How To Make The Most Of A $10 Facebook Ad Spend

Radhika Sivadi

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A great article at JeffBullas.com recently offered 10 excellent reasons to spend $10 a week on Facebook advertising. The piece, written by Jason Parks, made a strong case for investing cash into your content marketing strategy on Facebook.

But, there are a couple of ways to make that $10 work even harder. Why not make $10 net a much heftier payoff?

The Theory

The theory is simple: Boosting posts is a good thing. Boosting posts that have been crafted to appeal to a target audience, based on data-driven research into their preferences, is a great thing.

The death of organic reach on Facebook has been widely chronicled, and ad spends, as Jason explains, are one cost-effective way to get posts in front of the correct eyeballs (and their friends’ eyeballs). So in the land of super-viral worldwide information snowballs, it’s an easy choice to spend money to lob digital snowballs into newsfeeds. That’s $10 thinking.

Now it’s time to go beyond $10 thinking. To multiply the impact of your ad spend, you need to lob posts that land with such poise and panache that people pick them up, ponder them, and pass them on.

Think about it this way. If Facebook is the battle of Troy, the perfect post is a Trojan horse; the ad spend is the cart it rolls in on. Your $10 gets the horse in position. Your intelligent research into your audience’s preferences opens the gate and sends your post streaming into multiple newsfeeds. (There’s even an arrow on the share button!)

Boost Posts That Resonate

Jason recommends using $10 post boosts to see what kind of content your audience responds to. It’s a great idea, but you can make that $10 immensely more effective by researching your audience’s preferences long before you click “boost.”

Researching the content that appeals to your audience can take a lot of time and money, you can shortcut the process with BuzzSumo’s top content search feature. It allows you to quickly and easily identify the most relevant topics, the most popular formats, and the most viral headlines. Developing content which you know appeals to your audience improves you content marketing odds.

Hannah Smith, from Distilled, summed up this strategy for finding relevant topics. “BuzzSumo makes finding out what resonates with people ridiculously easy. Simply search for a topic and see what’s being shared. From there you can see the sorts of pieces and stories that are resonating, and identify themes.

“It also shows you what isn’t being shared. Don’t believe me? Do a search for ‘fungal nail infection’ – the topic results have been shared just 4.5k times on Facebook – looks like most people want to keep their manky toenail problems to themselves. Contrast this with a search for ‘nail art’ – here the top result has been shared 104k times on Facebook. (We know you’re curious!)

buzzsumo results

“When you do pay to boost posts,” Hannah continued, “you will get more value from your ad spend, because you will have already eliminated a lot of extraneous, unpopular material from your content marketing strategy. Instead of trying to rank 1000 posts from most popular to least, you’ll be ranking 10. That’s value added.”

You can take this strategy even further than honing a list of topics to write about.

Content Formats Your Audience Likes

The same tactic can identify the type of content your audience likes to see — videos or infographics, lists or how-to posts. Once you know what your fans like, you can serve up a steady stream of those types of things. Then, watch the statistics to see which is really their favorite. You will be ranking a list of four or five content types instead of a list of 50.

Killer Headlines

Writing a killer headline, as recommended in this post at Kissmetrics is an essential part of getting your content read. You can nap tips to beef up your headline skills in the Kissmetrics article, as well as in this one at Wordstream. With a quick topic search at BuzzSumo, you’ll have a list of the most shared headlines ready to go. No need to reinvent the wheel. Check out the list of most shared quizzes from BuzzFeed below. You can see how they used an effective headline over and over to grab more shares.

This type of content creation makes everyone happy. Your fans are happy because they have what they want—content they like. You are happy because you have what you want— solid information about your audience and a chance to grow your fan base by expanding your newsfeed real estate. Win!

Researching What Works

Approaching content creation haphazardly is costly in terms of time and money. It takes time to think of topics, time to write blog posts, time to find images. It just doesn’t make sense to spend the time writing something with one hand while the fingers of the other are crossed, hoping you have discovered a winning formula. It’s not a very effective way to create.

Another approach is labor intensive. You can crawl the web for content, pulling shares with API’s. Crawling and pulling might be effective, but its hard, even tedious. And, it’s definitely not the most efficient choice when there’s an easier, quicker option.

A top content search feature automates the process, essentially doing the crawling and pulling for you. In a few seconds our topic search will show you what people like to share. With a couple more clicks, you can create a really great list of proven ideas. Then you can analyze those ideas — look for the formulas that have the widest appeal, the themes that resonate, the headlines that grab attention.

Without those guides in place, you are likely to spin your wheels. As Jason says “The biggest mistake we see businesses make is they invest in the resources to create the content, but there is no strategy or money behind it.”

So instead of crossing your fingers, do some research and get on with making a great piece of content that will resonate with your audience. Even one great piece a week can make a difference on Facebook, Jason’s advice is “Focus on promoting just one piece of content per week. You need to make sure this Facebook post is darn good so you get the best bang for your buck. Instead of making seven mediocre posts over the course of the week, if you put all of your energy into one post and promote it so it can gain some traction, you will see much better results.”

This article was syndicated from Business 2 Community: How To Make The Most Of A $10 Facebook Ad Spend

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Radhika Sivadi