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A 3-Step Guide To Planning Social Ad Campaigns

The amount of first-party data available on Facebook and other social networks is enough to make an excited brand marketer foam at the mouth. But social media advertising isn’t as simple as just matching ads to consumers. Successful social branding campaigns require careful planning and testing. More often than not, they uncover unexpected correlations between brand and consumer. 

When plotting a social media campaign, there are three criteria to keep in mind above all others: creative, targeting and optimization. Consider the following as you prepare a campaign:

Creative
Effective advertising gives users a reason to click. The creative needs to convey this reason, whether it’s a compelling offer or a call to action. Users flock to social media platforms to converse and share with friends, so your creative team should produce short, catchy ad copy with a conversational tone.

With a few creative ideas in hand, you can test dozens of combinations of text and images. Our internal studies have found that images are responsible for 70% of the response rate on social ads, so don’t be afraid to experiment. Test images that are visually jarring or out of the norm.

Every in-ad image should have a single subject, and that subject should take up a large portion of the graphical real estate. Space comes at a premium within social ad units, and group shots can make an image murky.

If you’re using Facebook, take advantage of Like-gates for fanning campaigns and try to match the creative to target sets. Social’s targeting capabilities enable advertisers to match different messages and creative to different audiences for maximum performance.

Targeting

One key step in running a successful campaign is planning. Consider the target demographic and how you might reach them, based on their interests. This can be done concurrently with creative design, as the two fit closely together. When advertising to moms, try daytime TV show targets to appeal to their interests. It is important to sift through many different targets and think about their inclusion in the campaign before it begins. 

Marketers would be wise to use Facebook advertising products, like Friends of Connections Targeting, which leverages the social graph to grow their base, building scale off of a group of consumers who match their criteria by targeting their friends.

Facebook’s Sponsored Stories product is also a great tool for reaching new users on the network. This ad format is triggered when a consumer Likes a brand’s Facebook page, application or place. The activity is then promoted across the network to their friends, via a sponsored story ad, increasing the likelihood that friends will notice this activity in their News Feed.

Optimize

Once the creative has been tested against several different audiences, it’s time to optimize the combinations that achieve the best results. Don’t be afraid to kill all the losers, because you’re going to reward the winning campaigns. Once you build new fans, re-market to them to build engagement and drive branding goals. 

Even if your campaigns hit your desired level of success, don’t stop experimenting. Constantly ask yourself, if you move more budget to social, will it replicate this success on a larger scale? Can you expand on the targets that are working?

Social advertising is opening a world of opportunity to brand marketers, but some of the biggest opportunities are initially hard to see. Keep experimenting with creative and targeting, because you never know which unlikely corollaries will drive brand results.

 

 

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