• This detailed article tells you how to install and use this powerful plugin.
    #1: Install the Facebook Plugin on Your Blog

    From inside your WordPress admin dashboard, go to the Plugin section and search for “Facebook.” The Facebook plugin for WordPress should appear at the top of the search results.

    Search for the word “Facebook” and the right plugin will be the first to appear in the search results.

    After clicking “Install Now,” you’ll need to activate the plugin.

    After installing the plugin, you’ll have to activate it before you can proceed.

    You already said that.

    WordPress will guide you through the necessary steps. The next step will be to create your own Facebook application. Don’t be afraid, this does not require a single line of code and is a pretty easy process. Yeah, right.

    #2: Create Your Very Own Facebook Application

    In order to benefit from your newly installed Facebook plugin for WordPress, you need to create your own Facebook application.

    To begin, go to Facebook apps and click on the Create New App button on the top right of your screen.

    You’ll then be prompted to enter your App Name and your App Namespace. Choose that name wisely. In most cases, the best choice is to name your app after your blog’s name, as it will publish on Facebook with this name.

    You can use spaces in your App Name (such as “My Blog”) but not in the App Namespace field (which should read something like “myblog”).

    Choose your App Name wisely. Ideally, it should match your blog’s name. Why?

    Repition does no harm.

    Once your name is defined, you’ll be taken to the setup screen. Enter your contact email, your blog’s domain, its exact URL in the “Website with Facebook Login” field and its mobile URL if you have a mobile version.

    Just fill in six fields and you’re done. Creating a Facebook app is really easy. Hey, you only mentioned four fields. Where are the other two?

    Also, don’t forget to personalize your app logo and icon. They’ll both be visible with all of your blog publications on Facebook. Don’t miss this opportunity to increase your brand’s visibility!

    Personalize your app logo and icon. They are also both required to have your Open Graph actions approved. Both required or optional?

    These are the only options you need to set in the basic options menu. Don’t forget to click Save changes! To click save changes. Yeah, right.

    Once these basic options are defined, you need to set the Open Graph actions for your app.

    Just click on the Open Graph menu of your app settings. Just.

    Making your app Open Graph–compatible is one click away. It’s an important step if you want to fully leverage the viral power of Facebook.

    The next step is to define your action type and your object type. In our case, the action type will be “publish” and the object type will be an “article.”

    Add the action verb and object, click on Get Started, and you will then be prompted to submit your Open Graph action for approval. Note that you’ll need to publish an action first. Justaminit. What do you have to do first, and what do you have to do second?

    Now that you’ve successfully created your Facebook application, you need to copy your App ID, App Secret key and App Namespace.

    Then go back to your WordPress admin, access the Facebook plugin setup screen and paste this information into the corresponding fields.

    Paste your App ID, App Secret key and Namespace into your WordPress plugin.

    Dejá vù.

    Save changes, and voila! Your Facebook plugin is now fully installed. You can adjust the settings to benefit from its numerous social features.

    At least I get my French accents right.

    #3: Set up Your Facebook Plugin for WordPress

    Once installed, you can access all of the settings of your Facebook plugin. In a single interface, you can configure:

    • Social Publishing features
    • The position and design of the Like buttons on your articles
    • The Subscribe button to allow readers to follow article authors
    • The Send button to ease the one-on-one sharing of your articles by Facebook messages or even emails
    • Comments to let your readers comment on your articles with their Facebook identity

    The Recommendations bar to display personalized article recommendations based on your readers’ friends’ favorites and activate your very own social reader
    All of the plugin’s options are accessible in one dashboard.

    You can choose to activate all of these options or only the ones you want. It’s your call!

    Activate Social Publishing.

    The Social Publishing feature is a great way to promote your latest blog post to your friends, your Facebook page or even another Facebook page where the audience may be interested in your article.

    Your first option is to activate the automatic publication of your blog post to its author’s Timeline.

    Then, you can also automatically publish each article to one of your Facebook pages. This is limited to one Facebook page only.

    If you manage several Facebook pages, select the one associated with your blog.

    Each of the articles published on your blog will then be automatically published on the Facebook page you selected. When publishing your article, you’ll have the option to add a personalized description.

    This is how your blog articles will appear when they are automatically published by the plugin. Note that they will be published “via” your Facebook App Name. First “via”.

    More importantly, if you have activated the Social Publisher, when editing your article you’ll have the option to mention friends or Facebook pages.

    Just enter the name of your friends and Facebook pages you want to share your article with and Facebook will auto-suggest the appropriate friends and pages.

    Mentioning a friend or a Facebook page when publishing an article is easy. It will help you create some initial visibility for your post.

    This sharing option is a great way to give some serious visibility to your article as soon as it publishes. Share your article both with friends interested in your article and relevant pages with audiences interested in what you have to say. If you do this wisely, you’ll increase your number of blog readers.

    Your article will appear on your selected friends’ and Facebook page’s Timelines just as if you had shared it directly on their Timelines. Another big time-saver!

    The update will show that it was made “via” your App Name. This is why you need to choose your name wisely. Why you have to write “via” in perverted commas is never explained.

    When you mention friends using the plugin, your article will be automatically published on their Timeline. How do you “mention” “friends” “using” the “plugin”? Huh?

    Finally, the friends and pages mentioned at the time you published your article will appear on the blog at the top or bottom of your article, depending on the option you selected in the settings. Wow!?!

    Friends and pages mentioned by the plugin in connection with an article will appear on the article itself.

    “On the article”. Check your own articles, mate!

    Add Like buttons and set their position and design.

    Adding a Like button on your articles is as easy as a walk in the park. You can even add a Send button, choose to show likers’ faces (which is recommended), choose the name of the action (Like or Recommend), select its position on the top or bottom (or both) of your article (recommended) and the width allocated to the button.

    You can do all of this in the easy process below.

    Select the options for your Like button. Don’t forget to select “Show faces”—it will double your click rate!

    Add a Subscribe button to allow readers to follow the articles’ authors.

    You can add a Subscribe button on each of your articles. This will allow your readers to subscribe to the authors’ public updates on Facebook. This is a great way to give your authors additional visibility on Facebook in recognition for their contribution.

    Allowing your readers to subscribe to the authors of your blog will help them increase their personal audience.

    You can adjust the Subscribe button settings to have it appear where appropriate. Usually it’s at the bottom of your article, where the author’s profile is displayed.

    It’s also recommended to select the “Show faces” option and select a font in line with the one used on your blog.
    show faces option

    The Subscribe button should be located close to the author’s name or bio, usually at the bottom of the article. How does it get there?

    Add the Send button to ease one-on-one sharing of your articles.

    The Send button is a convenient way to allow your readers to send your articles to a specific Facebook friend (or several friends) or by email.

    The Send button option can send your articles as a Facebook message or by email.

    Am I repeating myself, or is someone else doing it for me?

    You can choose where to display a Send button, its color scheme and the font you want to use for it.

    The Send button option is not necessary if you have configured your Like button to also contain a Send button. Tell me How.

    Note that if you set the Like button option to also include a Send button, you won’t need to select this Send option a second time. Unlike nearly everything you say.

    Activate Comments to let your readers easily comment from within their Facebook accounts.

    Facebook Comments are the best way to add a social commenting feature to your blog. This will make it easy for your readers to comment on your content using their Facebook accounts AND this will dramatically reduce spam and trolls as commenters use their real identities. What? The real identities of the trolls?

    This also boosts your content’s visibility as each comment is published on your commenter’s Timeline.

    The Comments option is pretty straightforward—select the option, fill in the maximum number of comments to be displayed on one page, the width of your comment box—and that’s it; your comment plugin is up and running.

    Your comment plugin should have the same width as your articles. Which is where, smartass?

    Not only do you have a built-in commenting feature under each of your articles immediately…

    Facebook comments are a great way to prevent spam and increase exposure for your articles.

    …you also have the number of comments for each article updated in real time.

    The plugin will automatically show the number of comments for a given article on each view of the article (full view, list, featured).

    This Facebook Comment plugin offers great admin options, including some impressive moderation features.

    #4: Most Important!!!

    If the Facebook plugin fails to work as desired at this point, this is mainly due to users ignoring the Golden Rule, to shutthefuckup.

    Software design depends crucially on karma to make it work, and creating bad karma in the way of complaints about “This plugin does not work” and general whingeing on the Support Forum is highly counterproductive. Not only do you ensure that your installation will not work, but that other users will also be negatively impacted.

    It is not even relevant if the plugin does not work for you. Who the hell are you anyway? Our bosses were impressed by the amount of time we took for what appears to be a simple task, and they were keen on following our presentation of how the plugin worked. At least up to the point where the Facebook app turned up, when their eyes glazed over with excitement. We figured that if we could get them past this point, any remaining doubts of whether the software actually worked would be moot.

    If you are unhappy about the plugin not working, you might consider the following: Write your own bloody plugin. Stop sponging off us. We’re not here to solve any of your problems, you know. We’ve got our own things to worry about.

    Don’t bother to complain to either Facebook or to WordPress. No one is at home.

    Parts 1-3 copied from: https://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/facebook-plugin-for-wordpress-guide/, accessed 22 Dec 2013.

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