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Maybe your ads are running, but Meta doesn’t spend your entire budget. Or maybe your ads won’t deliver at all.

Why??

It’s a common issue. Let’s break down the potential explanations for what might be happening and how you can address it.

1. Your Audience is Too Small

This one’s rather logical, but some advertisers still miss it.

If your goal is to target a very small audience and set a budget that may be suitable for a larger audience, you shouldn’t expect your entire budget to spend.

You may see that your budget spends initially, but it may struggle with time — particularly if performance wanes.

If this is your issue, consider expanding your audience or lowering your daily budget.

2. Using Ad Set Spend Limits

Ad Set Spend Limits

If you are using Advantage Campaign Budget (formerly known as Campaign Budget Optimization), you have the option of setting an ad set spend limit (or minimum). This may lead to delivery issues.

Any time you attempt to restrict the algorithm, your actions may impact delivery. If you’re going to use Advantage Campaign Budget, it’s recommended that you refrain from setting ad set spend limits, except in extreme situations.

3. Cost Per Result Goal or Bid Control

Cost Per Result Goal or Bid Cap

By default, Meta’s algorithm will attempt to get you the highest volume of optimized actions at the lowest cost. But you can choose to override that and enter a Cost Per Result Goal or Bid Control.

By doing so, you are restricting the Cost Per Result or bid based on your goals. The impulse might be to set an unrealistic Cost Per Result Goal or bid in an attempt to lowball the algorithm.

The result will almost never be magical results. Instead, expect to get under-delivery. If you’re going to use these options, be careful to set reasonable cost and bid controls.

Read here for more information on manual bidding.

4. Optimization Event

Optimization Event

Your optimization event matters. Meta recommends setting a budget high enough to get at least 10 optimized actions per day (multiply the expected cost per optimized action by 10). Similarly, you may need to generate up to 50 optimized actions per week per ad set to exit the Learning Phase.

If you are unable to set a budget that is high enough to accomplish these goals, you may find yourself in Learning Limited. This often results in restricted delivery.

When this happens, consider switching to an optimization event that will result in more daily volume.

5. You Set up Dayparting

Meta Ads on a Schedule Dayparting

Some advertisers want their ads to only run on certain days or at certain times. If you use a lifetime budget, you can run ads on a schedule (also known as dayparting).

First, check to make sure that your ad set is supposed to run today. If you use dayparting, you may have chosen to turn it off.

Once again, restricting the algorithm can be problematic as well. Far too often, advertisers try to outsmart the algorithm. In the case of dayparting, they may choose to only run ads between 9am and 5pm during the week “because that’s when our customers are online.” Well, that’s also the most competitive time.

Your ads may struggle to deliver as a result.

6. You Set a Frequency Cap

Frequency Cap

This is a limited situation when optimizing for Reach, but it happens. In this case, you can choose to set a frequency cap, which limits how often you reach your audience.

The default frequency cap is 1 impression every 7 days. If you use this, particularly for smaller audiences, you may notice that the ad delivers fine the first few days but then starts slowing down. Why? Because the algorithm has to wait 7 days to deliver your ads to the same audience again.

If you’re going to use Reach and this is an issue, consider adjusting the frequency cap.

7. You Use Automated Rules

Automated Rules

Sometimes, changes are made automatically based on rules that you set up. It may have been a rule you set up long ago that you completely forgot about.

These rules may pause your ads based on performance. Or you may automatically adjust your bid, which could impact delivery (as discussed earlier).

Make sure to check to see if you have any automated rules running and determine whether they are impacting active campaigns.

8. Performance Issues

If your ads are performing poorly, you may see delivery slow down and you may be less likely to reach your budget.

This is a good thing! And it’s a sign that you should try something else.

Check the Delivery Column

Oftentimes, the Delivery column will give you clues about why your ads aren’t delivering. Issues like Learning Limited and Creative Fatigue are the most common culprits that could lead to a drop in delivery.

Check the Activity History

There are a couple of reasons that you should check your Activity History if delivery is an issue.

First, maybe there was a significant change or change you weren’t aware of that led to the drop in delivery.

Second, look for frequent changes or pauses that would negatively impact the delivery of your ads.

Use Breakdown by Day

Breakdown by Time Ads Manager

Another way to isolate what went wrong is to breakdown your ad performance by day. See if you can isolate when this problem began.

You should start with those problematic dates when looking at your Activity History.

Watch Video

I recorded a video about this, too. Watch it below…

Your Turn

Do you have issues with Meta spending your ads budget? Are there any other explanations that haven’t been listed here?

Let me know in the comments below!

The post Why Won’t Meta Spend My Advertising Budget? appeared first on Jon Loomer Digital.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=5822

When Your Brand’s Customer Experience is Underwhelming — What To Do

Managers are Routinely Unaware of How Customers Actually Rate Their Customer Experience.

It’s a startling fact. We know 80% of organizations believe they deliver a “superior experience” to their customers; however, only 8% of customers feel the same way. We’ve shared the top five most common reasons Why Brands Believe Their CX is Better Than It Really Is and sadly, one or more probably apply to your organization. (Pause and let that sink in.) Whether this is a new revelation to your CX initiatives or a long-known fact, there are steps you must take to turn the CX ship around. And the first step to solving any problem, is to acknowledge it.

Identifying the recurring causes of a poor customer experience are probably something your organization is already tracking. Is that data widely shared with all the teams who can impact change? If not, do it immediately. Every additional customer lost to a poor experience is brand and revenue damage that could likely have been avoided.

 80% of organizations believed they delivered a “superior experience” to their customers; however, only 8% of customers felt the same way.

Pro Tip: Quantify your CX performance data and supplement it with anecdotal stories to complete the narrative. Add in the human elements to make the stories more impactful. Share your current state and desired future state — with time frames — to all internal team leaders who touch any aspect of your organization’s customer experience. From this beginning, process improvement plans can be created and implemented.

No organization intends to provide poor customer experience (possible exception is the U.S. Internal Revenue Service) so how and why does it happen? What are the root causes that matter in your situation? 

Visit our article and quick self-assessment on the 10 Pillars of Customer Experience Your Customers Care About Most to help you learn and hone in on what is really important to your customers.

Use the Four T’s of Customer Service Triage

Convince & Convert has created processes to help assess and improve organizations’ digital customer experiences. One of the process improvements we developed is the Four T’s of Customer Service Triage. Once you know which areas of the customer experience needs help, use this as a framework to focus on where to implement process improvements and change management. While CX encompasses more than just customer service, it is often the decision point for a customer’s ultimate satisfaction or lack thereof.

4 T's of Customer Service Triage

#1: Time

Speed is everything. The time to resolution is the most critical factor in preserving a customer relationship. As Jay Baer explains in his top-rated keynote, Time to Win: Grow Your Business by Satisfying Consumers’ Need for Speed, you can pick two of the three: quality, price, or speed and one of them better be speed.

Continually increasing customer expectations confirmed in this proprietary research, this new reality will have you rethinking your own answer to the “how fast is fast enough?” question. 

What is the time expectation-to-resolution for your audiences? What sets those expectations? How quickly does your organization respond to an email? Chat inquiry? Wait time on hold? Product returns or exchanges? Social media post? For each channel in which your audiences may voice dissatisfaction, your response time has an outsized impact on the ultimate resolution. 

In customer experience, in the minds of your customers, “Rapid Response = We Care”

#2: Tools & Technology

(Yes, that’s 2 T’s but we only counted it once)

We often see customer experiences and customer service hampered by inadequate tools and technology. These tools are force multipliers an organization must use to leverage these key business elements:

  • Your personnel
  • Data, used for personalization
  • Data, used for measurement and reporting
  • Response time
  • Time to resolution

In your specific circumstance, you have your own set of unique requirements, pain points, and resource constraints. High-volume call centers need very different ticket management software than one person answering the phone for a local plumber. There is a plethora of chat and chatbot management software options that allow vastly different degrees of data capture, CRM integrations, automation, ticket management, data collection and analysis. Your organization may have specific needs regarding legal compliance, medical privacy, finance, or any manner of customer privacy concerns.

This is not the place to begin recommending any particular tool or technology platform to supplement your specific needs within your industry nuances. What is appropriate is to emphasize tools and technology are essential investments intended to yield a return over time. But just owning a tool does not make one a skilled carpenter. The tools need to be used with skill and precision. And that leads us to…

#3: Training

In your organization, who is responsible for providing exceptional customer experiences? (Pause, really answer the question before reading further.) 

The correct answer is everyone! Anyone who touches the product or service you deliver, anyone involved in the messaging and communications with your audiences, anyone involved in fulfillment or customer care, they all need to be trained on how to deliver exceptional customer experiences.

The reality is, most of the people in your organization have had little to zero training in customer service or what it even means to deliver exceptional customer experiences. Sure, they are all committed to doing a good job, but how can they do a great job? How can they surprise and delight? What cross-functional process changes could be made to streamline and accelerate progress to higher customer satisfaction, retention, and revenue? These are not net-zero decisions. Teach, assess, refine, and improve at each critical point in the customer journey. Then do the same at each non-critical point too.

Pro Tip: Begin with a broad-reaching internal survey/quiz to assess what level your customer experience team (almost everyone) scores on a variety of customer experience scenarios and solutions. No need for trick questions but get a real understanding of the current state of employee confidence, individual empowerment to “fix” an issue, the internal hierarchy of your organization, and their points of friction in getting to rapid resolutions and exceptional customer experiences. The results may surprise you. If you’d like Convince & Convert to help you implement such an internal assessment, drop us a note.

#4: Temperament

I have great empathy for anyone who works or has worked in a customer service call center. Or been a food server. Airline ticket agent. Or dealt with the public in general. The public can be (is):

  • Brutal
  • Overbearing
  • Rude
  • Frustrated
  • Incorrect
  • Ignorant (different than incorrect)
  • Demanding
  • Unreasonable
  • Loud (yelling)
  • Oblivious to the role the CS person can or cannot fulfill
  • Appreciative of your assistance

I admit, I have at a few times in my adulthood been guilty of most of these. And if you are honest with yourself, you may have as well.

The point here is that not everyone is wired to deal with such drama. Granted, we’ve all encountered CS professionals who are dang good at their job and truly improve the customer experience. And that must be some combination of training, company culture, and personal temperament. Excellent customer service requires an inherent empathy for the customer and genuine desire to help.

“Excellent customer service requires an inherent empathy for the customer and genuine desire to help.”

These are the individuals you must value most and use as examples for others to follow and mimic. If you have one, or a bunch of them, good! Figure out how to replicate that. If you don’t have that in your organization, something must change. Yes, George may have been employed there for 20 years, but if he is gruff on the phone and abrasive to everyone, it’s time to change.

Flight or Fight? Do This Next:

If you really feel your organization’s customer experience cannot be salvaged, do this:

  1. Update your resumé and up your professional networking game. Reach out and make new connections and start to work those for new employment opportunities. If your organization’s CX/CS problems are systemic and you are not able or willing to implement change, look for a more comfortable workplace.

If you really feel your organization’s customer experience can be salvaged, do this:

  1. Refer back to this article on the 10 Pillars of Customer Experience Your Customers Care About Most and determine where your most important pillars are. (To-do steps are at the end of the article.)
  2. Overlay the four T’s for CX/CS Triage from above across your most important pillars.
  3. Create internal visibility, awareness, and understanding of what specific areas need to be improved first and get buy-in from every potential stakeholder who will be involved in the process.
  4. Get outside assistance. If your issues could have been solved internally, they probably already would have been. Outside guidance, awareness of the latest tools and technology, training workshops, help implementing change-management, unbiased perspective, these are all good examples where it is not only ok, but also smart, to solicit some professional assistance.

Pro Tip: The steps in this article are clearly reactionary to your current state. They do not address a new look at surprise and delight, Talk Triggers (infographic), or our Ultimate Guide to Customer Experience. We have knowledge to share. Learn and share with your colleagues.

If you have thoughts, questions, or ideas to share, we are here to help. We always enjoy the conversation.


Check out our entire CX series.

Part 1:  The Two CXs You Have to Deal With — Customer Experience vs Customer Expectations

Part 2:  The Audience Experience is More Important than Customer Experience

Part 3:  Why Brands Believe Their CX is Better Than It Really Is

Part 4: Great Customer Experience Starts with Great Employee Experience

The post When Your Brand’s Customer Experience is Underwhelming — What To Do? appeared first on Convince & Convert.