Are you using the Boost Post button on Facebook?  Are you getting the results you want from boosting your posts?  In this article I’m going to show you my strategy and results for using Facebook boosted posts in my ad campaigns.

Many people are only using the Boost Post method for advertising but the truth is that should be only a small part of your advertising budget.

The boost post seems like a good idea and Facebook makes it easy to use.  Just 2 button clicks and you are done!  But if you aren’t targeting your Boosted Post in the right way, you may be wasting your money.

Boosted Posts Should Be Used for Your “Warm Audience”

Boosted Posts are automatically optimized for Page Post Engagement.

Which means the ad is shown to people who are more likely to click Like, comment or share your post.

If you are using the keyword targeting, then you are showing your ad to a “cold” audience who is more likely to click like on the post and then they will never see your business again.  You haven’t “captured” them in any way.

UPDATE:  With the new Engagement Retargeting option on Facebook, you can actually capture that audience!

If the goal of your post is to drive traffic to your website and you want connect to a new audience, you should use the Facebook Ads Manager to match your goal to the right Facebook Ads objective.

But what do I mean by a “warm” audience?  Your warm audience is anyone who is familiar with you in some way and can include:

  • Your current fans
  • Your website visitors
  • People who have signed up for your email list

Facebook is rolling out Engagement Targeting on Facebook and that will also include people who have interacted with your posts in the past.  That may be an effective way to target but until I’ve done some testing on it, I’m not going to recommend that for your strategy now.

Facebook Boost Post Strategy

The Boost Post option is still a good type of ad to run, but you need to be smart about how you are using it.  Here is my strategy that I use to get $0.11/website click on many of my boosted posts.

  1. Use my blog posts as the main type of boosted post.
  2. Create an image for my blog post that is eye catching and includes the title of the blog post in the image. Size the image properly for Facebook at a ratio of 1.91:1 (for example 1200 x 628).
  3. Make sure there is a call to action within the blog post to sign up for my email newsletter or get a free ebook so that people can get on my email list.  I also have an exit popup on my posts.
  4. Post the link to my Facebook Page and wait a couple hours for the post to gain some traction and get organic reach.
  5. Spend $30 boosting the post to Fans ONLY in the US, UK, CAN, AUS – my most engaged audience. Sometimes I will choose to boost the post to my website visitors or email subscribers.
  6. Make sure the Pixel tracking is on for the boosted post.
  7. Uncheck the Instagram placement (this is now checked by default – Instagram placement on a boosted post will be optimized to get likes on the Instagram post and doesn’t drives traffic as well).
  8. Boost the post for 3 days which would reach a significant portion of my Fans for $30.  Keep the text to a couple of lines but I haven’t done a lot of testing on longer vs shorter text.
  9. Watch the performance.  If the ad isn’t getting under $1/link click within $10 spend, then shut the ad down.  Occasionally I will keep it running if I really want exposure for that promotion.

For Boosted Posts, I’m getting better cost per website click because my warm audience is familiar with my content and wants to click over to read it.

See full article at: http://www.andreavahl.com/facebook/boosted-posts-facebook-strategy-results.php