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Want to learn how to run Facebook Messenger ads the right way from the start? This article is for you. I’ll walk you through the basic setup—from choosing your goal to launching your first ad—without confusing jargon. Read this all the way through, and you’ll avoid the mistakes most beginners make.

Choose “Messages” as Your Campaign Objective

The first step when setting up a Messenger ad is selecting the right campaign objective in Facebook Ads Manager. This is not just a small detail—it tells Facebook what your ad is trying to do.

For Messenger ads, you want people to start a chat with your business. So pick:

  • Messages

(Not “Traffic,” not “Conversions,” not “Engagement.”)

After choosing “Messages,” Facebook will ask how you want users to interact:

  • Click to Messenger

  • Sponsored Messages

If you’re new, always go with Click to Messenger. This shows your ad in the feed, and when someone taps it, a Messenger conversation opens. It’s great for lead gen, customer support, and quick sales.

This simple step sets the tone for your entire campaign. If you don’t choose it correctly, your Messenger ads won’t even run. That’s why this is the most important step in learning how to run Facebook Messenger ads effectively.

Build Your Ad Set: Budget, Schedule, and Targeting

Once your objective is in place, Facebook will guide you to the Ad Set level. Here’s where the real strategy begins.

Set a Budget That Fits

Start small. I always recommend:

  • $5 to $10 per day for testing

  • Use daily budget instead of lifetime to keep control

  • Choose a 5- to 7-day window to measure early results

Pick the Right Schedule

  • Run ads during your audience’s active hours

  • Turn off ad delivery overnight if it’s irrelevant to your users

  • Use Ad Scheduling (available when using a lifetime budget)

Target the Right Audience

At this point, focus on:

  • Interests relevant to your niche

  • Age, gender, and location filters

  • Mobile-only placement (Messenger ads perform best on mobile)

Want bonus points? Exclude people who already converted by using a Custom Audience.

If you want to master how to run Facebook Messenger ads, your ad set strategy is where you win or lose.

Create the Ad: Copy, Creative, and Message Setup

Now it’s time to build the actual ad. Here’s how to do it right.

Pick a Clean, Eye-Catching Format

You can choose:

  • Image

  • Video

  • Carousel

If you're just starting out, a high-quality image with a strong call-to-action works best.

Write Strong, Simple Ad Copy

Keep your headline short and to the point. Use your primary text to spark curiosity or solve a problem.

Example:

  • “Tired of wasting time on back-and-forth emails? Chat with us instantly on Messenger.”

  • Include a clear CTA like:

  • “Send Message”

  • “Get Help Now”

  • “Ask a Question”

Set Up the Welcome Message

This is what appears once someone clicks your ad. Use a friendly, conversational tone and include a quick question to keep them replying.

“Hey there! 👋 Thanks for checking us out. Want help choosing the best plan for your business?”

When people respond, Facebook sees that as engagement—and lowers your ad cost.

Now you're not just learning how to run Facebook Messenger ads. You're building an experience that turns attention into results.

We just covered how to run Facebook Messenger ads the right way—from setting your goal to writing your first message. Start small, keep it simple, and always test. If this was helpful, stick around for more bite-sized ad strategies from KTM Ads Agency that work in the real world.

👉Explore the article for more insights: https://accountforrent.com/how-to-run-facebook-messenger-ads/

 
 
 

Knowing how to exclude audiences in Facebook ads is key when you're trying to reach fresh, new users. In this article, I’ll explain how to build cold traffic campaigns that avoid overlap with warm audiences — and why that’s a big deal for performance. Stick with me, and by the end, you’ll have a cleaner, more cost-efficient campaign setup.



Why Cold Campaigns Fail Without Proper Exclusions

Cold campaigns are designed to reach people who have never interacted with your business. But if you don’t exclude warm audiences — like past visitors or customers — you’re mixing signals. That leads to:

  • Confused messaging

  • Poor campaign results

  • Wasted ad spend

Facebook’s algorithm doesn’t know your intent. It simply shows your ad to whoever fits the audience unless you say, “Exclude this group.” Without exclusions, people who have already bought, clicked, or visited will keep seeing your cold ads. That’s the opposite of efficient targeting.

Let’s say your goal is new customer acquisition. If you’re hitting your email list or past buyers, you’re just recycling warm leads instead of expanding your reach.

What to Exclude When Running Cold Traffic Campaigns

Here are the main groups you should exclude to keep your cold audience clean:

  1. Website Visitors (Last 30–60 Days)

These are people who’ve already shown interest. Save them for your retargeting campaigns.

  1. Past Purchasers or Leads

If they’ve converted already, they’re not cold. Use your CRM or Facebook Pixel to create this exclusion.

  1. Page Engagers and Video Viewers

Anyone who has interacted with your Facebook or Instagram in the past 30 days should also be excluded.

  1. Email Subscribers

Upload your mailing list and create a custom audience from it. Exclude that group from prospecting campaigns.

You can set all of this up in the Audience section of your Ad Set. Facebook allows you to layer multiple exclusions, and you should — every exclusion sharpens your targeting.

Structuring Cold Campaigns for Best Performance

A great cold campaign setup starts with structure. Here’s how I break mine down:

Step 1: Define your cold audience

Use interest-based targeting, lookalike audiences (but exclude the source), or broad targeting if your pixel has enough data.

Step 2: Layer your exclusions

Add in:

Website Visitors

Customers

Subscribers

Engagers

Step 3: Test multiple ad creatives

Since this group is unfamiliar with you, test different hooks, headlines, and formats.

Step 4: Monitor frequency and overlap

Keep your frequency below 2.0 and check for audience overlap weekly using the Facebook Audience tool.

This system ensures that your cold traffic campaign is actually cold. No more wasting impressions on people who’ve already heard of you.

You’ve just learned how to exclude audiences in Facebook ads to get better results from cold traffic campaigns. Smart exclusions keep your message on point and your budget laser-focused on new users. For more winning Facebook Ads strategies, keep following KTM Ads Agency — we’re just getting started.

 
 
 

When marketers ignore Facebook Ads image size specifications, their ads often fail before they even start. In this article, I’ll show you how to avoid the most common image sizing mistakes that hurt performance. Whether you’re just starting or managing multiple campaigns, this guide will help you clean up your creatives and drive better results. Keep reading so your next ad doesn’t get skipped or disapproved.



Mistake 1: Using the Wrong Aspect Ratio

One of the biggest mistakes I see is using the wrong aspect ratio for the ad placement. Facebook offers several placements—Feed, Stories, Reels, Marketplace—and they don’t all use the same format.

Quick guide to correct aspect ratios:

  • Feed Ads: 1:1 or 4:5

  • Stories & Reels: 9:16

  • Right Column Ads: 1:1

  • Video Thumbnails: 16:9 or 1:1

What goes wrong when you use the wrong ratio?

  • Facebook crops your image

  • Your message or CTA disappears

  • The ad looks broken or incomplete

Solution:

Design with the final placement in mind. Use design tools that allow custom aspect ratios. Don’t upload one generic image for all formats—it won’t fit properly.

Mistake 2: Ignoring Facebook’s Image Compression

Facebook automatically compresses your ad images to save bandwidth. If you upload a low-quality image, it becomes even worse after compression.

Common issues:

  • Blurry visuals

  • Pixelated text

  • Washed-out colors

Recommended image specs:

  • Resolution: at least 1080 x 1080 px

  • File size: under 30MB

  • File type: PNG for graphics, JPG for photos

What’s the fix? Start with high-resolution exports. Avoid screenshots, WhatsApp-forwards, or compressed downloads. Export your final image from your design software with "maximum quality" settings.

Mistake 3: Overloading Images with Text

Even though Facebook dropped the strict 20% text rule, too much text on an image still ruins the ad.

Why it’s a problem:

  • It looks spammy

  • It gets ignored by viewers

  • It lowers engagement and relevance score

Keep your image clean:

  • 1–2 short lines of copy

  • Bold fonts only

  • Stay inside the safe zone (center 80% of the image)

If you have a lot to say, say it in the ad copy—not the image. Your creative should attract attention visually, not overwhelm with information.

Pro tip:

Run your image through Meta's Text Overlay Tool to check its balance, even if enforcement is soft.

Facebook Ads image size specifications are more than technical guidelines—they protect your campaign from common design errors. Avoid bad aspect ratios, low-res files, and text overload to give your ads the best chance at success. These three mistakes are easy to fix and even easier to prevent. Stick with KTM Ads Agency for more expert tips on creative strategy and campaign design.


 
 
 

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