be amazing attention seekers and keepers. They can easily ‘mutate’ into time
    wasters if you let them control you.

    Facebook apps along with all

    other major social network services are fantastic tools that enable us to run
    our businesses more smoothly, share our message with the world across multiple
    channels and interact with clients from all over the world – in most cases for
    free.

    Yes, most of them are large

    and permission-hungry apps but remember:

    You’re the master.

    You’re the one who invited

    these apps to the party by installing them on your phone.

    If you don’t discipline yourself to using them

    appropriately, they will take control over your life. And it doesn’t matter
    whether these apps come from Facebook or another provider.

    The post Do You Really Need All Those Facebook Apps on Your Phone? appeared first on StrengthInBusiness.

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    Strength In BusinessBy Krisz Rokk

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