Facebook Ad Formula
Facebook Ad Formula
Your Objective
a clearly defined objective is the first, and arguably most important, step in the creation of your
Facebook ad.
After all, knowing why you’re writing this ad is going to dictate the words you use and the tone you
write it in.
Decide what your desired outcome is first — and then start writing.
To get the reader to complete an action? (Subscribe to our blog, become a member of our
website, etc.)
Only when you can answer this definitively, should you move on to step two.
Now let’s think of this in terms of copy. If your ad copy is created in a company centric way, it’ll
babble on endlessly about how great your company is.
But if it’s customer centric, it’ll show the reader clearly how your product or service will benefit
them. Plainly state the advantage the reader will get by signing up, purchasing, clicking, etc. Make
your copy about the customer and what you can do for them.
Step 3: Be Persuasive
Persuasive ad copy gets results. For example if you want to highlight the benefits of shopping local
in a persuasive way you need to create an ad in such a way that it tempts people into shopping on
our site, but to also highlight the fact that you’re supporting local stores when you spend money on
local Marketplace rather than chains.
1. Avoid fluff. You barely have enough time to grab (and hold) a reader’s attention. Why would
you ever junk up your ad copy with flowery language?
3. Understand the difference between a benefit and a feature. It’s much more persuasive to
show a reader how the item you’re offering will improve, enhance, better, etc., their life in
some way rather than simply list a few of its features.
4. Know that less is more. try to keep ad copy under two sentences (if they’re medium to long
in length) and under three if they’re very short. This same rule applies to all components of
your ad
5. Always include a call to action. Facebook lets you include a customizable call to action
button in your ad, so don’t overlook this important step. But your ad copy can also include a
CTA to reaffirm the action you want readers to take and, again, catch the attention of
skimmers. (Get it now, buy today, download, click here, book now.)
6. Customization is crucial. Keep in mind that one ad does not speak to all audiences.
Meaning, your copy should be customized according to the audience you are trying to reach
7. Test the persuasiveness of your ads. Testing various ad copy with the same creative will
help you determine what type of copy (straight-forward, funny, edgy, etc.) resonates best
with the audiences you are targeting.
You can spend hours writing the perfect ad, but it’s never going to see the light of day if you don’t
follow Facebook’s rules.
1. Text overlay on images must adhere to the 20% rule. Put more than 20% text on an image
and your ad will be sent to its untimely death faster than a Game of Thrones character. Not
sure how to figure this out? (Who can blame you?) Facebook’s grid tool will help.
3. Avoid adult content. If you’re getting too racy, you’re not going to get approved.
4. Stay away from religion and race in your copy. For example, “Are you Christian?" or “Meet
other black singles” will not fly.
5. False advertising… just say no. Don’t be deceptive or misleading with your copy, ever.
6. Typos destroy ads. Use spell check unless you’d like your ad banished for all eternity by
Facebook’s grammar and punctuation police.
While many components go into a successful ad, (the image you use, the audience targeting you do,
etc.), the copy is always going to be a major player that can either keep you in the game or have you
sitting on the sideline, watching as your competitor scores the touchdown.