The Facebook Group Strategy That Gets Businesses Reaching Out to You

The Facebook Group Strategy That Gets Businesses Reaching Out to You

Inbound beats outbound every time

There's a version of this business where you spend your days cold-calling dentists and landscapers, leaving voicemails, sending follow-up emails, and hoping someone picks up. A lot of operators are living that version right now.

And then there's a version where you post something in a Facebook group and wake up to 25 businesses who reached out to you.

Something I've been seeing operators talk about lately is using local Facebook business groups as a primary prospecting channel — and the results are striking when they do it right. Not just posting and hoping. There's a specific way to do it that changes the response rate completely.

The one thing most operators skip: photos

A tactic that keeps coming up in EDDM circles is simple but easy to overlook. When you post in a Facebook business group, include actual photos of your mailer.

Not a description of it. Not a link to your website. Photos — ideally two kinds:

  • A sample of the printed card itself (filled with real ads, or a mockup showing how it looks)
  • A photo of bundled mailers — the stacked trays of postcards ready to go to the post office

What happens without photos is that businesses read your post and try to mentally picture what you're selling. Most of them don't. They scroll past.

What happens with photos is different. They can see the physical product. They can see it's real, that it goes out in volume, and that it looks professional. The "I don't really understand what I'm buying" objection disappears instantly.

Operators who are filling cards fast tend to have this in common — they make the product visible before the conversation even starts.

You're not selling. You're connecting.

The other piece is framing. Facebook business groups are communities. Members are protective of them. If your post reads like a sales pitch, it gets ignored at best, reported at worst.

What's working right now for a lot of people in this space is positioning themselves as a community connector, not a marketer. You're organizing something local — a shared postcard that goes to 5,000 homes in the area, with a limited number of local businesses represented. You're not trying to sell anyone anything. You're letting people know the opportunity exists.

That shift in framing changes how people read your post. And adding a family photo — just you and your family, nothing sales-y — reinforces it. People buy from people they feel connected to. A family photo does quiet but real work.

What to do with the people who respond

Here's where operators leave money on the table. They post, get a wave of "interested!" comments or DMs, and then fumble the follow-through.

I've been hearing from operators who found that email follow-ups after a Facebook interaction mostly went cold. What's working better is switching to phone after the Facebook touchpoint. The FB post creates the warm introduction — it takes away the cold-call awkwardness because they already know what you're about. The call just moves it to a close.

One operator described their workflow: post in local business Facebook groups, identify the businesses who engage or comment, then call them directly. "Email really didn't work for me," they said. "But combining the Facebook groups with follow-up calls seems to be doing the trick."

The sequence matters. Facebook first (broad reach, visual, community framing), phone second (personal, closes). Neither works as well alone.

Where to find the groups

Search Facebook for your city name or county name plus terms like "business," "entrepreneurs," "local businesses," or "small business owners." Most mid-size markets have several active groups. Strip mall owners, home services, retail — they're all in there.

You're looking for groups where local business owners post, not just consumer groups. The right groups have owners promoting their services, asking for referrals, and talking shop. Those are your people.

Post consistently over a few days across multiple groups. Don't post the same exact text everywhere — vary it slightly so it feels native to each community.

The simple formula

To summarize what's actually working:

  1. Post in local Facebook business groups (not just consumer groups)
  2. Include a photo of the printed card and a photo of bundled mail trays
  3. Add a family photo or personal touch — community connector, not salesman
  4. Frame it as a limited opportunity for local businesses, not a pitch
  5. Follow up by phone with anyone who engages

That's it. No cold list. No email software. Just a few posts and a phone call to anyone who raises their hand.

Operators who've dialed this in are filling cards with significantly less friction — and they're talking about it.

If you're serious about building a postcard business, the best place to learn from operators who are actively doing this is the EDDM Skool Community. Real operators, real results, and the tactics actually working right now.