If you’re a business owner considering Facebook advertising for the first time, I bet your first question is:
“How much does Facebook advertising cost?”
How do I know this? It’s the same question countless business owners new to Facebook advertising have asked me. The traditional answer, and the answer you’ll find in almost every article on the subject, is:
“It depends.”
Fortunately, today I can do better than “it depends.”
Below you’ll find out the average cost of advertising your business on Facebook and what factors affect Facebook advertising costs.
The Average Cost of Advertising on Facebook
This is the #1 answer I see EVERYWHERE about Facebook advertising cost: “It depends.” No sh*t, Sherlock, all advertising costs depend. Fortunately, I’ve got a baseline for you to start from: If you’re measuring cost per click (CPC) Facebook advertising costs on average about $0.27 per click. If you’re measuring cost per thousand impressions (CPM), Facebook advertising costs about $7.19 CPM (Hootsuite). Hold on, we aren’t done. Remember that “it depends” answer? It’s 100% accurate. Starting Facebook ads with those averages mentioned above plastered in your mind is setting yourself up for failure. Why? Because there are a few extremely important factors that determine your Facebook ad cost.Lead Capture – Free Social Media Analysis
Factors That Influence the Cost of Facebook Ads
There are a few main factors that influence the cost of your ads:- Ad objective
- Bidding type and amount
- Audience
- Ad quality
- Your industry
Types of Facebook Ad Objectives and How they Affect Ad Cost
Within the Facebook ads platform are different objectives (goals) for you to choose from. Each goal, and each type of ad:- Has different KPIs
- Is shown to different people based on the outcome you want
Types of Ad Objectives:
Awareness: Ads with the Awareness objective build top-of-mind awareness and interest in your product or service. Consideration: Ads with the Consideration objective get people to start thinking about your business, product, or service, and look for more information about it. Conversions: Conversion ads encourages people to carry out a specific action or purchase your product or serviceHow the Facebook Ad Auction Works and How it Affects Ad Cost
The second factor that plays into how much ads cost is the auction and your bid. Unfortunately, the advertising spot doesn’t go to the highest bidder, and instead is presented based on ad value. According to Facebook, they strive for two things when showing ads:What goes into that value? Three things:The best way for us to do this is to hold an auction in which both interests are represented. That way, advertisers are reaching people receptive to their ads and users are seeing something they’re interested in. This is different than a traditional auction because the winner isn’t the ad with the highest monetary bid, but the ad that creates the most overall value.
- Creating value for advertisers by helping them reach and get results from people in their target audiences
- Providing positive, relevant experiences for people using Facebook, Instagram or Audience Network
- Advertiser bid – Your monetary bid.
- Ad quality and relevance – This is based on feedback from Facebook users and how relevant Facebook thinks your ad will be to the people seeing it.
- Estimated action rates – This is calculated by how likely Facebook thinks a person is to complete the objective you’ve chosen.
How Your Bid Can Affect Facebook Ad Cost
There are two ways to bid for your ads, Automatic and Manual. With Automatic bidding, Facebook sets your bid for you to get the most actions for the best price. With Manual bidding, you decide what a result is worth to you. Facebook always encourages for you to bid true to what the action is worth to you. And focus on ROI instead of the lowest cost. The higher your bid, you more access you may have to the people that matter most.Your Facebook Audience and How it Affects Ad Cost
The audience you choose to show your ads to have A LOT to do with your end cost. The more relevant your audience, the lower the cost. Think about it this way: You’re a home services company. You want to run an ad for a roof replacement, so you choose to target people who are interested in home improvement. Good idea, right? Wrong. If you only select “Interested in home improvement” as a qualifier, your ads are going to be shown to EVERYBODY who has ever indicated they like home improvement. This includes people who live in apartment buildings, people who aren’t homeowners, people who watch HGTV because they’re obsessed with watching shows about flipping houses, etc. Now the bad news: there are more than 350 audience attributes you can select and combine, and it takes years of perfecting your technique to manipulate them into killer audiences.Ad Quality and Facebook: Picky, Picky, Picky
If I was going to say you have to pick two things to optimize to lower your Facebook advertising cost, Ad Quality would be the first on my list, followed by Audience. Here’s the thing about Facebook: Facebook is akin to someone’s online diary. It’s their personal space to catch up with what matters to them, discover new things that could matter to them, and to basically escape boredom. It’s a “see” platform. People don’t go there with the intent of “doing” things. This mindset can work for or against you when it comes to your ad creative. Because it’s a “see” platform, regular ad copy you might see in print of in search results won’t fly, and they’ll drive your costs way up. Your ads need to be interesting, visually appealing, and they absolutely must fit one of these criteria:- Able to pique a user’s interest
- Able to invoke an emotion
- Able to jolt someone into action
Facebook’s Ad Relevance Score
Like we mentioned before, Facebook values user relevancy. The higher your relevance score (rated 1 – 10), the less it will cost to be delivered. According to the platform,Relevance score is calculated based on the positive and negative feedback we expect an ad to receive from its target audience. The more positive interactions we expect an ad to receive, the higher the ad’s relevance score will be. (Positive indicators vary depending on the ad’s objective, but may include video views, conversions, etc.) The more times we expect people to hide or report an ad, the lower its score will be. Ads receive a relevance score between 1 and 10, with 10 being the highest. The score is updated as people interact and provide feedback on the ad.If you want to cut down Facebook ad cost, increase your relevance score.