| Thanks for chiming in. A few comments regarding your guidelines. 1) Change your targeting to reduce fraud clicks.
- I did, and I actually had M, the Facebook Global Marketing Specialist, comment that my targeting was solid. If this becomes a game of guess-and-check, then that's borderline gambling. I had a pretty specific target group, and that got me nowhere. Also, whenever FB responds with "you need to improve your targeting," I interpret that as "stop sucking, and then you'll be awesome." 2) Always use the hack mentioned by adambratt.
- I incidentally tried that with one of my previous ads. No luck. Try try again? 3) Focus on post quality and virality.
- This sounds like a bit of 1 and 2 put together. Again, when FB gave me this canned response, it started to sound like "stop sucking, and then you'll be awesome." My messaging was both clean and direct. Even for the Japan market (with specific targeting), I wrote IN JAPANESE "whether your on the train, at home, or in school, listen to my podcast to help you improve your English listening skills." Again, nada. Do you have any specific anecdotes with your own business and FB advertising that you could share? Thanks for mentioning Google, I'll research it to see how it could help me. |
I can understand your frustration with FB. I was just as frustrated when I dove in. Good luck to you.
PS: It absolutely is very close to borderline gambling / borderline day-trading. However it's NOT, and that minute difference is where the arbitrage can be found. Cheers!