To circumvent Facebook's strict housing ad targeting, a marketing agency used a two-step funnel. First, they ran a broad, non-real estate video ad to a specific neighborhood. Then, they retargeted people who watched the video with their actual housing ad, effectively creating a hyper-targeted audience despite platform restrictions.
Local service businesses should use organic social media as a testing ground for ad creative. Post helpful, authentic content consistently. When a post naturally gains significant traction (e.g., 5-10k views), invest a small, targeted ad budget ($100-$500) to amplify that proven winner within a tight geographic radius to generate leads.
To successfully test a new ad platform, focus on three foundational steps: 1) Integrate your data (pixel, CAPI) first. 2) Allow the platform to target broadly for at least 14 days without preconceived notions. 3) Test the platform's deepest engagement surfaces, like Snapchat's chat ads.
Meta's new ad placement inserts ads immediately after the top 5% of trending organic Reels. This tactic leverages the user's heightened state of positive engagement from the viral video, making them more receptive to the subsequent ad and significantly boosting ad recall and overall performance.
To prove marketing's ROI, run geo-fenced ad campaigns targeted at a specific set of retail locations. By comparing sales in these "test" stores against a control group of similar stores, you can measure the direct, incremental sales lift caused by your creative, providing black-and-white accountability.
Acknowledging that "relevance" is subjective shouldn't lead to creating generic, one-size-fits-all campaigns. Instead, it demands a high-volume creative strategy that produces dozens of distinct assets, each tailored to be hyper-relevant to a specific consumer segment or "demand state."
Social media has shifted from 'social' to 'interest' media, where the algorithm targets users based on the content they consume. Making hyper-specific content for your target audience is the most effective form of targeting. Resist making broad content for vanity metrics, as it won't reach qualified buyers.
Marketers chasing trends on 'cool' platforms like TikTok create an imbalance where massive, older platforms have huge audiences consuming features like Facebook Reels but few creators serving them. This supply/demand gap for attention creates a significant, underpriced marketing opportunity.
The future of paid social lies beyond broad audience targeting. The next level of sophistication involves using identity data to dynamically adjust ad spend and frequency based on the specific value of an individual consumer and their stage in the journey. This means not all site visitors are treated equally in retargeting.
During tentpole holidays, Resident activates CTV to retarget users who recently visited but didn't buy. They view this not as a performance channel with measurable ROI, but as "marketing hygiene"—a necessary, common-sense tactic to capture high-intent buyers on a big screen, even if direct attribution is impossible.
Standard top-of-funnel campaigns like "video views" often target low-quality audiences that Facebook's algorithm has already identified as non-buyers. True top-of-funnel marketing requires a unique method for capturing attention, like viral TikTok content or major creator partnerships.