fbpx
(02) 42444411 info@ybrmarketing.com.au
8 Ways to Lowering Your Facebook Ad Costs in 2022

8 Ways to Lowering Your Facebook Ad Costs in 2022

Have you been wondering how to stretch your Facebook ad budget? You’re not alone. Many marketers are still wondering how to grow their organic reach, avoid the Facebook penalty and keep up with all of the changes at Facebook. It’s for these reasons I’ve put together a list of 8 ways to stretch your Facebook ad budget in 2022.

Factors that affect the cost of Facebook ads

Just like Instagram ads costs, Facebook ad costs are influenced by a number of variables.

First and foremost, the campaign objective you select for your campaign will have a significant impact on pricing since it relates to the value of the desired goal and where in the funnel your users are. For example, Brand awareness or Engagement campaigns will cost less than lower-funnel campaigns like Conversions that drive purchases. It’s easier to get someone to engage with an ad than it is to entice them to click through, open up their wallet, and complete a purchase.

Next, audience size plays a role in Facebook ad costs as well. Ads targeting larger and broader audiences will generally cost less than ads targeted at smaller audiences. You will typically see lower costs in prospecting, upper-funnel, cold-audience campaigns compared to retargeting, lower-funnel, warmer-audience campaigns because the audiences of the latter tend to be more specific and smaller in size—therefore more competitive.

Facebook’s algorithm is in constant learning mode, so it will continue to optimise your ads over time. The longer your campaign runs, the more data Facebook has to work with, which can result in lower costs.

This is where a high daily budget comes in handy. For example, if you have a $5 daily budget for a new ad set and only spend $1 on a given day, Facebook may take longer to exit the Learning Phase because it received less data to work with. The same will happen if you have a very low-performing ad set — if the ad set doesn’t reach Facebook’s minimum goal for engagement or conversion volume by the end of the day, then it may not be able to learn enough to optimise your ads well.

If your daily budget is on the higher end, Facebook may be able to exit the Learning Phase faster because it has enough data and a large enough audience pool to draw from. With a higher daily budget, Facebook also has more room in its budget optimisation algorithm to push your ads out more frequently, increasing your chances of getting new conversions and engaging with new users.

Bidding strategy is another factor that influences the cost of your Facebook ads.

A bidding strategy is the way you instruct Facebook to spend your ad budget, and there are a variety of options.

If you choose a lowest-cost bidding strategy, it will try to spend as little money as possible while focusing on getting the most out of your ad for you. A maximum value strategy prioritizes maximizing the value of each conversion. A cost cap strategy is more expensive than a lowest-cost option but allows you to set a limit on how much you’re willing to spend on each click or conversion. Similar to cost cap, minimum ROAS (return on ad spend) involves setting a specific dollar amount that you want to get back from each dollar spent. Finally, manual bidding gives you direct control over your bids for clicks or impressions, with no optimisation by Facebook’s algorithm.

Click-through rate can also play a role in you Facebook ad costs. If click-through rate is low, especially in a website traffic campaign, you may then see higher costs as Facebook understands that there may be some disconnect between your target audience and the messaging in your ads.

A healthy Facebook click-through rate is about 2%. More often than not, the higher your click-through rate climbs, the lower your cost per clicks will be.

There are many factors that influence the cost of Facebook ads, and the most important one is industry.As you saw in our benchmarks above, Facebook costs vary by industry, which also includes varying click-through rates. It’s also important to look at the ROI by industry. For example, the average CPA for restaurants is $12.91. But if your customer spends $50 and keeps coming back for years to come, you’re essentially making money off of that ad.

Of course, other factors play into ad costs as well, such as:

The level of competition in your industry (for example, in real estate)

How many times a user has converted on your site or app

Whether or not you’re advertising mobile or desktop apps

The cost of your product or service

Seasonality: Historically speaking, in the latter part of Q3 and Q4, costs tend to temporarily increase as the advertising landscape changes for the holiday ecommerce season. Competition ramps up as brands increase their budgets and gain more impression share, thus, increasing costs for all advertising brands.

Keep that in mind as you budget for the year and if you aren’t in ecommerce or running promotions during the end of the year, you may want to strategize on whether to keep a presence or to scale back.

Location: If you’re targeting a smaller metropolitan area like Peoria, IL versus New York City, your costs may be lower given that there will be less competition for those impressions.

Competition: The more saturated your industry is with advertisers, the higher costs will be. There are simply more brands vying for those same impressions and clicks from your target audience.

facebook CPC per industry

Source: Wordstream.com

Lowering your Facebook ad costs

Running a Facebook ad campaign isn’t easy! Success comes as a result of constant testing and optimisation. There are ways of making things easier and reduce your costs without having to take shortcuts. We’ve put together 8 proven ways to help you lower your Facebook ad costs.

1. Create a full-funnel strategy

To use your budget wisely, choose funnel-appropriate campaign objectives. In general, Awareness and Consideration campaigns are suited for the top of the funnel; Consideration and Conversion campaigns align with the middle of the funnel; and Conversion campaigns are best for bottom-funnel conversions.

In short, begin with upper-funnel campaigns to reach more people in your target audience at a lower cost, and then move your way toward conversion campaigns that optimize for your purchase-driving conversion events.

Note that some brands can certainly run a Conversion campaign targeting upper-funnel audiences with lower priced products or something that may make for a good impulse buy.

People can and do make purchases upon first interaction with a brand on Facebook, however, most will need more touch points from a brand so you can gain their trust, showcase your benefits, and entice them to convert.

facebook full-funnel strategy

Source: Wordstream.com

2. Use the Automatic Placements setting

While it can be tempting to pick and choose where you want your ads to appear within the Facebook network, the best way to save money is to start with the default Automatic Placements setting. In fact, not doing so is on our list of 7 Budget-Wasting Facebook Ads Mistakes. By appearing on all placements, Facebook can get a better idea on where to best serve your ads, thus lowering your costs. You’ll also get out of the learning period faster so that you can apply data-informed money-saving optimizations as soon as possible. Your targeting conditions will remain the same regardless of placement, which means Facebook can then serve ads to user in a lower volume, but lower cost placement that can help drive incremental revenue for you.

facebook automatic ad placements

3. Broaden Your Audience

Your audience size impacts how much Facebook ads cost. So while you want to keep your targeting narrow, you should strive to make those targeted audiences as large as possible. This has become trickier as a result of privacy measures implemented by Facebook, but the benefit is increased privacy for Facebook users and the opportunity for marketers to target more precisely and identify more effective strategies for reaching their target audience. If you’re not sure where to start, look for commonalities among your current customers and try targeting people in your own network who share those characteristics.

  1. Check audience overlap

Check audience overlap. Facebook’s audience overlap tool can be instrumental in saving money. Let’s say you have one ad targeting an audience of people interested in startups and another ad for people interested in entrepreneurship. You have different Facebook ad copy and creative to appeal to these different audiences. However, the overlap tool shows you that half of the startup audience overlaps with the entrepreneurship audience. Knowing this, you can use exclusions so those ads don’t overlap. Otherwise, you’d lose money bidding against yourself.

facebook ads audience overlap tool

Source: Wordstream.com

5. Bid caps

Bid caps are the manual bidding strategy in Facebook ads, where you can set a maximum bid instead of allowing Facebook to dynamically bid based on your goals. But this should be used with caution. It’s for advertisers who have a solid understanding of the conversion rate and profit margin, and requires regular maintenance. If you set your bid cap too low, Facebook might have a hard time spending all of your budget.

6. Use the Pixel and the Facebook Conversions API

The goal of both of these pieces of technology is for you to track your ad performance. With visibility into what’s working and what’s not, you can allocate budget accordingly. You can also gain insights about the people viewing your ads, which you can use to further optimise your campaigns and maximise your budget.

The Facebook Pixel is still a thing, but it is losing its power since it’s cookie-based and cookies are crumbling. The Facebook Conversions API does not rely on cookies, but it doesn’t pick up the same exact information as the pixel. So, using the two together will ensure you capture the most accurate data. Refer to SOP “Installing facebook pixel on your site” below.

SOP 005: Install the Facebook Pixel on Your Site

7. Run Facebook A/B testing

Facebook isn’t the set-it-and-forget-it type of platform. If you want to get the most bang for your buck, you’ve got to stay active, and that includes running tests at the ad level.

Running tests can help improve your engagement rates and CTR, which will stretch your budget further. Here are some tips on how to lower your Facebook ad costs through testing:

  • Run A/B tests on ad sets
  • Run A/B tests on ads

Lowering your Facebook ad costs can be tricky. If you’re reading this, you know as well as anyone that Facebook is constantly making changes to its platform, and sometimes those changes aren’t so great for advertisers.

But there are still plenty of ways to make sure your campaign achieves the results you want while keeping costs low. We put together a list of the top 8 ways we’ve found to help lower your Facebook ad costs—and get more bang for your buck.

A/B ad testing

8. Target your page fans separately

1. Target “People who like your page and their friends” with a different ad than what you’re showing other audiences because this audience will convert at a much higher rate than cold traffic, but remember: just because it converts better doesn’t mean you should spend more in this audience than other audiences.

2. Don’t target people who like your page if all you want them to do is engage with an ad, not convert—that will just cost you more money because they’re already familiar with your brand and content.

3. Target only the interests that are relevant to your business, even though Facebook gives users the option to select multiple interests when creating campaigns on its platform (such as beauty products or tech gadgets).

4. Use remarketing ads instead of retargeting

SOP 074: How to select your Facebook Ads Targeting
SOP 075: How to plan your Facebook Ads Campaign
SOP 007: Creating a Cart-Abandonment Remarketing Campaign Using Facebook Ads

Considering the above facts, it should come as no surprise that Facebook Ads are more cost efficient per thousand impressions than other social media platforms. However, there are other factors to consider when making a final decision on where to spend your ad budget. No matter what platform you choose, keeping your costs down will always be an important element of running successful campaigns.

Dedicated to Your Marketing Success

John

wollongong digital marketing

The Value of Lead Generation

The Value of Lead Generation

Whether you’re a B2C or a B2B, if your business has sales, it should be generating leads. A lead is a potential customer, and lead generation is the process of creating and nurturing those potential customers.

The benefits of lead generation include:

Credibility: By offering valuable, reliable information to potential customers, you establish your business as an authority in your field. This means that when they’re ready to buy, they’ll be looking for you first.

More sales: You’re not only attracting new customers when you generate leads, you’re also working on keeping them around for the long haul. Leads are carefully cultivated through the sales process so that by the time they reach conversion, they are ready to do business with you.

Less effort: Lead generation allows you to have more control over the sales process while simultaneously reducing your own workload. By automating certain steps of the process and making sure every lead gets a personalized experience, your team will spend less time chasing down leads and more time closing deals.

What’s the real cost of lead generation?

Lead generation is a valuable marketing tool. It helps businesses build their pipelines and drive sales, and for those who are just getting started with it, it can be a game-changer—especially because there are so many free resources available.

But what’s the real cost of lead generation? And how can you make sure that you’re actually getting your money’s worth?

One of the more popular methods for generating leads is to “buy them” from lead generation companies like Hipages, Oneflare, Airtasker and Service Seeking.
It seems easy enough, pay your hardearned, get a lead, and go from there..

So what’s the catch? Lead generation companies are expensive. They charge a percentage of the total job value, in most cases is 15% plus a monthly fee plan which can be anywhere between $99 to $1200. In fact, on average, it ends up costing you more than $30 – $60 per lead in some cases. That’s per lead. Not per job or sale.

It’s for this reason that we don’t recommend using pay per lead platforms such as those mentioned above. We’ve had dissatisfied clients who’ve used these sites, and generally speaking, each lead they accepted was 30 to 40 dollars. Often once accepted the “client” wouldn’t answer calls or they were just curious as to the cost. After a few leads like this it becomes extremely costly. This only bumped up the price for the next client as we couldn’t afford to keep paying for such expensive leads.

If you own a franchise and are required to pay a set monthly fee regardless of your revenue, it can be costly, and most large franchises will sends leads your way for a price, which on the surface may seem low, anywhere between $4 – $10, but factor in the complusory monthly fees and those leads could be upwards of $60 plus each.

marketing budgets

So what is the alternative?

Google or Facebook?

Search is no longer just a place to discover new products and services. It’s become the go-to destination for consumers who are ready to buy. Even if they aren’t sure exactly what they want, search engines are where most people start their research.

So why not get in front of those potential customers at the moment of highest purchase intent?

In a recent survey, 71% of respondents said that search engines were the first place they looked for information about products or services. And with paid search ads, you can show up at the top of those search results—and beat your competitors to the punch.

Paid search ads are highly effective because they put you in front of consumers when they want your product or service most.

Google and Bing Search Ads: Average Cost Per Click, Click-Through Rate, Cost Per Lead, and Conversion Rate by Industry

If you’re considering running Google or Bing search ads, you’ll want to first get an idea of what you can expect to pay for cost per click, click-through rate, lead cost, and conversion rate. These factors will play a large role in how much your ad campaign costs overall.

To help you get a sense of what’s possible in your industry, we’ve compiled the top 20 industries that run Google and Bing search ads (according to their own data). The data is broken down by industry so that you can get an idea of where you need to improve to stay competitive.

Also read: “The cost of Google Ads in 2022”

Pay only for interested leads

What is cost per lead?

Cost per lead, also known as cost per action, cost per conversion, or cost per acquisition, tells you how much you spent in order to get someone to complete a desired action—whether to fill out a form, call you, or make a purchase.

How much does it cost to get a lead?

According to Wordstream market research, the average across all industries is $41.40. This overall average is lower than what we’ve seen in the past, which is good news for advertisers. The automotive vertical has consistently been in the lowest bracket in our past findings.

Which industries have the highest cost per lead?

Industries with the highest cost per lead include attorneys and legal services ($73.70), furniture ($64.72), and finance and insurance ($62.80).

Which industries have the lowest cost per lead?

Industries with the lowest cost per lead are animals and pets ($14.88), automotive repair, service, and parts ($17.81), and restaurants ($20.49).

 

average cost per lead

Which industries have the highest conversion rates?

The conversion rate of an ad is the number of people who clicked on your ad and then did what you want them to do (like contact you or buy something from your site). This is one of the most important numbers you’ll ever look at, because it tells you whether your marketing dollars are being spent in a way that creates value for your business.

We found the average conversion rate across all industries to be 8.82%, ranging from 3.25% to 19.19%.

Industries with the highest conversion rates include animals and pets (19.19%), physicians and surgeons (19.15%), and automotive repair, service, and parts (15.23%). Industries with the lowest conversion rates were furniture (3.25%), apparel/fashion and jewelry (3.6%), and real estate (3.93%). Our past data also finds the highest conversion rates in the legal and automotive verticals and the lowest in real estate and apparel.

On the other hand, the personals conversion rate has historically been higher than what we’re seeing here.

average conversion rates

I am not a marketer, I run a business, so how can I do both successfully?

You’re not alone. You think you’re the only one who’s ever been through this, but we’ve heard from many business owners just like yourself.

You’ve built your business on passion and hard work, so it can be a rude awakening when you realize that you need to give all that same passion and attention to crafting an effective marketing strategy.

For a lot of people, it’s especially hard because they don’t have a background in marketing—they’re just business owners. But the good news is, we can not only help you with that, we can also help turn you into a marketer who happens to own a business.

Here’s how:

Three Words: “Standard Operating Procedures”
We have been developing and using our marketing SOPs to great success. Our SOPs provide you with step by step instructions that make setting up effective ads simple and straight forward. They are easy to follow even if you are a beginner or don’t have any experience in creating Facebook or Google ads.

Our SOPs come with detailed instructions on how to set up your ads, tricks of the trade that save you time, money, frustration and improve your results. We have been working with different audiences over the years and have tested what works best for your market.

SOP 047: How to Create a Lead Generation Landing Page

Like to know more? Click this link 

Dedicated To Your Marketing Success

John

wollongong digital marketing

Call Now Button