As an entrepreneur, I am always trying to find cost-effective ways to promote my business. I am no marketing expert, at least not yet, so a lot of it is just trial and error at this point. For my first attempt at paid advertising, I chose to boost a Facebook post to see what would happen.
Now if you follow other bloggers you may have heard of Melyssa Griffin she is an internet marketer and blogger who makes over $100,000 a month! She no longer shares here income reports but the ones she has posted up to the end of 2016 are still there.
I was looking at her December 2016 Report and noticed she paid a staggering $52,582 in Facebook Ads. Now, no one pays that much each month unless they are getting an even better ROI.
Now I haven’t got over $50k to spend on Ads so let’s just try £20 and see how far it gets us.
Attempt 1: What not to boost
After creating my Facebook page my very first post was a simple “Here’s my service which is open for beta please signup” sort of post.
The post had a link directly to my signup page in the hope it might drive some traffic there. So I set up my target audience, entered my card details and tentatively waited for my ad to get reviewed.
About an hour later I got the dreaded message:
Ad not approved
Your post is still published on your Page, but it is no longer boosted because it doesn’t follow Facebook’s Advertising Policies.
Not a great start but oh well let’s try again. After doing a bit of Googling it turns out Facebook doesn’t like promoted posts to look too much like an advert, as it spoils the user experience of the site.
So for my second attempt, I tried just a standard list post to see how it would perform.
Attempt 2: Promoted Blog Post
Now content marketing is something I am going to spend a lot of time doing over the next 6 months as I try and get some traction for my startup. So I was going to be posting stuff anyway so why not start now.
I had already done research on what sort of posts attracted visitors by looking at other blogs in my niche. To get clicks however I needed a decent title.
I used CoSchedule’s Headline Analyser to come up with a decent headline. If you haven’t used it before it is a very cool free tool that gives your headline a ranking based on how well it thinks it will perform.
After about 10 mins of trying different things I came up with “ 5 Mistakes Unsuccessful Recruiters Make All the Time “. Which gave me a headline score of 73!
With the article written and published the next step was to post a link on my Facebook page and write up what was ultimately going to be my boosted post.
Target Audience
The great thing about Facebook Ads and the main reason I considered using them is that you can specify your target audience. Instead of sending your message out to thousands of random people you can send it to people in your niche who might actually be interested in your offer.
For my first Ad I wanted to try and make it as targeted as possible so I went with the following:
- Men and Women aged 25 – 34
- Living in United Kingdom, United States and Australia
- Job Title of Human Resources Recruiter (HR Recruiter), Corporate Recruiter or Technical Recruiter
- Interested in Recruitment or Sourcing (personnel)
I ran the promotion for 6 days with a total budget of £20.
Boost Result
For just £20 my post was shown to 3,858 people and resulted in 150 clicks through to my website. Resulting in a 3.9% click through rate (CTR) which is probably about average if not on the low side for Facebook Ads.
You will notice from the stats above that I also managed to get 2 comments. However, it seems that Facebook’s algorithm isn’t perfect, as based on the comments it clearly wasn’t shown to recruiters. I couldn’t see my selected interest on their Facebook profiles either.
For completeness, these were the comments I got on the post. Still, I guess some engagement is good right?
Website Traffic
Obviously, all those clicks resulted in traffic on my site. Unfortunately, it didn’t convert into any sign-ups, but I think that is probably more down to my poor post choice and lack of a decent call to action (CTA) in my post.
If you are interested this is what those 150 clicks look like in Google Analytics over those 6 days:
I seem to be missing 25 clicks. I am guessing whoever clicked the link didn’t wait long enough for the page to load. Also interesting is there are more than the 3 countries I selected.
Conclusion: Should you Boost a Facebook Post?
Even though there was a severe lack of engagement and signups resulting from my £20 spend, I would still count this as a success. With better copy and a decent lead page on the other end, I think this could have potential to bring in a lot of leads.
In future, I will be doing smaller tests and working out which Ads perform better before spending any more on Ads.
If this post was at all interesting or useful please let me know in the comments.