I mean how hard can it be? All you need to do is click a bunch of buttons, and select a bunch of options, right? Unfortunately that’s the actual personal proclaimed Facebook Ads experts think. Are your returns big for how much you invested in the advertisements enough? Either way, try to escape.
It amazes me just how many people ignore that running Facebook Ads has anything to do with advertising. Who needs good copywriting and creatives when papa Zuck can uses his machine learning to switch our suboptimal advertisements full of emojis and exclamations marks into cash cows, right? The platform matured to the main point where you need some advertising skills to get a good result actually, especially in competitive markets.
1 focus of a Facebook Ads expert, but that’s hard work so most miss it – creating some low effort ads and longing for the best. Enquire further about how many ads are they going to create for you (and hey duplicating and just changing a term doesn’t count number). Ask for other current clients of theirs and check their running Facebook Ads – you’d like to see operating many advertisements with as many angles as possible. If their clients only have 2-3 similar advertisements, then again run away.
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There are 2 types of evaluation, a Facebook Ads specialist should be capable of doing: on platforms (analyzing the way the ads are doing) and on websites (examining the way the resulted traffic changes). Knowing only 1 or none of them is very dangerous, because the advertisement buyer can’t respond and adjust to what’s occurring really.
He will not only miss potential problems or bottlenecks, he wastes potential opportunities that a better media buyer would spot also. Just a few businesses rely only on Facebook Ads to get their traffic and customers… most businesses use a variety of channels to operate a vehicle traffic. That’s not a problem necessarily, but what’s going to end up happening (particularly if you’re running a lot of retargeting promotions) is that Facebook will over attribute leads to their ads.
Why does this happen? Let’s have a simple situation: someone clicks one of your Google ads or even an organic search result, they browse the website but decide never to buy at that time. Then 1 day passes plus they visit a Facebook retargeting ad, they click it and they buy whatever you’re selling.