![]() Shopping – designed to showcase products and make it easy for people to shop online.Restaurants & Cafes – allows you to highlight your menu, hours, location and photos.Nonprofit – designed to encourage people to fundraise and donate to your nonprofit.Movies – allows you to highlight showtimes.Venues – allows you to highlight information like your venue’s hours, location, and upcoming events.Business – designed to help you manage your business, including areas for special offers and job postings.Services – designed to help people find your services and get in touch.This is what most pages are currently defaulted to, though Facebook will likely prompt you to select a more specific template below. Standard – good for all page types, with buttons and tabs to help showcase what’s important for your brand.Here is a breakdown of the 10 different template options that are currently available: RELATED Facebook Is Testing a Diversity Designation for Business Pages ![]() However, no matter which one you select, you still have the option to customize the order of the tabs, and choose which ones are visible to users by going to Settings, Edit Page. The major difference between templates is the buttons on the top toolbar and the tabs on the left toolbar. The templates options look fairly similar, but depending which one you select, they differentiate slightly on layouts and call to actions. Remember, if you don’t change it yourself, Facebook will automatically select a template they think is best suited for your brand at the end of August. For example, if you choose a template that has a “menu” tab, you’ll then have to upload a menu to your Facebook page.įacebook will inform you what your current template is, and which one they recommend for your page. Note: if you choose a template that has tabs you don’t currently have on your page, you’ll have to edit your page to populate those tabs.
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