Things to Optimize in Your Facebook Ads Campaign
4 Things You Need to Optimize in Your Facebook Ads
Campaign Now
blog.motionave.com/4-things-you-need-to-optimize-in-your-facebook-ads-campaign-now
By Maria Virginia Rodriguez on 12 Mar 2018
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We bet this has happened to you: Your team prepares (what you consider to be) a stellar
Facebook ads campaign. You upload it to your ad platform of choice and, once it’s
approved, set it to start running ASAP.
Then, you sit down and wait for the ROI to come… but nothing happens. In desperation,
you prepare to spend more money to practically force your message down the throats of
every member of your target audience. You want the clicks, and you want them now!
If this is you, calm down. Spend that money on a soothing cup of tea instead, and open
your ad analytics before doing anything else. You’re more likely to find the culprit here than
in your credit card bill. The real secret to winning campaigns doesn’t lie in getting
everything right the first try: it’s about continually optimizing each element to ensure you’ll
keep getting the ROI you want.
Let’s get real, gone are the days in which a single ad could run for a long time and still get
the revenues your brand hoped for. Our audience’s tastes, digital hangouts and channels
change quickly; if you want your message to get across, you should stay at least a half step
ahead.
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The best way to do so isn’t by setting your campaign, forgetting it and waiting for a shower
of dollar bills.
Instead, you need to take out your ad
toolbox and optimize, optimize, optimize.
In the past few months, we’ve become
obsessed with optimizing our ad
campaigns for our clients. It’s a bit of extra
work but it has taught us a lot as
marketers, increased our brand’s sales
and helped us embrace our inner scientist.
This is also a tactic you can also use for
any email sales/engagement campaigns
you’re running.
Today, we’ll show you the four most important elements you need to tweak regularly in your
Facebook ads campaign. Spending some time on these elements will get you one step
closer to your goals and help you grow as an ad creator.
Are you ready for some tweaks? Read on!
1. Your Audience
You can have the ultimate Facebook ad for your brand, one that could become the gold
standard for your industry, but if it’s primed for the wrong audience… you’re throwing your
efforts down a bottomless pit.
When choosing your audience, not only you should ensure that the copy, images, and
landing page are attractive to them, and that you have an offer they can’t refuse, you
should also take into consideration the following elements:
Which demographics gave the best returns in previous campaigns?
What subgroup of your target audience has delivered the most CTRs?
Is the audience more active at your campaign's proposed days/times?
Should you consider adding (or removing) interests from your desired audience's
traits?
This is why many experts recommend running two or more audience types for each
campaign you run. After getting the results of the first few days, you can see which one is
more open to your message, and devote your subsequent efforts towards it.
2. Your Copy and Your Image
This dynamic duo are entrusted with the labor of seducing your audience into performing
the action you want them to, be it going to a landing page, interacting with a chatbot or
signing up for your webinar. If you notice that your campaign is sputtering but your
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audience setup is perfect, take a closer look at your written copy and its accompanying
image.
Even though we’re moving towards a more visual world, copy is still critical to getting the
desired conversion. This is why you should look into trying out different texts through A/B
testing, to determine whether an aggressive style of writing is more successful than a
playful one.
In the digital ad world image matters, especially when you’re only a scroll away from fading
into obscurity. If that first choice of ad photo isn’t enticing enough to motivate users to click
for more, you need to scrap it. Don’t marry yourself to a single type of picture or video,
while, for example, only changing your male model’s shirt color:
Come on
Instead, make sure to test out different
types of images: with or without text, a
beautiful photoshoot or a cool in-house
design, among other variations. Whatever
you do, remember to keep your
optimization ideas in check by following
your chosen media’s guidelines for images
and text.
3. Your Running Time
Time is a delicate factor when it comes to an ad campaign, and we must take it into
consideration in our optimization efforts. Give a campaign too little time to penetrate, and
no one will see your ads. Give it too much, and everyone will get tired of you and ignore
any further communication you send.
This is especially crucial when it comes to a campaign that’s tied into a time-sensitive
promotion, such as a webinar, a limited offer or a holiday promotion. Every second gone
without a click will drown your efforts and you need to act quickly to adapt.
4. Your Money Investment
The final point to consider when optimizing is the amount of money you’re funneling
towards your ads. There’s a stubborn myth that the more you spend on your ad campaign,
irrespective of anything else, the greater the results. This isn’t true and, in fact, can bring
the opposite effect.
Consider this: if you’re maxing out your credit card to guarantee a 1st place visibility spot,
but your conversion rates are meager, aren't you operating this campaign at a loss? If any
of the elements that comprise an ad is failing, injecting more money won’t turn around bad
results.
(sorry for the tough love!)
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Instead, only reach for your wallet as a last resort, after you’ve worked on the previous
elements of this post. In our experience, insufficient spending is irrelevant to 99.9% of ad
failures.
CONCLUSION:
Ad campaign success doesn’t happen automatically after posting (we wish!). By investing
extra time and brain power into making well thought out adaptations, you’ll increase the
odds of success, get the metrics you hoped for and learn new tricks to enrich your brand
and marketer knowledge.
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TAGGED: Facebook Ads
Written by Maria Virginia Rodriguez
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