The Philippine Star

Facebook offers platform to help Phl SMES expand

- – Catherine Talavera

Facebook has given small and medium enterprise­s a platform to grow their businesses through social media tools that provide training to these entreprene­urs.

John Rubio, Philippine country director for Facebook, said the company has been helping SMEs thrive through education programs that will give them the tools they need to succeed, as well as efforts to unlock growth for large businesses as they embrace mobile strategies.

“Businesses are embarking on the journey to digital transforma­tion with the aim of unlocking growth opportunit­ies and to better connect with today’s mobile-savvy Filipinos. In the Philippine­s alone, more than 50 million Filipinos are connected to an SME business page on Facebook,” Rubio said.

As part of its initiative­s to help SMEs, Facebook has partnered with Bayan Academy and the Department of Trade and Industry to provide digital marketing workshops for SMEs, aimed at helping them grow their businesses online.

Facebook has conducted seminars for over 1,700 SMEs in seven cities since 2017. Facebook is expanding these training sessions to reach more entreprene­urs in 25 cities across the Philippine­s in 2018.

“We’d like to scale more and more. We wanted to start small, identify what ’s needed to do, so we hit a couple of close to 2,000 people with 25 different workshops,” Rubio told reporters.

“So we want to accelerate that, this year we’re targeting 5, 000 entreprene­urs. We want to hit more entreprene­urs, giving them tools, “Rubio said.

On the internatio­nal front, Rubio said they are also focused on helping businesses connect with the 130 million people living outside the Philippine­s who are already connected to an SME on Facebook based in the Philippine­s.

“For large businesses, we also want to help them realize untapped potential across all touch points – from strategic partnershi­p and insights, to conversati­onal commerce on Messenger, to hands-on workshops and education,” Rubio added.

Meanwhile, Messenger is helping evolve the ways businesses interact, respond and get real-time feedback from their customers in the Philippine­s.

“For large Philippine businesses, Facebook is doubling down its efforts to help them address challenges in implementi­ng digital strategies to embrace a mobile future and evolve their organizati­ons,” the company said.

Facebook is also helping Filipino companies evolve the way they collaborat­e through Workplace by Facebook. Employees at Meralco, Philippine Savings Bank (PSBank) and 7-Eleven are connecting on one platform, creating more efficient workflows and collaborat­ing better. In turn, this helps them build a stronger company culture and enables employees to be more productive and feel connected to their companies.

Moreover, Facebook is also targeting to help empower women entreprene­urs through its #SheMeansBu­siness initiative, which it has partnered with Connected Women and the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology(DICT), to empower women entreprene­urs with knowledge, training, technology and a network of peers for support. The initiative was launched in 2016, and has since been extended to seven cities in the country, and has reached more than 500 women entreprene­urs.

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