Bear Fox Marketing Official Blog

Facebook Advertising Ultimate Guide: How to Build Trust Through Facebook Advertising

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Article Updated on 6/5/23

Almost two decades after introducing the concept of a social network to the world, Facebook remains the social network to beat.

Don’t believe it? Think about how much time you’ve already spent today scrolling through your Facebook feed. Now think about how many other people are away a few minutes (or an hour) here and there doing exactly that.

Facebook has the reach, which means if you want to advertise your business, it’s the perfect place to be. But you have to know how to use it.

That’s where the professionals of social media advertising at Bear Fox Marketing come in. Here’s everything you need to know to advertise on Facebook like the ruler of your niche (because, really, that’s exactly what you are).


Why Facebook Ads?

Look, we hear you. With changes afoot in Facebook’s algorithm, organic reach is basically dead in the water, and intrepid businesses like yours have no choice but to invest in paid ads. Coincidence? Maybe not.

That said, don’t turn the page on Facebook quite yet.

Here’s the thing: Facebook still has 1.63 billion daily active users. That dwarfs most other major social networks, including Instagram (500 million), Twitter (139 million), and Snapchat (210 million). It’s the most widely used social network by a huge margin, and that means it has incredible reach with your potential customers.

Plus, Facebook users are more engaged than users on any other social network.
In plain English? If you have an audience of any kind, there’s a high chance that they’re already on Facebook.

That user power shows in Facebook’s advertising functionality. The beauty of Facebook advertising over other social media networks is that you have incredible power to be precise, ensuring that you reach exactly the audience you want to reach (and thus see more conversions).

The question isn’t, why use Facebook Ads? The question is, why aren’t you using Facebook Ads already?


Before You Get Started

Before You Get Started with Facebook Advertising

Facebook’s advertising is only as powerful as your ability to use it, so if you’re fumbling along without any sense of direction, you won’t make much headway.

So, before you log your first Facebook campaign and wait for results, you have to get organized.


Know Your Audience

It all begins with your audience. Even though Facebook has 1.63 billion daily active users, you’re not going to target all of them. The power of Facebook advertising is its ability to target specific groups who are most likely to buy–only those who are most likely to buy.

That means a far better ROI for your marketing dollar…if you know who’s most likely to buy.

To that end, get to know your target audience first. Specifically, get to know your target audience on Facebook, which is different from your target audience on any other social media network (or any other form of marketing). You may be having great success with a target demographic you don’t even realize.

If you’re not sure who they are, no worries. Now is the perfect time to learn your target customer. A lot of new marketers have the urge to broaden their appeal. Resist that instinct. You should know your target customer so well that you could pick them out of a crowded city street based on their appearance, age, and what they’re doing.


Know Your Strategy

Once you know the audience you’re after, you can develop a strategy to target them. Remember, advertising tools (including Facebook) are only as good as your proficiency at using them. If you come in knowing exactly what you’re trying to achieve, you stand a much better chance of achieving it.

Otherwise, you’ll open up Facebook Ads and be so dazzled by options that you’ll wind up with an ad that doesn’t do anything to help your campaign. 

Start by asking yourself the basics, such as: 

  • What are you trying to sell? A product? A service? An event? Be specific. 
  • Who are you targeting? 
  • Why are you targeting them? 
  • How will they benefit from what you’re selling? 
  • What’s their pain point? What would prevent them from spending? 
  • Where are they in the sales funnel? 
  • Are they a warm or cold audience? 
  • What result do you want from this campaign? Conversions? Traffic? Be specific.

As with your target audience, the more specific you can get, the better off your campaign will be.


Know the Right Type of Ad for Your Goals

Once you’ve gotten that far, it’s time to ask what type of ad is best suited to your goals. Hint: it’s not one-size-fits-all. 

As in most things, Facebook Ads offers you a beautiful array of ad format options, including: 

  • Photo
  • Video
  • Slideshow
  • Carousel
  • Dynamic product ads
  • Lead form ads
  • Collection ads
  • Instant experience ads
  • Messenger ads
  • Stories ads
  • Stories augmented reality ads
  • Playable ads

Each of these ads can be broken down into one of four main ad categories: 

  • Mobile newsfeed
  • Desktop news feed
  • Right column
  • Instagram

How do you choose just one? It’s simple: go back to that strategy, objective, and target customer we asked you to identify. If you’ve done your homework, you know your audience, and you know what would best speak to them to achieve the results you’re hoping for, the type of ad best suited to the occasion should be an easy choice.


Know Your Creative Material

Once you know what type of ad you’re creating, it should be that much easier to zero in on your creative materials. Don’t think this is an in-and-out situation, though. 

We told you to be surgically precise with your customer details for a reason: what clicks with customers (i.e., what convinces them to click) is highly specific, which is why Facebook Ads are so highly targeted. If you don’t design your ads with almost microscopic attention to detail, your creative material may miss the mark completely. 

If you need somewhere to get started, lean into your funny bone: more than half of customers say they remember an ad if it’s humorous. Better still, be funny in video format, as customers are far more willing to pause scrolling for a funny video than read a block of text to catch the punchline.


Set Up Your Account and Access

Once you’ve got your ducks in a row, you’re finally ready to get this show started and set up your account (if you don’t already have one, that is). 

If you haven’t already, sign up for a Facebook Business Manager account. This is what allows you to access Facebook Ad Manager, which will allow you to create ad campaigns and track your ad spend. 

Don’t forget to link to your business’s main page–otherwise, you won’t be able to manage ads for your business account. 

Once you’ve got your Business Manager account set up, direct your attention to the Business Manager Settings and click on “Add New Ad Accounts.” It will then prompt you to enter your payment information, so have your account information handy. 

From there, you’re ready to head on over to your Facebook Ads Manager Dashboard. 

You’ll notice four tabs: 

  • Account Overview
  • Campaigns
  • Ad Sets
  • Ads

Take a deep breath because you’re about to get familiar with all four. And if you’re tech-savvy, or are still unsure, contact Bear Fox Marketing, and we’d be happy to help.


Preparing to Advertise on Facebook

Once you’ve got your ducks in a row, rolling out your Facebook Ad campaign is mostly a matter of setup and monitoring. Fortunately, if you follow the steps we already gave you, you should be ready.


Choose Your Objective

The very first thing you’ll do when you kick off a brand new Facebook Ads campaign is to choose your objective. This is a fantastic advertising tool because Facebook will use the information you provide about your objective to tailor ad placements and optimize your marketing ROI. 

The key is knowing how to use it, which is why we told you to clarify your ad objectives, target audience, and end goal first. 

You’ll see three categories of objectives: 

  1. Awareness
  2. Consideration
  3. Conversion

Within each category, you’ll see a more specific objective. You can choose: 

  • App installs
  • Brand awareness
  • Catalog sales
  • Conversions
  • Engagement
  • Lead generation
  • Messages
  • Reach
  • Store visits
  • Traffic
  • Video views

Choose your objective wisely because your ad campaign from this point forward will be geared toward the objective you select. Remember to be specific and choose an objective that best reflects your goals, and Bear Fox Marketing can help you with this.


Creating Facebook Audiences

And now, for the mother lode, the thing that makes Facebook the one to beat: the audience. 

Facebook knows it has an enormous audience. It also knows that the audience is incredibly diverse, with a huge array of interests, life experiences, motivations, and pressure points. The crowning jewel of Facebook Ads is the incredible specificity of audience targeting. 

Facebook has three primary audience types: 

  1. Saved audiences
  2. Custom audiences
  3. Lookalike audiences

Custom audiences are your highest value target since they allow you to retarget site visitors and those who have engaged with your app or content in the past. Saved audiences are audiences you can define based on key characteristics. Lookalike audiences reach people similar to those in your existing customer database (translation: high conversion potential). 

You, or your marketing team, like Bear Fox Marketing, can combine custom and lookalike audiences for targeting, but again, learn to walk before you try to run a marathon. If you’re just getting started, keep it simple and focus on one type of audience first and figure out how you want to target them. 

You can target audiences in four ways: 

  1. Location-based
  2. Demographic
  3. Interest-based
  4. Behavior-based

Which you use and to what extent you tailor it will again depend on what your ad campaign is hoping to achieve. 
A word to the wise: targeting your ads is a necessity, but there are creepy and non-creepy ways to do it. The key is to use targeting as another means to focus on a highly specific type of customer and gain their trust through advertising rather than reminding them that you’re using a disturbingly impressive array of marketing tools to pluck their data out of a crowd. But a marketing expert such as Bear Fox Marketing can help distinguish between these two.


Location-Based Targeting

Location Based Targeting in Facebook Advertising

Location-based targeting is based on the principles of location-based advertising, which is when you tailor your marketing efforts to people in a specific area. In Facebook terms, this means targeting certain people based on geographic information, such as: 

Fortunately, Facebook makes it easy to target the group you’re after based on location information. All you have to do is type in the desired location target. 

Plus, you can narrow down location targeting even further. 

The default option is targeting everyone in X location, i.e., the last updated location of a given Facebook user. But let’s say you’re a local pest control business, and you want people to hire you to do work in their homes. In that case, you could target only people who live in the specified area. 

You can also target people who frequent the area by targeting people who were recently in the desired area (which is established by tracking mobile phone usage in your target location). 

On the other hand, if you’re trying to attract tourists or travelers specifically, you could target people traveling to your target area of choice. This option allows you to target users who visited the target area recently if the target area is 100 miles or more away from their home location.


Demographic Targeting

However, there are plenty of people who visit a given location that may not be desirable for you as a potential customer. Young professional twenty-somethings with money to burn are an entirely different species from soccer moms who shop primarily for their kids. 

This is where demographic targeting comes into play. 

As usual, you’ll get a bunch of options when you click on demographics, but the options are split into three key area codes: 

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Language

For example, people won’t interact with your ads if they can’t read them, so it helps to choose language preferences if you’re advertising in a particular language. This can get tricky in areas where multiple languages are spoken, but it can also help separate your business by showing that you’re willing and able to work with people speaking different languages. 

However, you can get extremely specific in demographic targeting. You can target based on education, occupation, political views, generation, life events, relationship status, and even based on a user’s parents (like we said: creepy and non-creepy ways to do this).


Interest-Based Targeting

However, for businesses, one of the easiest and most effective targeting avenues is interest-based targeting, which is exactly what it says on the tin: targeting people who have specific interests that are relevant to what your campaign and organization have to offer. 

A few general interest groups you can target include: 

  • Business and industry
  • Entertainment
  • Family and relationships
  • Fitness and wellness
  • Food and drink
  • Hobbies and activities
  • Shopping and fashion

If you’re a yarn company targeting knitters, for example, the hobbies section is your jam. 

Once you tell Facebook what interests you want to target, it will pull data from users’ likes and interests, pages they’ve liked and visited, apps they use, etc. 

Here, again, it pays to be specific. You can target multiple interests to broaden your reach, but only select an option if it’s truly relevant to your campaign and your advertising goals.


Behavior-Based Targeting

Finally, there’s behavior-based targeting, which is a more nebulous category than the other three. Unlike the previous categories, which focus on data culled from a user profile like their age and location, behavior-based targeting combines Facebook data and external data sets to target users based on things like purchase history, personal anniversaries, etc. 

A few behavior categories you can target include: 

  • Anniversary
  • Consumer classification
  • Digital activities
  • Expats
  • Mobile device user
  • Multicultural affinity
  • Seasonal and events

Be careful with this type of targeting. When it works, it’s tremendously useful, but it only really works in specific circumstances. You have to be precise about who you’re after to ensure that behavior-based targeting is the right fit.


Decide Where to Display Your Ad

Once your targeting is winnowed down to the last possible detail, it’s time to target other things. Where to display your ad, for example. 

This is the moment when you move on to the ad set stage and tell Facebook where to optimize your ads. 

For example, you can choose to focus on mobile users instead of desktop users. Within Facebook itself, you can target feeds, in-stream videos, in-stream articles, the right column, and suggested videos. You also have display options on Instagram, Messenger, and audience networks. 

You can even target a specific operating system if you’re so inclined.

Technically, you can run your ad with every display option selected, but you shouldn’t. Again, the power of Facebook Ads is specificity. If you know your audience, chances are you can figure out where they’re lurking online, and you’re better off targeting them there anyway.


Set Your Budget

Take a deep breath and get ready to put your money where your mouth is. 

In the next section, you’re able to choose your budget, or rather, how much money you want to spend on the campaign. You can select a daily budget and select the maximum amount you want your campaign to spend each day, or you can create a lifetime budget which denotes how much money you want to spend throughout the entire campaign. 

If you select a lifetime budget, you’ll also have to provide a specific date range to run your campaign. Keep in mind that your budget isn’t used up based on arbitrary daily spending, so you could spend a lot in one month and very little in the next. You may not even spend your entire budget by the deadline. 

Facebook will run your ad until the date range runs out or the budget runs dry, whichever comes first. So be careful about how much money you realistically expect to spend. 

And no, you can’t run ads on Facebook for free. Facebook is a business, not a charity. You get charged by cost-per-click (CPC) or cost-per-thousand-impressions). No money, no ads. 

There is no minimum or maximum you have to spend on Facebook Ads to see results, nor is there a perfect timeline to see results. It depends on what works for you, which can take some trial and error (and attention to your advertising goal).

For beginners, start with a baseline range based on what you know you can afford and what you reasonably expect to spend based on your pre-existing data. Then you can scale up or down based on performance.


7 Helpful Facebook Marketing Tips for Your Business

7 Helpful Facebook Marketing Tips for Your Business

It is estimated that there are now 2.912 billion monthly users on Facebook. 1.929 billion of those people log on at least once a day. So how can you harness that traffic to benefit your business?

It takes time, but with the correct plan, it can be done. Read on as your local Boise ad agency shares its tips on enhancing your Facebook presence.


Optimize Your Profile Page

When you optimize your profile page, you should be using it to attract people and direct them to a goal. Making sure all your information is up to date is standard procedure. What matters is what happens afterward. 

Don’t just link directly to your website home page. Choose something that is going to wow them and grab their attention instantly. A custom-built landing page with new products and offers is a great solution. 

Once you hit 25 followers, you will also have the option to choose your own Facebook URL. Make sure this is easy to remember and includes your business name and keywords related to your brand.


Know the Aim of Your Post

One of the main Facebook marketing pitfalls novice companies fall into is posting without intent. Regular posting is vital, but when your posts lack substance, it harms your brand identity. 

Make sure each post adds something of value to your audience. Consider what its aim is.

Are you trying to build a relationship and get people to establish personal connections with your mission statement? Or are you building excitement for new products or lines?

This can be hard to do, especially when you log onto social media and see other brands doing the opposite. Keep watching your marketing strategy metrics, and you should develop a rewarding routine.


Create a Content Calendar

A content calendar can greatly assist your marketing strategy. This will ensure you have plenty of time to create content and posts of value. Ideally, this should be done around two weeks before the event, depending on the type of post or content. 

Start by adding national days and holidays of importance. Then zone into events that are specific to your industry or niche. After this, you can narrow it down to dates that are important to your company, like product releases and sales. 

Some things to consider when scheduling posts for your Facebook page include the following:

  • Are there any promotions going on at the time this post is scheduled?
  • How is the time of year affecting the mood and state of mind of my ideal customers?
  • Are our competitors offering promotions at this time, and if so, how do we avoid losing customers to them without simply playing “follow the leader?”

After considering these matters, you can reasonably schedule your posts while claiming knowledge of the process.


Utilize Facebook Stories

Facebook stories are short vertical video posts that go at the top of a feed. Videos can last for 20 seconds, but you can even create them from a text that appears for 5 seconds. They stay up for 24 hours and then vanish.

These posts have a much more casual feel. As they are at the top of the page, they are often the first thing to be clicked on. They are also not part of the Facebook algorithm.

All of this means you can create much more casual content for them. Ask questions, post-behind-the-scenes videos, or even do live feeds. Use it to invite followers into your company and build a relationship as you do so.


Don’t Obsess Over Vanity Metrics

Vanity metrics are any statistics that are a measure of social popularity. Likes, posts, shares, and follows are typical. While these are a fair indicator of how popular a brand is, following them is a false economy. 

The reason for this is that all that matters is how social media impacts your profit margins. One follower who spends $100 on your products is better than a million who spend nothing. 

This becomes increasingly important when you invest in paid social media marketing advertising. If you put $1000 into an ad campaign, you want at least $1000 or more back from it. Following likes and shares is not representative of this.


Grow Your Budget

One of the advantages of advertising on Facebook is its ability to hone your marketing campaign. You can set a daily budget, then target people based on specific criteria. These can include everything from gender, location, income, and people’s likes and dislikes. 

Getting the target audience right does take time. As campaigns can be altered as they run, you can improve them as they go. A company that offers marketing services will be able to handle this for you. 

By starting with a small budget, you have less to lose. When you start to get it right, increase your spending. All of this means you get a much better return on investment, and you don’t have to invest in huge campaigns that may not work.


Understand the Facebook Pixel

Retargeting is a method of social media advertising in which you target people who have already visited your website. They may have left because they got distracted or went away to think about your products and services. It has a very high success rate, bringing them back and often converting them into a sale. 

So Facebook knows who has visited the site, and you have to install the Facebook pixel. This is a small line of code that relays information. Once installed, you can start your remarketing campaigns.

As well as retargeting, the pixel allows you to access Facebook’s lookalike feature. This lets you target people who have not visited your site but have similar habits to the ones who do. This can open you up to a brand new audience.


Ready to Take Your Facebook Advertising to the Next Level?

Ready To Get Started with Facebook Advertising

The relationship between Facebook Advertising and a potential customer should be built, not rushed into. If your conversion and click-through rates from your advertisements are low, you might be rushing the sale too early. Learn more about what mistakes you might be making and how you can build trust through Facebook Ads that will improve the overall performance of your campaigns by contacting a professional marketing company.

When you advertise on Facebook, you’re not just running an ad. You’re building trust, establishing a relationship, and showing customers why your solution is exactly what they’ve been missing in their lives. It’s a powerful tool, but you have to use it skillfully. 

That’s where Bear Fox Marketing can help.

We know the power of Facebook marketing, and more importantly, we know how to deliver results. Our goal is simple: crack your Facebook funnel in under 45 days and get you 5x or more return on your ad spend.

If that sounds like your cup of tea, pull up a chair, and let’s get talking.

How can we help?