Let’s pretend you’re about to audition for an acting role that could make or break your career. You have to impress the panel before you get into the production, and to do that. You have two choices: try to amaze the judges with an improvised performance or research their work to understand their preferred dramatic techniques better.
While spontaneity is a great attribute if executed well, adapting yourself to ideas that have worked before is a more systematic approach.
Good question!
Think of it this way: by doing some research before your audition, you equip yourself with ideas that the judges are already warm to—meaning the possibility of landing that role might be higher because you’re giving your audience something they’re already familiar with.
Facebook uses the same principle. Ideally, you want to build rapport with your audience throughout the customer journey through retargeting strategies.
There are three types:
These people don’t know much—of anything—yet about your company, product, or service. If your objective is to widen your brand awareness and reach, you should target these people.
These people recently engaged with your business in any form and are most likely to take your desired action.
Those who have already taken the desired action.
All types of audiences are valuable when advertising on Facebook. It’s about approaching them with the right content at the right time.
Tap on cold audiences if your objective is to introduce your brand to strangers. They become part of the warm audience once they engage with you. Give them time to consider your brand until they decide to take action with your business. You can consider them hot once they have taken the desired action from your business.
In this blog, you’ll learn the different tips and strategies that focus on cold and warm audiences.
An essential asset of any Facebook campaign is the Facebook Pixel—a code that collects data from your website and helps you track results and conversions, build audiences and optimize campaigns.
This is an event whenever a potential customer takes action on your website. Events allow you to know what stage they are in their customer journey: maybe they added items to their shopping cart, subscribed to your newsletter, viewed one of your product pages, or made a purchase.
Facebook Pixel has a small library of standard and custom events that can help you identify the category of each audience based on their actions.
Use your results as the foundation of your next strategy by populating your audiences and creating custom audiences that you can use for various objectives.
Your retargeting strategy should adapt to where your audience is in the customer journey! A person who looked at your online product catalog might already be considering your product, but that won’t be the same for someone who just read your introductory blog.
With the Pixel, you can start populating your audience after each campaign. Guide your audience further into the customer journey by creating ads specific to each phase.
Here’s an example of a strategy that adapts to each level of interest:
Start by creating a Reach campaign to show your ads to a maximum number of targeted audiences interested in things relevant to your brand.
Create an engagement custom audience comprised of people who engaged with your ads.
Retarget your engaged audience by creating a Video Views campaign. Videos generate a lot of engagement, including any action taken around the video, such as commenting, reacting, and sharing. But a more precise way of populating an audience from your video campaign involves viewing time!
Segment your audience based on the length of time people viewed your video. Why? Because a person who watched in total might have a more substantial interest in your business compared to someone who only watched 5 seconds of the video.
Those who watched a minimum amount of time can still be useful! We recommend retargeting with a more engaging video to expand your engaged audience further.
Once you’ve built a substantial enough audience engaged with your content, you can create a Conversion campaign to drive them to your website.
Conversion ads push people to take valuable actions on your website. Optimize your campaign according to what can help you achieve your end goal—a purchase, a subscription, or a download.
Who else knows your business better than anyone else? Your existing customers!
You can retarget your customer list to upsell new products and services. Instead of tapping consistent buyers, consider focusing on subscribers or customers who have been unresponsive.
Show ads highlighting a new feature of your business to pull them back into your sphere of influence!
Under the GDPR, users must willingly give their information through a consent form, which means buying or scraping lists is strictly forbidden.
Finding the right opportunity to run your retargeting ad is one of the challenges in generating results.
We recommend creating a workflow process for each campaign to see the bigger picture of your strategy.
A workflow process can streamline the sequence of your next steps based on user actions or pre-defined rules.
Each campaign may have different results, so you must adjust your retargeting strategy for the end goal.
Note: The steps in this workflow can go on, but for situational analysis, this process should be enough for us to gather insights.
In the image above, the workflow starts in the consideration stage, while the end goal is sales generation. At each stage of the workflow, your audiences continue to populate as the campaign runs! The more valuable the action taken is, the deeper you can guide your audience through their journey with the help of retargeting.
While it might sound scary initially, you should also explore other targeting options such as exclusions.
By choosing to exclude specific audiences, you’re optimizing your ad cost-efficiently by reaching out to people who have more potential to turn into leads and customers. You want to continue retargeting audiences who take action and stop spending money on people who ultimately decide not to engage with your ads.
Lastly, you might want to exclude your loyal customers when creating a campaign. They’re already generating sales, and most campaign objectives are primarily geared towards converting new clients!
The exception is, of course, if you are trying to introduce a new product line from your business—then your loyal customers can be ideal for retargeting.
Here have a few more tips on Facebook retargeting ads:
Trust your intuition as a social media marketer when pausing ads that seem nonperforming. We recommend looking through all the available data and checking the relevance scores on your ads.
Maybe they need more time to decide—or they were distracted when they came across your ad. The challenge is knowing when to stop making an effort. Persistence is great, but sometimes, letting go is the wiser choice.
Now that you’ve been immersed in a few retargeting strategies, let’s reiterate the similarities between acting and retargeting:
You can control your retargeting campaign by following these simple tips and tricks. Note that advertising on Facebook can be very situational, and there are other strategies you can follow.
The most critical factor is identifying where your audience is in the customer journey so you can come up with the perfect retargeting strategy!
Check out our social media services and learn how we can help you create conversions through social media ads!