Logo
  • Features
  • Resources
    • Guides
    • Blog
  • Services
  • Pricing
  • Contact
  • Try for free
  • Login

Home > Blog > Case Studies > The most common mistakes in Facebook advertising: The Structure
Monitor with a hand that sets it up and the headline to the blogpost

December 20, 2021

  • By  MaFi
  • 0 comments

The most common mistakes in Facebook advertising: The Structure

The theme of the second part of our series about the most common mistakes that came out of the dozens of Facebook Ads accounts audits is about the common mistakes in the campaign structure and the fragmentation of the campaign as a whole.

What is the problem 

Most of the ads we have seen had an inappropriate structure and were very fragmented. We can say the most important thing that was missing was the lack of the funnel structure as a whole. The basic ecommerce stack consists of a top funnel (TOFU) – middle funnel (MOFU) – bottom funnel (BOFU) scheme.

How it should look like

Top funnel is prospecting audience (LAL, INTERESTS, BROAD), middle funnel is engaged people (social engagers, website visitors, email subscribers) and bottom funnel is remarketing to qualified people (ViewContent, Add to Cart, and similar events…).

There have been a lot of campaigns for small budgets for a few EUR – a few tens of EUR per day.

Example – an account running 10 campaigns for 10 EUR per day, each with 2-3 adsets with 3-5 ads. The result is that Facebook can’t distribute small budgets when it has many possibilities, it can’t learn and optimize effectively. The vast majority of campaigns are learning limited and 1-2 ads “take” most of the budget (especially if it is a CBO, see below).

Solution

So how to deal with this funnel issue? Well, the best practice is a logical consolidation of campaigns. Personally, I have accounts that spend thousands of EUR per day and run 3-5 campaigns – 3x TOFU (BROAD + LAL STACK + TESTING), MOFU, BOFU. I’ve seen accounts that were spending 50k EUR a day and running on 5 campaigns. The exception is split campaigns across countries. Consolidation gives FB more targeting and optimization options, it learns faster and spends budget more efficiently. No need to try to “outsmart” the Facebook algorithm. 

If you have enough data in Pixel, even wide targeting can work well, and in the later phase, wide targeting is necessary for good scaling.

All credits for this series goes to Martin Palsovic, E – commerce consultant with more than 14 years of marketing experience.

Focus on the things you are great in – your business, leave the struggles with Ad management. on US. Try one of our provided SERVICES for a hassle-free way to get ahead! 

SEE OUR SERVICES
Tags:
Case Studies

Grow in Impressions

With Boosterberg, Kremsa Digital was able to increase impressions by 66% while lowering the budget by 14%. This was enough to cover their costs as well as the cost of using Boosterberg. Read the entire
case study here.

Categories

  • Advertising Tips
  • Boosterberg Features
  • Boosterberg News
  • Case Studies
  • Social Media News

Related Articles

  • The most common mistakes in Facebook advertising: Introduction
  • 10 Common Mistakes with Facebook Ads
  • Facebook Ads Placement
  • How to Measure and Optimize the Effectiveness of Your Facebook Advertising
  • How does Facebook promotion influence your online sales?
  • Facebook marketing tips from specialists
  • Facebook and Friends: Where to Now for the Global Advertising Platform?

Boosterberg

  • Features
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Badges & Testimonials
  • Subscribe to our newsletter


Guides

  • Signing up to Boosterberg
  • Setting up a new campaign
  • Advanced boosting tips
  • How to run an engagement campaign
  • How to run a traffic campaign
  • How to run a conversion campaign

From our Blog

  • New Instagram feature
  • Apple's changes - what it means for your digital marketing efforts?
  • Facebook advertising automation alternatives
  • Facebook marketing trends in 2021!
  • Facebook marketing tips for specialists

© 2021 Boosterberg s.r.o.

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy