Showing posts with label facebook ad campaign. Show all posts
Showing posts with label facebook ad campaign. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

How to Use Targeted Facebook Ads to Promote an Event

How Facebook Ads Drive People Down a Marketing Funnel

Marketing funnels are useful because they show how people go from hearing about your event to registering for your event. Your funnel is essentially a framework that connects content marketing, social media engagement, email marketing and ads into a functional strategy.
Below is an example of a horizontal funnel (using Facebook) that follows Jane as she goes from awareness of the event, to registering for the event, to telling her friends about the event.
marketing funnel depiction
Each stage of your Facebook marketing funnel serves a different promotional purpose.
Now let’s dig deeper into how Facebook ads support each stage of the funnel.

#1: Capture Awareness

The first phase of any campaign is awareness. Maybe someone finds out about your event because a friend was talking about it, or maybe that person subscribes to your email or reads your blog.
In the funnel example above, Jane signs a pledge to support, which is a mini-campaign designed to nurture interest for an upcoming event. Doing a mini-campaign like this isn’t always necessary, but it can be effective, particularly for paid events.
At this stage of the game, I suggest you use any of these Facebook ad options:boosted posts, event ads, post engagement ads or lookalike audiences.
facebook ad options
Boosting a post offers a number of ways to target your Facebook ad.
I frequently recommend boosted posts, especially if you have limited staff, training or resources.
When you decide to boost a Facebook post, only boost your best stuff. That way you increase the likelihood that people who see the post will engage with it. To find the posts worth boosting, look at your Insights to find your top event-related posts based on engagement rate and how relevant it is to your current marketing goals.
There may be cases when your best-performing updates aren’t directly related to your promotion. If that’s the case, simply edit the status update, include a call to action (CTA) and link to your campaign landing page. Just make sure your edits feel natural, not forced.
I won’t go into the details about event ads, but I will say that promoting events with ads can be super-powerful, especially if you target the friends of people who have registered!
Page post engagement ads are another option. These are ads you create using a page update and the Advanced Facebook Advertising Tool. This tool gives you many more targeting options than boosted posts. (However, Facebook now lets you use the Advanced Ad Tool when boosting a post.)
facebook advanced options in ads
Use Facebook’s Advanced Advertising Tool for excellent targeting options.
Or you can create and use a lookalike audience. A lookalike audience is a custom audience that shares the same likes and interests as your customers, email subscribers, volunteers or even people who attended last year’s event.
Creating a Facebook lookalike audience is as simple as uploading an email list. Who should be on this list? Why would they be interested in hearing about your event? The easy answer to both is anyone who registered for a previous event.
Once you create a lookalike audience with Power Editor, you can use it to target your boosted post by following these steps:
1. Find the post you want to promote and click Boost.
2. Click the Use Advanced Options link in the pop-up window. You’ll be redirected to Facebook’s Advanced Advertising Tool.
3. Scroll down under Audiences and type the name of your lookalike audience into the Custom Audience field.
4. Select the lookalike audience from the list of suggestions.
5. Select any other targeting options you want to include. You may not need to bother with this if your lookalike audience is based on a very specific email list (for example, previous event registrants).

#2: Nurture Interest

In our example with Jane, we’re using triggered email marketing campaigns. Triggered campaigns or autoresponders are email messages that are automatically sent in response to something the subscriber does.
When Jane signs the pledge, she is added to a specific email list. As soon as she’s added to that list (the trigger), a series of two to three email messages are sent to her, encouraging her to register for the event.
There are a few Facebook ad tactics you can use to support these email messages, but one stands out front and center: email custom audiences.
facebook custom audience
Create a custom audience to target people from your email list.
The constant challenge of email marketing is getting people to open your emails and click through your campaign links. We can send Jane triggered emails intended to nurture her interest in the event, but we can’t make her open or click. This is where Facebook email custom audiences come into play.
An email custom audience allows you to reach people on a specific email list with Facebook ads. In our example let’s say that Jane opens one of the triggered emails, but fails to click on links to learn more about the event—maybe she gets distracted or gets pulled away to a work meeting.
After her long and stressful meeting, Jane opens Facebook during a coffee break. She sees boosted posts (or event ads) reflecting the same CTAs she read in the triggered email. She may click through the post and register for the event, or take the post as a reminder to register later that night when she has more time for email.
This tactic essentially creates a one-two punch—combining email marketing and Facebook marketing. In our example we’re using an email custom audience with the list of people like Jane who’ve signed the pledge.














You can create a Facebook email custom audience by following these steps:
1. Export the email list or segment from your current donor database, EMS or CRM and save it to your hard drive. You only need a single column (CSV or TXT) of emails. No other data is required (you can even remove the header row).
2. Select the Facebook page post you want specific email subscribers to see and click Boost.
3. In the pop-up, click Advanced Options. You will be redirected to Facebook’s Advanced Advertising Tool.
4. Scroll down to the Audience section and click Create Custom Audiences.
5. In the pop-up, click Data File Custom Audience.
6. Give your list a name and a short description, select I Agree to the Facebook Custom Audiences Terms and click Create Audience.
creating a custom audience
Fill in some basic information so you can use your new custom audience for later campaigns.
7. Complete your ad by selecting your email custom audience, your ad run dates and budget.
A quick note: When your list is uploaded, you can target Facebook users associated with that list. When you select the list in the Custom Audience field, you may notice that the audience number is smaller than the list you uploaded. That’s because Facebook only uses emails that are associated with a Facebook profile.

#3: Convert Prospects

If you’ve conducted any type of campaign that includes a landing page asking people to take a specific action, you know all too well that most people won’t do what you want them to do—they may lose interest, get confused, get distracted or even get back to work. Whatever the reason, they fail to convert.
But they did visit your landing page!
You can use that to your advantage by using Facebook website retargeting. The diagram below explains how retargeting works.
retargeting flow in action
When you see Facebook ads for a site you’ve recently visited, you’re being remarketed to.
Facebook website retargeting allows you to target ads at people who have visited a specific page on your website. In our example it’s the event registration page.
To retarget registration page visitors, follow the instructions above for creating a custom audience, but this time when you click Create a Custom Audience, choose Custom Audience from Website. Jon Loomer’s article will help you complete the process from there.
Pay careful attention to the number of days you keep people in this custom audience. You don’t want to keep people too long because the recency effect wears off. For example, if Jane visited the event registration page 30 days ago, chances are she’s way past the point of losing interest.
custom audience
Refresh your retargeted audience frequently so you’re not marketing to people who have lost interest.
Remember that the most important part of converting registrants is your landing page. If the landing page isn’t effective, retargeting visitors with Facebook ads won’t work that well.

#4: Increase Word of Mouth Shares

To encourage attendees to tell their friends about the event, you can reuse some of the tactics you’ve already implemented. For instance, you can create a new email custom audience based on the list you create from the event registration page, and then ask those people to share your event information.
I also encourage you to create another website custom audience—this time from people who have reached the thank-you page of your website after registering for your event. Next, create an unpublished (or dark) post encouraging registrants to invite their friends to the event and retarget the post to your new custom audience (your registrants).
facebook unpublished post ad
Create a dark or unpublished post ad in Power Editor.
You definitely want to use event ads at this point, simply because of their strong social proof. Facebook users who are served event ads see which of their friends have RSVP’d to your event.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

How to Use Facebook Power Editor: A Detailed Guide

What Is Power Editor?

The most powerful way to target your ideal audience on Facebook is with Facebook ads.
But clicking the “Boost Post” button and using the self-serve ad tool only scratches the surface. If you want to thrive and direct profits with your Facebook ads, you need to use Power Editor.
facebook power editor
Use Power Editor to have full control over your Facebook advertising.
Power Editor is a free browser plugin created by Facebook that lets you bulk-edit your ads. It was initially created as a Chrome plugin. Although it does sporadically work in other browsers, you’ll likely want to use the Chrome browser when working with Power Editor.
Go to Facebook.com/powereditor to test your browser or install the plugin.
But Power Editor is much more than just a bulk ad editor. It has many advantages over Facebook’s self-serve ad tool used by the vast majority of Facebook advertisers.
Here are the benefits of using Power Editor for your Facebook ads.

#1: Get Access to Latest Features

partner categories
Partner Categories is a feature available within Power Editor.
When Facebook rolls out new advanced features, they’re sent first to the Facebook ads API (which goes to third-party tools) and Power Editor. As a result, marketers using Power Editor tend to get these features well before those who use the self-serve ad tool exclusively.
Here are some examples of features you can currently find in Power Editor, but not in the self-serve ad tool:
Partner Categories: Facebook has partnered with three data-mining companies (Axciom, Datalogix and Epsilon) that collect mounds of data on users related to purchase history and lifestyle. Facebook uses this data to let advertisers do some powerful ad targeting with more than 500 categories.
Here’s a sampling of the targeting you can do with the help of Partner Categories:
  • Household size of 6 (8,842,800 users)
  • Upscale department store credit card user (34,618,400 users)
  • Home office supply purchases (2,638,300 users)
  • Aftermarket vehicle purchase over 48 months ago (11,952,800 users)
  • Baby food and products buyers (10,497,100 users)
  • Casino vacations (4,242,000 users)
  • Dog owner (12,643,500 users)
  • Fitness buyers—runners (5,950,600 users)
  • Teacher/educator (223,000 users)
  • Donate to veteran causes (7,016,400 users)
While Precise Interest and Broad Category targeting are dependent on users keeping their profiles updated, Partner Category targeting is based on a user’s actual buying history and completion of surveys.
Lookalike Audiences: Facebook’s recent rollout of Custom Audiences to the self-serve ad tool lets advertisers upload their customer lists into Facebook to target those users with ads.
Power Editor’s Lookalike Audiences builds a similar list of Facebook users based on your customer list.
lookalike audiences
Create an audience you can target with ads similar to your offline customer list.
This can be useful for advertisers with small customer lists that are quickly exhausted. Facebook will review your customer list and find either the top 1% (focused on similarity) or 5% (focused on reach) of users similar to those customers whom you can then target with advertising.
Saved Audiences (or Saved Target Groups): A successful Facebook ad takes time to create because you enter all of the relevant targeting parameters. This could include the following:
  • Countries/States/Cities
  • Gender
  • Precise Interests
  • Broad Categories
  • Partner Categories
  • Connections (Fans, Not Fans, Friends of Fans)
  • Custom Audiences/Excluded Audiences
  • Relationships and Relationship Interests
  • Languages
  • Education
  • Workplaces
That’s a lot of information and it’s a pain to re-enter this every time you create a new ad within the self-serve ad tool.
Within Power Editor, all you need to do is create a Saved Audience (also known as a Saved Target Group). Once you create a Saved Audience, you save a lot of time in the ad-creation process.
saved audience
Create a Saved Audience to save time!
While on the Audience tab, simply select your Saved Audience and Facebook will automatically prefill all of the necessary fields for you (more on this when we step through creating ads later).
Domain Sponsored Stories: This is a powerful tool that not nearly enough advertisers know about. It’s a great way to drive traffic to your website.
Whenever a user shares a link to your website, a story is created. If you set up a Domain Sponsored Story, Facebook will then turn that share into an ad.
domain sponsored story
Create Domain Sponsored Stories to leverage sharing from your website.
This is not connected in any way to your Facebook Page. The shining star of the ad is your friend and the link to your website. As a result, it’s more effective than a Page Post Sponsored Story at driving traffic to your website.
Conversion Specs: You’ll read more about this in a bit, but Conversion Specs allow you to get very granular within your ad bidding. You can optimize for specific actions like link clicks, video plays or post stories instead of relying on Facebook default optimization.
Others: This is constantly evolving. At one point, features like Conversion Tracking and Custom Audiences were available within Power Editor, but not the self-serve ad tool. If you want to get the cool features first, you need to use Power Editor!

#2: Control Ad Placement

Aside from new features, another reason to use Power Editor over the self-serve ad tool is the control you gain over placement of your ads.
placement of ad
Power Editor provides full control over the placement of your Facebook ads.
Within Power Editor, you can target the appearance of your ads as follows:
  • All Placements
  • Desktop Only (Right-hand column and news feed)
  • All News Feed (desktop and mobile)
  • Desktop News Feed Only
  • Mobile News Feed Only
Let’s take it a step further. Say you want to target mobile devices, but only particular mobile devices. This can be helpful when promoting an iPhone app, for example.
placement mobile
Target specific mobile devices with Power Editor.
You have the ability to target specific devices (feature phones only, Android phones only or iOS devices only) and even drill down into the models of those phones and OS versions.
If you use the new Facebook ads reports, you can quickly determine which placements are providing the best bang for your buck so you can optimize accordingly.

#3: Optimize Your Ad Bidding

Here’s more about the ability to use a feature within Power Editor that I mentioned earlier called Conversion Specs. This Conversion Specs feature is not available in the self-serve ad tool. You need the Power Editor to use it. Let’s dig into what that means.
Note that within Facebook’s self-serve ad tool, you can only bid based on Optimized CPM (optimized for a specific action), CPM (cost per 1,000 impressions), CPC (cost per click) and Optimized CPC (optimized for clicks).
Within Power Editor, you can do the following:
  • CPC (cost per click)
  • CPM (cost per thousand impressions)
  • Optimized CPM (optimized for a specific action)
In addition, within this Optimized CPM, you can choose from using default bids or manually set up bids to optimize for any of the following:
  • Clicks
  • Reach
  • Social
  • Actions
This is where it really gets fun. You can use either the default conversion specs or manually set up conversion specs.
You see, by default your ad is optimized for getting more Page likes if that’s your goal or for getting more engagement if you’re promoting a post.
But what if you want to optimize for something else? In the image below is an example of an ad that’s automatically optimized for engagement.
conversion specs
Optimize for specific actions by manually setting up Conversion Specs in Power Editor.
As you can see, the action type is “post_engagement.” You can edit this to optimize for another type of action.
Here are examples of codes you can enter to optimize for something other than general post engagement:
  • comment (post comments)
  • like (post likes)
  • link_click (clicks on links leading to an external website)
  • photo_view (views of post photo)
  • post (post shares)
  • post_engagement (general post engagement including any clicks)
  • post_story (post stories including likes, comments and shares)
  • receive_offer (offer claim)
  • video_play (plays of your post video)

#4: Save Time With Bulk Editing

The Bulk Editing feature is a quick and easy way to shave off a few minutes from managing your ads.
Let’s say you create a campaign with five ads in it. All of those ads include the United States and Canada as your target countries. After looking through your results, you decide to target only the United States.
You could go into each ad individually and change your targeting or use Power Editor to highlight each ad and change one. That change will apply to all five ads.
bulk editing
Quickly edit multiple ads at once within Power Editor.
You can also quickly duplicate a campaign and all of the ads within it by clicking the “Duplicate” button while viewing the campaign.
duplicate campaign
Duplicate a campaign and all of its ads with Power Editor.
Or you can duplicate an individual ad by clicking the “Duplicate” button while viewing the ad.
duplicate ad
Save time by duplicating an ad within Power Editor.

#5: Create a Campaign With Power Editor

First, make sure you click the “Download” button at the top right before you get started. This updates Power Editor on all recent activity you’ve had on Facebook and includes creating ads elsewhere, creating posts that can be promoted or creating tabs that could serve as a destination.
download
Make sure to click “Download” before each session using Power Editor.
Now go ahead and highlight either “Recent Campaigns” or “Active Campaigns”on the left.
recent campaigns
Highlight “Recent Campaigns” on the left within Power Editor.
Then click the “Create Campaign” button at the top.
create campaign
Click “Campaigns” and then “Create Campaign” to create a campaign in Power Editor.
Now select this new campaign on the left and simply fill in a few minor details.
campaign details
Create a Facebook ad campaign within Power Editor.
  • Campaign Name: Name your campaign something descriptive to make it easy to pick out later.
  • Budget: Set a daily or lifetime budget. This is the maximum that Facebook will bill you in a day or from start to finish.
  • Start/End: Set a start and end date and time. You can choose to run continuously without an end date if you choose.
  • Labels: This is a way to help organize your campaign into groups. Feel free to add a label here to help keep similar campaigns together.
That’s it! Creating a campaign is pretty dang easy.

#6: Create an Ad With Power Editor

Here’s how to create your ad in Power Editor. First, make sure that your new campaign is selected on the left. Then click “Ads” at the top and “Create Ad.”
create ad
Highlight your campaign, click “Ads” and then “Create Ad” to create a new ad in Power Editor.
Your new ad is then broken up into three main sections and one subsection:
  • Creative & Placements
  • Audience (including Advanced Options)
  • Pricing & Status
The Creative & Placements view will look like this:
creative placement
The Creative & Placements view when creating a Facebook ad within Power Editor.
Here, you’ll need to provide the following:
  • Ad Name (make it descriptive based on purpose, placement, bidding, etc.)
  • Ad Type (Ad, Sponsored Story, Mobile Only Ad, Video Ad)
  • Destination (Facebook Page)
  • Page Post (if applicable)
  • URL Tags (for tracking traffic to your website from ads)
  • Conversion Tracking (for offsite conversions)
  • Placement
  • Mobile Devices
After reading this article on Power Editor, make sure you also experiment with different types of ads—particularly those classified as “Ad” and “Sponsored Story.”
The Audience view looks like this:
audience
The Audience view when creating a Facebook ad within Power Editor.
This is where you’ll do the bulk of your targeting by defining:
  • Audiences (select a Saved Audience to quickly fill in targeting details)
  • Country, State, City or Zip Code
  • Age Range
  • Gender
  • Precise Interests (target by interests, activities, education, job titles or groups listed on timelines)
  • Partner Categories (target based on buying histories and lifestyles)
  • Broad Categories (target people who include information in their timelines related to these words or phrases)
  • Connections (target users connected to your Page, not connected to your Page or who have friends connected to your Page)
The Advanced Options view looks like this:
advanced options
The Advanced Options view when creating a Facebook ad within Power Editor.
This is a continuation of the Audiences view. Target users based on the following:
  • Custom Audiences (target users on your customer list)
  • Excluded Audiences (exclude users on your customer list)
  • Interested In (relationship interests)
  • Relationships
  • Languages
  • Education
  • Workplaces
It’s important to target languages here so that you don’t waste your money on people who can’t read your ad.
When you select one of the Education options, you can pick the precise school, graduation year and areas of study to target.
The Pricing & Status view looks like this:
advanced pricing status
Here’s the pricing and status view.
We already covered much of this under the Section #3: Optimize Your Bidding (above). But this is where you can really refine with your bidding.
  • CPC (cost per click)
  • CPM (cost per 1,000 impressions)
  • Optimized CPM (optimized for a specific action)
I recommend split testing with each of these three options and that you consider manually assigning bids for a specific action to see what’s most efficient.
Make sure that you experiment with Conversion Specs to optimize your ad for the action that leads to success!
Don’t forget to click “Upload”!
When you’re finished creating your campaign, make sure to click the “Upload” button at the upper right-hand side.
click upload
Don’t forget to click “Upload” when you’re done creating or editing your Facebook ads in Power Editor!
Power Editor Results
Getting results with Facebook ads has a lot to do with whether you’re properly using all of the best tools available to you. Create your ads in Power Editor and you’ll get great results.