can you give list of sample of inquiries so the built-in A.I. of facebook will not detect my inquiries like a spam messages,
Yep — Facebook’s spam detection mostly looks for patterns, not just content. It flags things like identical messages sent to many pages, lots of links, or rapid-fire messaging.
If you’re doing legit inquiries, a few tweaks make them look human and keep you safe:
What Facebook’s AI usually flags as spam
- Copy-paste: Same message sent to 10+ pages
- Speed: Messaging many pages within minutes
- Links: Especially shortened links or multiple URLs
- Generic wording: “Hi, I want to inquire” with no specifics
- Keywords: “promo”, “wholesale”, “bulk order” + link = high risk
How to write inquiries that don’t get flagged
- Personalize each one: Mention the page name or something specific about them
- Space them out: Wait 5-10 minutes between messages to different pages
- Skip links in first message: Ask first, send links only after they reply
- Vary your wording: Don’t use identical templates
- Keep it conversational: Write like you’re texting a friend, not a form letter
Sample inquiries that look human
Instead of: “Hi, I want to inquire about your product”
For a bakery page:
Hi Panaderia! Saw your ube cheese pandesal post this morning — looks amazing. Do you still have some available for pickup today? Also, what time do you close? Thanks!
For a clothing shop:
Hello! I love the terno tops you posted yesterday. Do you have this design in size M? And do you ship to Marikina? Would appreciate the info 😊
For a service page:
Hi Team CleanUp Co. I’m based in Marikina and need deep cleaning for a 2BR condo next week. Can you share your rates and earliest availability? Thanks!
For a food business:
Good morning! Are you open for orders today? I’m interested in your party trays for Saturday. Could you send me the menu when you have time? No rush.
Key differences in these examples:
- Specific details: Mentions a post, product, or date
- Natural tone: Uses “Hi”, “Thanks”, emojis, casual phrasing
- Clear intent: One question or request, not a sales pitch
- No links: Ask first, share details later
- Location context: “Based in Marikina” makes it relevant
Pro tip: If you do need to contact multiple pages for the same reason, change 30-40% of the wording each time. Facebook looks for exact duplicates.
Want me to rewrite a specific inquiry you’re planning to send? Drop it here and I’ll help you make it sound natural.
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