Following on Facebook but Sent Friend Request

Why does it say Following on Facebook but Sent Friend Request? Updated 2023

For a quick summary, the three types of relationships between two entities on Facebook are friendship, following and fans. Friendship takes place between two personal profiles. Follow-up takes place between two personal profiles. Fans are personal profiles that are associated with business pages

There are other ways you can interact with people on Facebook outside of this relationship For example, you can join other people in a group and you don't have to be in any of the above relationships with anyone in the group to do so. You can also join Messenger chat. You can search for people and view their profiles without engaging with them, although if you have them you are subject to privacy setting restrictions.

Why does it say Following on Facebook but Sent Friend Request?
Why does it say Following on Facebook but Sent Friend Request?


Facebook fans

Fans are the relationship between a personal user and a business. When a personal user prefers a business page - or any other type of page - they basically subscribe to a content feed. The Brands page does not see individual user posts, although they do get a lot of information about the user added to their aggregate analysis. It is a one-sided relationship in terms of content; All content flows from the page to the profile. This includes both organic posts and paid posts.


Like a fan page

I’m not going to go into too much detail about these here, as the post is going to focus on interpersonal relationships instead. Since fan relationships are the core of business interactions on Facebook, there are plenty of posts written about it across the web, so feel free to check them out instead.


Followed by Facebook

A follow on Facebook is an interesting relationship, because it is probably one of the least known relationships. For many, it was like a fan relationship or following Twitter. It fulfills a role for Facebook as a one-way relationship, and less intense relationship for individual users. This is probably the least valuable type of relationship, although it is beneficial for certain types of users.


Facebook follow button

One reason to follow is the least visible type of relationship because it is not enabled by default. For users with strict privacy settings, they need to apply the following to their profile to enable it. To do this, you need to click on the drop-down arrow at the top right of Facebook and click on Settings. In the Settings menu, click the Public Posts section in the left column. From there, you can choose one of two settings.


Friends means only people who are friendly with you can follow you.

Universal means that anyone can follow you, whether they are friends with you or not.

You can also change other settings about your public posts You can change who can comment on your post, to limit it to friends, friends of friends or the general public. You can change who gets notifications and whose notifications you get You can change who is allowed to like or comment on your profile. You can set the comment ranking, to have a "top comment" section in your post instead of the usual chronological sorting.


So what's a follow up? This allows you to view your posts without having to approve a two-way relationship with those who follow you. If person A wants to see person B's posts, they can follow person B. A will see B's posts, but will not see any comments or likes from B A, assuming they are approved. If B wants to see what A posts, they can follow A, or they can start a friendship. There is not much difference between the two except what is allowed through the privacy settings.


Facebook follower settings

Follow-up is also instant. When A follows B, B's approval is not required. This is in contrast to a friendship request, which must be submitted by one party and approved by the other party before it can take place.


Follow-up is subject to Azranc just like any Facebook relationship. The person doing the following will see follower posts on their feed depending on their engagement level, preferably above the brand but generally below friends. Specifications will vary up and down depending on how many followers, likes and otherwise followers are involved.


When you consider everything, a follow is a pretty ideal relationship for many online forums. The automatic reciprocal nature of friendships on Facebook is strange, when most other social networks and virtually every non-social site work on a one-sided basis.


So who wants to use following? These are most commonly used by personal users who do not want to create pages for themselves. Someone like Facebook viral famed George Taki has a long established page. However, many other people choose to use profiles instead of pages for many reasons. For example:


A journalist can’t think of himself as enough to create a brand page for their own name; Their own personal profile is enough. People can still follow it and they don't need the advanced features of a page

A CEO can own four different businesses, each with its own page. Instead of managing a page and a profile for their own name, they only manage things through their personal profile, which has admin rights for pages representing their business.

A novice writer looking for popularity and fame may not be eligible for a Facebook page because they are not significant people, especially if they have not published much other than contributions from a few magazines. They can build reputation through a profile and make potential conversions on a subsequent page.

Occasionally, Facebook will determine if you are using a Facebook profile in such a way that they are considered exclusive to the pages, such as a business. Facebook doesn't like people running businesses outside of their profiles, so they will log in and temporarily lock the profile and force them to create a page. It doesn't get rid of the profile, but it does copy the followers on the page, to make sure the conversion is smooth.


There are several good reasons to disable the ability to follow your profile and use a page to build your brand presence.


Due to privacy concerns you may want to lock down your personal profile to the extreme, allowing only a select few. It's hard to build a reputation like this, so it can be valuable to separate your brand personality and your personal profile.

You do a lot of your work under a pen name and want to keep your personal name separate from your pen name, so you create a page for pen names and keep your personal profile separate.

You don't want to deal with the friend request spam that comes with being a high profile personal user, so you instruct people to follow your page, where you don't have to confirm anything.

You want to create a social media team for you to manage some of your presence. Pages have group functionality and page role; Not in a personal profile, and you'll need to provide your password.

Something about your business may offend your personal friends, or something you want to hide For example, those who write adult fiction or erotica may not want to share it with their friends and family and thus create a page for their professional life apart from their personal life.

One thing you may notice is that the followers are basically Facebook fan relationships for personal profiles. There is a reason for this, and the reason is that Facebook wants to increase the audience and encourage people to become significant people, even if they are not yet eligible for verification or page. It keeps them close to the site so they can take a page later when it becomes available, and start spending money on ads, among other things.


Facebook friends

The third and final type of relationship on Facebook is the traditional mutual friendship on which the site is based. When you're friends with someone, you see their posts in your feed and they see your posts in their posts. How often, as always, is subject to EdgeRank. Friends weigh more than followers or brands, and thus will appear for most of the user's feed. However, you can only see a fraction of your friends' posts, so you are not necessarily going to see everything from all your friends.

Friendship, as mentioned above, is a close relationship. In order to befriend someone, one of you has to submit a friendship request, and the other has to accept it.

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