Simply swapping headlines or colors on the same image is now penalized with higher CPMs. The Andromeda algorithm demands a wide variety of creative formats (static images, UGC, carousels, memes) and angles (pain points, testimonials, curiosity), viewing minor iterations as a single, less valuable creative piece.
Contrary to the prevailing "video-first" narrative, Meta's own data shows that 60-70% of ad conversions still come from static images. Furthermore, carousel ads are experiencing a significant resurgence, making them a top-performing format that advertisers should prioritize for the new algorithm.
The next evolution, the Generative Ads Recommendation Model (GEM), aims to fully automate ad creation. Marketers will simply provide an image and a budget, and the AI will generate the entire ad library. This shifts the marketer's primary value from ad creation to optimizing the post-click customer journey and offer.
A low Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) might seem successful, but it could be hiding inefficient creative. Optimizing creative strategy could dramatically lower CAC further (e.g., from $39 to $16), unlocking greater profitability and scale, especially as you increase ad spend.
Facebook search results are shifting from a text list to an "immersive grid layout." This change transforms search into a visual discovery engine, meaning text-only posts will lose visibility. Marketers must now prioritize visually compelling content to rank in Facebook search, treating it more like Pinterest or Instagram Explore.
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."
Previously, marketers told Meta who to target. With the new AI algorithm, marketers provide diverse creative, and the AI uses that creative to find the right audience. Targeting control has shifted from human to machine, fundamentally changing how ads are built and optimized.
Instead of testing individual ad variations, advertisers can use the "Dynamic Creative" (for leads) or "Flexible Creative" (for sales) toggles. This allows combining multiple top-performing images, videos, headlines, and text into a single ad unit, which Meta’s algorithm then mixes and matches to find the optimal combination for different users.
With Meta's Andromeda algorithm automating audience targeting, the primary reason for poor ad performance is no longer incorrect targeting settings. Wasted money is now almost exclusively a result of insufficient or non-diverse creative, making creative strategy the most critical component of a successful campaign.
Consumers see thousands of posts a day, making generic sales graphics invisible. To capture attention, use creative formats that are entertaining and playful, such as creating a fake news announcement about your sale or parodying a well-known ad trope.
When platforms like Instagram roll out a new feature, such as the awkward long horizontal format, marketers should adopt it immediately. Platforms aggressively push new features to drive adoption, rewarding early adopters with increased visibility and reach, even if the feature itself is disliked by users and creators.