How are you using remarketing on Facebook? If you've ever felt frustrated about the ROI on FB ads, it just may be time to give them another chance. In today's guest-hosted Whiteboard Friday, Ryan Stewart outlines his process for using remarketing and targeted content creation to get more conversions out of your Facebook ad spend.
Video Transcription
Hello, Moz fans. My name is Ryan Stewart. I own digital consultancy agency WEBRIS, and I am ecstatic to be doing this week's version of Whiteboard Friday.
Now, as a marketing consultant I get the pleasure of talking to fellow marketers and business owners all the time, and one of the first questions I ask them is what they're doing on Facebook, because I firmly believe there's no better way to spend your money online right now. Nine times out of ten, what they tell me is this. "Hey, look Ryan, we spent some money, we got some fans, we got some video views, we got a lot of clicks, but ultimately that return on investment wasn't quite there, so we stopped." So I'm going to show you a framework today that's going to help you get more return on investment from your Facebook ad spend.
Common key mistakes when it comes to Facebook ads
Before we get into that framework, there are a couple of key things that I want to just check off right off the bat that might help you. These are key mistakes that I see people making all the time.
- The misuse of Facebook technology. What that means is not having the pixel installed, not using custom conversions, not using a tag management solution to help you out, and not really understanding and using custom audiences the right way, because those are ultimately what make remarketing and really what make this whole funnel thing really drive through. We need to understand and use custom audiences the right way, and I'm going to talk about that in here.
- We need between six to nine brand touchpoints. Another thing, and I kind of call this the SEO mentality, we think that just because somebody is interested or searching for red shoes that means they want to buy it. It's not the case. Especially on Facebook, there's a completely different mentality on Facebook, and we need to understand that. There's a lot of studies that show that we need between six to nine brand touchpoints before somebody is an interested sales prospect or lead, and...
- We need to build that value, that relationship and really build that purchase intent. We do that through content, which I'm going to talk about in depth over here as well.
- The lack of trust in Facebook. Again, the SEO mentality that we're constantly working against Google, Facebook is a complete opposite. They have done an amazing job optimizing their platform. All you have to do is tell it what you want it to do and it will go out and it will find the right audiences. Just have faith in the process. Trust that Facebook will get it done for you, and then you can focus on what really matters.
The Facebook marketing funnel framework
This is the framework that I have drawn up over here. It looks like your traditional marketing funnel. It's got your awareness, interest, consideration, and purchase. But what's in it is specific to this process and Facebook ads in particular.
Now I'm going to start actually not at the top. I'm going to run you through the whole thing, but I'm going to start here with interest, because this is where most people start. They build a landing page, a squeeze page that says, "Hey, opt in for our free e-book," and they just start promoting it. They push it to fans. They push it to audiences that they think are interested in it. Unless you're a huge brand that has all of these touchpoints and awareness taken care of, it's very tough because people don't know who you are and they're not just going to start giving you their information and start buying just because you put up a nice landing page.
1. Build your content — whatever form works best for you.
So what we need to do is build the content on top of that. That's what I have right here. So you can I've got different types of content that you can use — videos, blog posts, webinars, e-books. Whatever it is, it doesn't really matter.
Create something that you're comfortable with. But what you need to focus on is really two things.
- Making sure that it's on your website, because then we can retarget people and get them down that funnel.
- Creating and building value for the people that you're targeting. So again, if you're Moz and you sell a bunch of different products — you've got your local solutions, you've got your keyword research, you've got link building solutions — we don't want to just create one piece of content. We want to create specific pieces of content that are engaging to those little sub-niches of the audience and relevant to the product, and that's key because it allows us to expand and scale this out.
2. Gather insights from people that are already aware to inform your lookalike audiences.
Now once you've got that content built, what I like to start doing is promoting it to what I call warm audience. These are people that are already aware. These are your Facebook fans, your website retargeting list, your customer list, all of these people. You start by promoting the content to them, and you start analyzing the data and see what's performing best.
Understand the audience segments that are driving the most engagement, driving the most purchases right off the bat, because what we can do is create lookalike audiences based on these and we can pivot into promoting this to cold audiences. Again, this is really where you can start to scale, because this is only going to take you so far. Unless you're a massive brand, it's not going to take you very far. This is really mostly for data analysis and getting some initial people into the funnel.
This up here, the cold audiences, is where you really start to make your money. So again, lookalike audiences are a tremendous thing. You need to trust in Facebook that what you tell it to do, it's going to go out and find the right people. But there's other stuff you can do as well. Again, because we're not taking a landing page, we can actually go out and do some form of outreach to get more eyeballs on the page. We can go to Facebook groups. We can go to other Facebook Pages. We can say, "Hey, I've got this really great guide, '19 Things To Do to Build Links for Local SEO." We can start to do some exchanges. All we need to do is start getting people to here, getting people to this content, because once they're on this content, they're in our funnel. So let me show you how this works, and this is where the Facebook ads really start to pick up and retargeting really starts to come into play.
3. Remarket with an initial offer to move your audience from aware to interested.
What we want to do is we want to set parameters that tell Facebook, "Hey, anytime somebody's been to this blog post but hasn't been to our landing page, show them this ad." I love to use video in this case, again because video is a great way to build the brand, to hack those touchpoints, to get your face out there, and to start getting some recognition. So I like to use a video that says, "Hey, thank you for checking out our blog posts, our webinar. We really appreciate it. But we left some things out, and those things are included on this page." That's how you can start to introduce your offer and get people to your landing page, your squeeze page, or your product page.
4. Use another remarketing ad to move them from the interested stage to consideration.
We're not done there, because there are some other things that we can do on Facebook to start really building this thing up and driving a lot more conversions.
Once we get people to the landing page, not everyone is going to convert. So what we can do is we can set up another remarketing ad that's says, "Hey Facebook, anytime that somebody has been to our landing page but hasn't been to the next page, which is our trial page, our thank you page, whatever that may be, we want to run this ad." Again, I like to use video again, and we can say, "Hey, thank you for checking out our landing page, but you didn't opt in. Did you know that we have a free trial? Did you know that we offer a discount? Did you know we have a free e-book?"
Whatever it is that you're offering to get people to opt in, run that. What happens is then you get your people in your email sequence, your traditional marketing sequence. You run that on the side, but again we're not done. Because we found these people on Facebook, they're still on Facebook. There's still more that we can do.
5. Build trust with ads that share benefits, testimonials, etc.
If you've got a free trial that you're giving away, a free consultation, whatever it is, a discount for your products, we want to tell people about it. We want to make sure that they're taking advantage of it, because again you know once you get somebody on email, you might have a 20% open rate, you're cutting off 80% of people. But we know they're on Facebook, so what we can do is run another remarketing ad that says, "Hey Facebook, anytime that somebody has been to our free trial page but hasn't actually purchased, let's drive people to use it." You can start talking about the benefits of your product, start showing testimonials from people. Whatever it is that you can drive people to use your product and really build trust in your product, you want to take advantage of that.
6. Use your final remarketing ad to sweeten the pot and ask for the hard sell.
Finally, we're still not done, because we still haven't asked for that hard sell. This is where we use our final ad that says, "Hey Facebook, anytime that somebody has used our trial but hasn't been to our ultimate checkout page, we want to run this final ad." What I did, I have a course that I use that I sold using Facebook ads. What I did, I ran a very personalized video ad that said, "Hey, thank you for checking out my content. Thank you for attending my webinar. Thank you for checking out the free trial. Look it, there's something that's holding you up from purchasing. I am willing to jump on a call with you and answer any questions that you may have." Obviously, that's not going to apply to every business. But figure out a final piece of value that you can add to those people to really drive them to purchase and ask for that hard sell.
Again, this is kind of a quick overview of this process, but the key point here is that this part from down here's automated. All you have to focus on now is building more content and building more traffic to that content, because once you get traffic to this content — and you know tons of ways to do that, you can even rank it in organic search and get people in your funnel that way — all you have to do is focus on getting people in here. This whole funnel is automated, and it's a beautiful thing. When you do this, it takes patience. You're not going to get as many email conversions upfront, but it works.
I'm telling you, if you just have faith in this process and use this to your advantage, use remarketing with everything that you can do, it will work.
Again guys, my name is Ryan Stewart. Hopefully you enjoyed this presentation. For more information, again there's a ton of stuff on Moz. I have some stuff on my blog. I appreciate your time. Take care.
Hey Ryan,
Couple of questions here-
1) What do you set as budget expectations for this process with a client? Like for instance, the creation of these pieces of content/collateral and then running the ads themselves obviously cost some money. Do you set minimum cost expectations for these?
2) What is your timeline expectation for this? I think for our clients it would be the time commitment to get up and running that would be a bit of a barrier for us (even though I particularly like to preach patience with all of this). Just was wondering if you had some insight into this?
Loved the presentation. I'm going to use this to help us build our pitches.
1. budget adds up - they need to be willing to invest in content (preferably video), audience building and testing to really see results. depending on the audience targeting, CPMs vary. for my agency (WEBRIS), i spent about $1,000 to get things right and created all the content myself. this is just the cost to entry to market effectively in today's world.
2. timeline really depends - see my comment above.
Thanks. That was my suspicion. Budgeting this out for us I was thinking it needed to be 1K+ pretty much off the bat to make sure that A) we were profitable and B) the client would be successful. Thanks so much again. This was very helpful.
Extremely well explained Ryan! I think one of the biggest barriers when pitching Facebook marketing to clients is getting them to overcome their past experience with it where they have just blindly thrown some money at a boosted post and the outcome has been "well this hasn't worked", similar to how many people experience Adwords for the first time! As you mentioned, patience and trust in Facebook really is the key. How do you go about ensuring clients trust in Facebook, stick with the process and don't abandon a campaign early?
It's difficult, especially bc you have to spend money JUST to build the right audiences to target. It's similar to SEO, you have to prep the client ahead of time that it's going to take time, patience and investment BEFORE the return comes.
Hey Ryan, firstly congrats for your first WBF at Moz and thanks for sharing the helpful post to get most of the advantages from Facebook.
thanks shalu, i appreciate it!
Great WBF Ryan! You have made me reconsider marketing with Facebook again. My personal takeaways:
thanks for the comment brad - we can talk more about this in detail :)
Great Whiteboard Friday! Nice to listen :) And not only do you explain how to use Facebook marketing, you also explain very clearly how you can use remarketing (in general) to get your audience through the funnel. Good Job!
Thanks Roy, much appreciated
I'll be watching the comments all weekend - since WBF is meant to be under 10 minutes, a lot of details got covered quickly. PLEASE ask any and all questions here, I'll answer!
Ryan, this is brilliant! I think I've heard you mention before that it's worth installing Facebooks pixel (even if you're not actively marketing on FB right now) as it's useful for re-marketing further down the line.
This was advice that I thought I'd taken but when I checked yesterday, I realised my site had no FB pixel installed. #fail.
Anyway, great WBF - I think too many people try to skip straight to that $ without doing the rest!
Thanks Joshua!
Hey Ryan, congrats man!
Quick question, how would you use Facebook ads for a client in the emergency service industry? For example locksmith, plumbing, roof repairs, fire/water damage restoration, etc. Were people only search for these when they really need it, usually make a quick decision and not necessarily need to be "romanced" with retargeting?
thats tough, as those are "on demand" services thats best suited for search, i.e. ppl dont care about a locksmith until they need them and when they do, theyre searching google for them. i probably wouldnt waste resources on FB in those niches, but if they had extra cash to spend, i would just create a 30 sec commercial and run it in the areas of service. treat FB ads as TV ads, they work that way also
Good stuff. That's a solid WBF really enjoying it!
When is the next one? :)
im hoping they let me back for more :)
Hi Ryan!
I really loved the video! I think you had a great idea to do it because even if it's almost 9 minutes, it's easy to undersand and i think people will pay more attention on the video that reading.
I know that reading the rest of the helps to complement things you said in video.
And the way you did it was very nice! Very interactive and intresting!
Thanks!
Camille.
youre very welcome camille, it was incredibly difficult to smash this all into 9 minutes, i couldve spoken for hours! thanks for commenting :)
Thank you for a great post of Facebook remarketing
I have been using it for some time now. Initially we were using Facebook conversion campaigns, but once we have remarketing setup for our Ecommerce store our sales have grown. However there are several things which i think needs to be worked upon. For instance how to re engage people who have already purchased from us? Which product they will like ?
id look at your store's data as a whole to better understand your cross sell and upsell opportunities. then, test! it's the best way to find out what works :)
Hi Ryan,
Congratulations on the WBF contribution and overall, I think you did a great job.
As Rand has previously said, "the best way to sell something - don't sell anything, earn the awareness and trust of those who might buy".
Education is key, and brands are able to influence purchasing decisions with remarketing in this case (but in a good way, as it's not a hard-sell).
Great work.
thanks joshua!
Hi Ryan
Thanks for that great summary of the FB channel. Really enjoyed it. It's helped me realize that it's a totally different mindset for Facebook, and a lot of the PPC or SEM rules don't apply and need to be relearnt.
I'm a travel marketer in New Zealand and have been using Google Adwords and traditional SEM for years to get people in our sales funnel. We've started with Facebook and are doing a fair bit of what you outline here, but haven't really got our funnel as defined as you suggest. We've found our cost per lead is about 20% of what it is on Google Adwords which is great, but are struggling to get as many actual sales across the line from our Facebook leads.
What I (and hopefully others) would find really useful would be a real life example of a couple of these steps you outline, for a business offering a product or service other than online marketing services, if you get what I mean?
Maybe you can point us towards something?
Agree with the previous comments about the shirt - go loud next time!
Thanks.
id look into Keith Krance, he's one of the people I look to for FB ad info - you should be able to find some great examples on his blog and podcast.
Awesome WBF! Thanks for the insight!
Thanks Tom, you're welcome!
Excellent and timely post Ryan. I am in the process of setting up Facebook Dynamic Ads to promote a product catalog for customer so can relate to all of your points which are spot on! Getting audiences set up correctly is key and implementing pixels can be a bit tricky but am assuming it will be well worth the effort.
Glad we could be of help Rick
I certainly agree whenever you have a chance to remarket with FB ads, please do so. Plus I think the FB platform is a more user friendly than Google adwords. I've used GA since mid 2000 and lots have changed in their platform. Thanks Ryan for a great explanation. FB also has the ability to dig deeper into geo-targeting groups like say recreational fishermen and reach out to them to chat (soft approach).
Just curious you mentioned creating content at the "awareness" stage, do you work with your clients with a full blown plan or is it something that you just suggest to the clients?
Cheers!
It's baked into our content marketing process - we build out a list of topics, mapped to keywords and then map it to the stage in the customer journey (aka funnel).
Great presentation Ryan,
Good to see we are on the same page (strategies), not easy to set up but very easy to run.
P.s. One thing I didn't like... I missed the iconic white board Friday shirt, I think the use of a Rand shirt should be mandatory for guests. :)
they didnt give me one! thanks for commenting :)
I really liked this Whiteboard Friday! Very thorough despite only having less than 9 minutes to explain something that is pretty complex. I'm very interested in getting into the Facebook automated ad process, but it's good to know that at the end of the day it's still about having great content to give to the customer. Everything technical can be learned in time, but having content that will grab people's interest is the real challenge. Thanks Ryan!
thanks chris, it was INCREDIBLY difficult to shorten this down into such a short time frame, i appreciate you recognizing that.
Great approach and well Presented. Well done ryan.
thank you, i appreciate that :)
I'm your big fan, Ryan!
This video is another good job as usual. Look forward to your next video.
hopefully they have me back for another - thanks for commenting!
Very important article because Facebook is for many the main business channel. Thank you very much for sharing
this article is very helpful for new user and professional. keep sharing
Thanks for commenting Arif!
Solid explanation. Really appreciate the level of detail. Thanks for sharing Ryan!
You're welcome Kevin, I do what I can
Hey Ryan, great info.
Retargeting is such an underused strategy I agree, the only problem I've run into is when a client has a low monthly budget. It's challenging to spread out the ad spend between all the ads. Do you have a recommended budget for a campaign like this? Lifetime or daily?
Thanks
Jason
i dont, its really too difficult to tell. you need as much as you need, thats the best i can say.
how do you feel about people in third world contrys clicking on paid ads to mask the paid likes on their accounts. alot of ads get fake clicks from people in india or somthing who are doing small paid tasks like liking a facebook page and they click ads to mask that pages and make their profile more full
I feel like that's pretty sh!tty, but there's nothing i can do about it. i try and focus on the positive, not the negatives - there's always going to be people who try and take advantage of the system for their own personal profits, just ignore and focus on your own results and campaigns. in spite of them, FB ads still work!
Epic post and this really puts a great visual for working framework. Really appreciate it.
Cheers.
Sergey
youre very welcome, thank you for commenting
A great WBF again as usual!
Thank you for this very structured and logical view on a mainly misunderstood topic. It helps a lot!
This is cool, I learned a few new tricks to my strategy thanks to this post!
Wow thanks Ryan! Didn't know much about retargeting until now but you said it in a very clear way! To run retargeting campaigns do you have to use a pixel? Isn't that how you can track website opt-ins and so forth?
Thanks again man :)
Ryan, Thanks for a great presentation. I have a question. Anytime I see a similar conversion funnel whether it's from you, digital marketer or others, it seem like it's more suitable for coaching or consulting services such as the fb ad consulting service that you and others are providing. Does this type of funnel also work for products? I sell products so I don't offer free ebooks, webinars or pdf guide to hook the customers with free digital products to show value. What approach or funnel do you recommend for someone that's selling physical products?
Hi Ryan, Great content here!
I have my first client willing to pay pretty decent money to get into FB Ads. They, however, are a chiropractic/healthcare clinic. It's very tempting to take on but I don't want to under perform or not perform at all! I'd rather have a good reputation than a bad one at the expense of chasing money. Do you advise this niche being worth it?
No doubt Facebook has taken over all of us ... Now everything is based, is linked and intertwined with it.
Good post btw;)
thanks!
Finally a well explained Facebook funnel strategy that works. Thanks for sharing!
thank you alessandro!
Great work Ryan. I have been following you for a while now and your tips have been the best I've seen.
thanks daniel, that means a lot
Hey Ryan, great video, thanks. When you move a user through this funnel, do you maintain anything along the way through it that helps you know the users you put in the top are turning into revenue? For instance, let's say I have a client with 100+ visits a month before FB advertising. Largely SEO/SEM. I know that retargeting those users on FB will convert them, they came to my client's site specifically looking for XYZ product.
Now, say I start running some awareness & interest campaigns. Do you keep those users separate so they don't just get mixed into the general retargeting pool? I've played with putting some parameters in the URL and segmenting the custom audience to keep them separate - do you have a specific method?
great question - we use video for the very top of the funnel, or what i call the 'attention' stage. those videos are hyper targeted based on the product we want to sell and we build custom audiences based on the engagement of those videos. we also create a general custom audience for ANYONE that has watched ANY video that we use as another top of the funnel audience.
Hi Ryan, I really appreciate the structured way that you layout your framework out. So often the advice given is scatter-gun without the strategic thought given to what are the outcome objectives. You nailed it when you laid out the touch points that marketers need to be consistent in achieving to gain that front of mind purchasing experience. Looking forward to your continused work.
thanks for commenting, im glad you enjoyed it!
Great video Ryan, though the audiences can be a little complex and time-consuming to set up, you made it seem so simple. I'm actually in the middle of setting up our own funnel, so grabbing the screenshot of the board so I can make some tweaks!
its really difficult, it took me a while to fully grasp them, but once youve got it down theyre easy!
I was looking forward to this WBF. Always easy to follow along when you explain your processes
Didnt consider sculpting your moustache for this one? thanks Ryan
i left my wax at home, next time!
I am very un-aware of Facebook marketing but this article really opened up my eyes to the benefits of the social media platform. You brought up a great point in that it is built with the user in mind so optimizing on it is key to re-targeting. One of the bigger aspects that I like is the ability to make several passes with different approaches to user depending on their interaction.
Great contribution to the Moz community!!
glad i could help!
Just wanted to thank you Ryan for the post today and Moz for hosting it. I use Facebook for advertising our listings in real estate and have had a lot of success from a branding standpoint but not so much conversion directly on our site. This coupled with Rand's 10x content WBF should be gold!
anytime, thanks for commenting
Another GREAT job Ryan. I have been a follower for a while now (I think since you first started these videos) - and I learn something each time. Don't stop! Al
thanks al
Call me lazy :) , but watching a video is much better than reading it, you get much more, congrats Ryan
agreed :)
Always a great video Ryan! Love the idea of remarketing and using FB to your advantage. Keep spreading this great information bud.
thank you!
Love this Ryan - totally flipped my perspective of shooting for one-touch conversions on FB ads.
much appreciated david
Yo Ry Guy... You rock and this white board break down of how to run our Facebook ads is awesome! I've been struggling really bad getting results from FB ads and I think things might change as I start applying these techniques.
thanks isaac!
Great video. Well presented. What I would like to see is actual tutorials on how to set up these ads. Where to go. How to narrow target market, etc.
i have a blog post coming out next week, stay tuned!
Fantastic work, Ryan! Facebook is probably the most powerful marketing tool anyone can use but it's also very easy to waste money. Thanks for showing us how to do it right!
Anytime
Fantastic video and FB funnel breakdown. I haven't used FB a ton but am working on a venture now where I think it will develop into a big part of it. I always enjoy the knowledge you are putting out there and this is definitely right on par with the quality. Props
Thanks Phillip!
Very timely Whiteboard Friday Ryan, I have a client who is a perfect fit for this and we were only just talking about this earlier today! Thanks for sharing :-) I am going to discuss this with them and implement the Sh*t out of it!
A lot of people have been struggling with FB lately, it's too powerful not to take advantage of. Thanks for commenting Stephen!
1. This is a great WBF. I know nothing about Facbook and this helps a lot.
2. You lookl ike Rand's stunt double :D
Ha, I think it's the lighting...
Really well presented Ryan! Loving your posts! :)
Thank you :)
Awesome WBF Ryan. Everything you said was spot on!
thanks max!
Great info, you hit on 2 problems I have with FB ads right off... guess I need to go fix those
thanks alan!
Great video, Ryan! I'll definitely be incorporating these ideas into my Facebook strategy :)
thanks joe!
Amazing! Great walkthrough. You could have charged money for that one!
much love pierre
This is all great stuff thanks for sharing! However, I do have a question, how about SMB B2C customer? A majority of the Whiteboard Friday is catered to B2B or B2C commerce sites. How about a client that is SMB in the service industry and trying to pull in leads for their service. Any light on this?
thats actually easier, all you have to do is locaize the ads. i.e. if youre a restaurant in miami beach, id create some short videos about how great your coffee it, empanadas, etc - then just run them within a 1 mile zip of your location with demo targeting layered on top
Hi Ryan, I really enjoyed the video. These are sort of things I've heard before, but this breaks it down in more details and makes it clearer.
Do you have any training on how to actually set up the automated part? I know they are probably out there, but it's hard to find just the one place that shows you exactly how to set all that automation up I feel.
Thanks!
i have a blog post launching next week that details this - make sure to check out our site then: webris.org
holy moly this is so detailed! Thanks for sharing this Ryan! What providers do you use for the emails & landing pages in your funnels? Also, what is the minimum daily budget you recommend to use? Thanks in advance
we use activecampaign for emails and build our landing pages custom. however, unbounce and clickfunnels are both great, you cant go wrong with them. it looks like youre a miami native, thanks for commenting!
Hey Ryan, great presentation. I love your content, you are very innovative and it is easy to tell you have a real passion for marketing. Everything you illustrated makes sense. People today are generally fed up with the volume of direct sales out there, so how you break it down and interact with your target audience by offering value to build Brand awareness at each layer in the Funnel is a refreshing approach. Great strategy man, and I am definitely going to steal and implement this into my own marketing campaigns. Excited to see what results I can generate!
Cheers for sharing and as always looking forward to your next video.
David.
pleae do steal and please let me know how it turns out!
I've stopped the video several times, to take notes, and I only discovered the transcript after that :)
Very good info. Not new to me, but the part with "working against google" got me thinking. Can you please ellaborate on that. What do you mean by that ?
Thanks
sure, i was referring to SEOs (as the large majority of this audience are search marketers). we're working against google's algo for organic visibilty, whereas with FB we're working with them. hope that makes sense
Yes, I got that part. My only problem with the facebook advertising system is that they take money out of the advertiser's account and NOT clearly state what cost what. What is your opinion on the incorrect, not clearly measurable CPM/CPA policy in FB advertising ?
Good info!
Could you go into more detail on when it's best to use Google remarketing vs Facebook remarketing?
i find FB to be more effective, as people dont really click on banner ads. however, its not really one vs the other, if you have the budget, you should do both. if you dont have the budget, tick with FB
Great new perspective on a well known topic, well done, Ryan!
thanks walter! much appreciated
Great info Ryan! Good actionable breakdown of processes and realistic expectations from FB marketing efforts.
:)
youre very welcome paul
This does a really good job of turning the whole ad process into a very natural conversation.
thanks joe!
Facebook Marketing is very good job.i am really like this post.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=i+am+tofayel
thanks
Very useful post. Thanks Rayn
youre very welcome
Great WBF Ryan...
thanks guys, i apprecaite your comment
This is awesome... thanks a lot
youre welcome john!
Thank you so much Ryan for sharing about this Facebook funnel. I am still starting my social media engagement according to my field. Though I am certain and searching for the best way to start of doing facebook advertising about the service I am into.
I'd like to ask if you could also share some best resources where I could start learning about facebook advertising so that I could probably keep going in my venture? I would really appreciate it. Kane introduced to me about facebook marketing, then mentioned about Facebook pixel code but still I am trying to figure out how it is done. Your facebook funnel whiteboard is awesome, so I tried to reached out to you if I could get some tips or resources where I could start Facebook market. Hope you're open to this as I am not really into this field, but I'd like to try it just to market my service to students and teachers being a writer. Thanks mate. Looking forward for your response. Heading off to share this on my twitter.
Cheers,
James Stucky
[link removed by editor]
keith krance is probably one of my favorite experts, he's got the best content - i'd look into his work.
I'd say Keith Krance, but look also into Jon Loomer Digital. Jon Loomer knows his stuff in Facebook ads as well. Great info from either place.
Ryan, great job on the white board Friday and laying out the best practices in Facebook funnel building. Spot on sir!