Facebook is not a Website

it’s a social media platform

That distinction matters far more than most business owners realize.

I joined Facebook years ago for two reasons: to stay in touch with family and friends, and because it seemed like a good way to connect with people outside my very small bubble. And for a long time, it was fabulous. I’ve made real friends all over the world, shared joys and losses, and built genuine relationships.

But as a web developer — and as a business owner — I’ve always known one thing to be true:

Facebook is not where real business should live.

Facebook Is Linear, Noisy, and Disposable

Facebook is time-based. What you post today is buried tomorrow. Posts disappear into a constant stream of noise — distractions, ads, arguments, memes, videos, and whatever the algorithm feels like serving next.

It’s a carnival full of barkers.

And yet, I constantly hear business owners say:

“I don’t need a website. I have a Facebook page.”

I cringe every time.

Why Facebook Feels So Appealing

Facebook is:

  • Free
  • Easy
  • Fast to set up
  • Familiar

There’s no developer involved. No upfront cost. Anyone can launch a business page in minutes.

There are built-in advertising tools that can extend your reach beyond your immediate circle. For small businesses with tight budgets, that’s understandably appealing.

But none of that changes the core problem.

It’s still not a website.

Facebook Is Good at Communication — Not Ownership

Facebook excels at short-term communication. It keeps you visible. It lets you announce new products, share updates, and stay top-of-mind.

But visibility is not ownership.

Facebook decides:

  • Who sees your posts
  • When they see them
  • Whether they see them at all

And increasingly, even your own followers don’t see your content unless you pay.

That’s not evil — it’s their business model. You’re using their software for free. Advertising pays the bills.

But it does mean this: you are not in control.

Facebook Controls the Rules — and the Consequences

Everything you do on Facebook must comply with their rules, their interpretations, and their enforcement systems.

Posts can be flagged.
Accounts can be restricted.
Pages can be shut down.

Often the first decision is made by automated systems. If something trips an algorithm, your content disappears. You can appeal — sometimes — and hope a human agrees with you.

There is no phone number.
No real support.
No meaningful conversation.

If the decision doesn’t go your way, that’s it.

And yes — I’ve seen entire businesses effectively erased overnight because their only online presence lived on social platforms.

It’s devastating.

Facebook Owns Your Content — Not You

This is the part that should scare you.

Facebook owns:

  • The platform
  • The data
  • The reach
  • The rules

If your account is shut down, they are under no obligation to provide backups of your content, followers, or history.

If your business depends entirely on Facebook, you’ve handed control of your livelihood to someone else.

That’s not a strategy. That’s a gamble.

Facebook Is a Tool — Not a Foundation

Facebook is useful.
So are Instagram, Twitter/X, Pinterest, and the rest.

But they are tools, not foundations.

Your website is your home base.

It’s where:

  • Your story lives
  • Your brand is defined
  • Your services are explained clearly
  • Your customers decide whether they trust you

Facebook is the place to stop by, say hello, and point people back home.

What Facebook Can’t Do

Facebook:

  • Isn’t your URL
  • Doesn’t allow full branding control
  • Limits how you communicate
  • Has no long-term memory
  • Encourages shallow engagement
  • Distracts your audience constantly
  • Can disappear without warning

Your website:

  • Is yours
  • Tells your full story
  • Builds trust over time
  • Supports real business decisions
  • Gives you data you control

Those are not the same thing.

Your Website Is the Hub of Your Business

All roads should lead back to your website.

That’s where you build loyalty.
That’s where customers understand how you work.
That’s where real decisions happen.

Social media should support your website — not replace it.

If Facebook disappeared tomorrow, my business would still operate. I’d be annoyed, sure — but not crippled.

That’s where you want to be.

Use Facebook Smarter

Instead of posting endlessly on Facebook:

  • Write something meaningful on your website
  • Then share it on Facebook

You get more mileage.
More longevity.
More control.

One piece of content — two purposes.

That’s not working harder. That’s working smarter.

Final Thought

Facebook runs their business the way they want to.

You need to do the same.

Build your business on something you own. Use social media as a tool — not a crutch — and never put your entire livelihood in someone else’s hands.

Because Facebook is not a website.

And it never will be.

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