Ketelsen RV

Channel Strategy Assessment

Marketplace is a lead source.
It shouldn't be the system.

Facebook Marketplace creates real exposure for your inventory. The question is who owns the lead flow, the data, and the follow-up when a buyer reaches out. Right now, the answer is your salespeople. Here's why that's a problem and three ways to solve it.

01 — How Facebook Marketplace Actually Works

The Platform Constraints

These aren't preferences. They're the rules that shape any Marketplace strategy.

Platform Rule🚫

Business Pages Can't Post to Marketplace

Listings require a personal profile. No workaround.

Facebook Marketplace listings are tied to personal profiles, not business Pages. There is no way for a dealership's business Page to create a standard Marketplace listing.
Platform Rule💬

Buyer Messages Go to Personal Messenger

DMs land in the poster's personal inbox. Can't be rerouted.

When a buyer clicks "Message" on a listing, the conversation starts in the poster's personal Messenger. The only control point is what the poster does after the message arrives.
Platform Rule👤

Accounts Must Be Real People

Fake business profiles risk suspension and lost data.

Facebook requires personal accounts to represent real individuals. Creating a fake profile carries suspension risk — you lose the account, listing history, and active conversations.
Current Risk🔓

Multiple Salespeople Posting = Zero Control

No oversight on content, pricing, or follow-up. Pipeline leaves when they do.

When each salesperson posts from their own account, the dealership has no control over messaging, pricing, photos, or follow-up. When they leave, their audience and pipeline go with them.
The Core ProblemThe dealership needs Marketplace for reach, but can't post from a business account. That means a personal profile has to be involved. The strategic question is: whose profile, how many, and what process wraps around it to make sure the dealership owns the pipeline even though it can't own the listing.

02 — Three Models to Consider

Options for Structuring Marketplace Posting

Each option addresses the same constraint differently. The tradeoffs are between control, risk, and operational complexity.

Not Recommended

Every Salesperson Posts from Their Own Account

This is how things work today. Each salesperson creates Marketplace listings from their personal Facebook profile. Buyers message the salesperson directly. Leads live in personal Messenger threads and may or may not make it into the CRM.

Problems
  • No control over messaging, photos, or pricing
  • Pipeline leaves when a salesperson leaves
  • Salespeople build personal brands on dealer inventory
  • No data visibility into volume or conversion
  • No audit trail or quality standard
Only Upside
  • Multiple salespeople posting creates more listing volume
Recommended

Single Designated Poster with a Purpose-Built Account

Identify one team member — ideally someone who doesn't currently have a Facebook account and is willing to create one for this purpose. Their Messenger is purely business. The BDC handles all initial outreach, logs the lead in the CRM, then routes to a salesperson for closing.

Advantages
  • Single controlled posting channel, consistent content
  • Messenger is business-only, no personal bleed
  • BDC handles first touch — speed to lead is centralized
  • Account is a real person, compliant with Facebook terms
  • Turnover risk is low (chosen for tenure)
  • Dealership controls login credentials and listing content
  • All leads flow through BDC → CRM → assigned salesperson
Considerations
  • Lower listing volume than multiple people posting
  • Account needs to look like a real person (profile photo, friends, activity)
  • Need a written agreement that account is dealership property
  • If this person eventually leaves, handoff must be managed
Implementation Steps
1
Identify the person. Tenure, process-oriented, willing to create a new Facebook account. Admin, BDC, or ops.
2
Set up the profile properly. Real name, real photo, add coworkers and friends. Let it breathe 1-2 weeks before listing heavily.
3
Dealer contact in every listing. Phone number and website in the description so some buyers skip Messenger entirely.
4
Script the Messenger response. Redirect to dealer number, then BDC logs in CRM and handles first outreach.
5
Dealer-approved content library. Standardized photos, descriptions, and pricing. The poster pulls from approved assets only.
6
Put it in writing. Account, credentials, content, and lead data are dealership property. Signed by the designated poster.
Long-Term Target

Business Page as the Center of Gravity

Shift from Marketplace-dependent to brand-driven. The Business Page becomes the primary channel through featured posts, sponsored content, and website traffic. Marketplace stays as a supplemental reach tool using the designated poster model.

Advantages
  • Dealership brand is the center of gravity, not any individual
  • Multiple lead sources reduce Marketplace dependency
  • Sponsored content and ads are fully dealer-controlled
  • Website becomes the primary conversion point
  • Scalable and resilient to turnover
Considerations
  • Requires investment in content and ads budget
  • Business Page reach is algorithmically limited without spend
  • Takes time to build organic following
  • Marketplace still needs the designated poster model as a feeder

03 — Side by Side

How the Three Models Compare

DimensionA: CurrentB: Designated PosterC: Long-Term
Who PostsEvery salespersonOne designated team memberDesignated poster + Business Page
Lead OwnershipSalesperson's Messenger RiskBDC intake → CRM SecureMulti-channel → BDC → CRM Secure
Content ControlNoneDealer-approved libraryLibrary + branded Page content
Turnover RiskHigh RiskLow — chosen for tenureMinimal — brand-driven
Messenger BleedEvery salesperson's inboxNone — purpose-built accountNone
FB ComplianceCompliantCompliant (real person)Compliant
Listing VolumeHigh (multiple posters)Moderate (single poster)Moderate + ad-boosted
CostNoneLow (process + policy)Moderate (content + ads)
TimelineToday2-3 weeks3-6 month build

04 — Our Recommendation

Start with B. Build Toward C.

The designated poster model solves the immediate pain points — turnover, persona control, data visibility — without requiring budget or a long buildout. Operational in two to three weeks. The Business Page strategy layers on top.

1

Identify the Designated Poster

Someone with tenure, process-oriented, willing to create a new Facebook account. Admin, BDC, or ops is often a better fit than a salesperson.

2

Set Up the Profile Properly

Real name, real photo, add coworkers and friends. Let the account breathe for 1-2 weeks before listing heavily.

3

Include Dealer Contact Info in Every Listing

Phone number and website in the description so some buyers skip Messenger entirely.

4

Script the Messenger Response

First reply redirects to the dealer number. BDC logs the lead in the CRM and handles initial outreach before assigning to a salesperson.

5

Use a Dealer-Approved Content Library

Standardized photos, descriptions, and pricing. The poster pulls from a shared set of approved assets. No freelancing.

6

Put It in Writing

The account, login credentials, listing content, and all lead data are dealership property. The person signs it.

7

Elevate the Business Page Over Time

Featured inventory, local engagement, traffic to the website. Marketplace becomes supplemental. The dealer brand becomes the center of gravity.

The Bottom Line

You can't post to Marketplace from a business account. That's the constraint. But with one designated team member, a purpose-built account, and a clear handoff protocol through the BDC, the dealership owns the pipeline, the data, and the follow-up. Marketplace stays a lead source. It just stops being the system.