Facebook Campaign Budget Optimization Becomes Fixed Default

More than a year ago, Facebook launched Campaign Budget Optimization. Beginning in September, Campaign Budget Optimization will become a fixed default that can’t be turned off.

This is a very big change to the structure of Facebook campaigns. In short, you will no longer be able to set a daily or lifetime budget at the ad set level. Let’s dig into the details of what this means…

The Announcement

Facebook quietly announced this change within a Help Center post titled About Campaign Budget Optimization Migration. The two key takeaways:

  1. Your new and existing campaigns will start to move to Campaign Budget Optimization this September
  2. Once the rollout is complete, you won’t be able to turn off Campaign Budget Optimization for new and existing campaigns

It’s difficult to overstate how much this changes things. While Facebook hasn’t released numbers on how popular this feature is, it’s safe to assume that a very small percentage of advertisers currently use Campaign Budget Optimization. So forcing it will be a major change in habits and process.

Setting Budgets: Now and Before

The current, default method for setting a daily or lifetime budget is at the ad set level.

Facebook Daily Lifetime Budget

With this approach, advertisers set a budget based on a combination of targeting, placement, and bidding. But the primary reason for a new ad set (and budget) was for a different audience.

For example, you may create two different ad sets based on targeting:

  1. Cold Audience (Interests or Lookalikes)
  2. Warm Audience (Website Visitors, Page Likes, or Email List)

In most cases, the warm audience will be much smaller than the cold one. But, the warm audience is also likely to be more effective (cost per desired action) than the cold one. You would consider these things when setting your budget.

Another example of why you’d create multiple ad sets is to separate countries, particularly when you are spending a bit more. I have found, for example, that the bulk of my paying customers come from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia. However, it’s much cheaper to get link clicks and free registrations from other countries.

If I’m promoting a blog post or opt-in, it’s usually not a good idea to include all countries in the same ad set. Facebook will optimize to get the most link clicks or opt-ins. As a result, the ad may be shown primarily to countries that don’t ultimately result in a paid conversion.

In other words, I’m willing to pay more to get clicks and email addresses from certain countries because I know they are more likely to ultimately buy. If I leave it up to Facebook, the optimization may leave me spending very little in these primary countries.

This is why creating separate ad sets by country or country group can be a good idea. It forces Facebook to spend in certain places.

We’ll come back to this later…

Campaign Budget Optimization: What Is It?

Launched a little more than a year ago, Campaign Budget Optimization is an option to control your budget at the campaign level.

Facebook Campaign Budget Optimization

By default, this is off.

When activated, you can control the overall daily or lifetime budget for the campaign. Assuming you have multiple ad sets within that campaign, Facebook then optimizes to distribute your budget to those ad sets. Hopefully, this will be more efficient.

This is very similar to what currently happens with ads. You don’t set a budget at the ad level. You can have multiple ads within a single ad set, and Facebook determines how to distribute the budget between them.

If you want to retain some control over the minimum or maximum spend by ad set, the prior version of Campaign Budget Optimization provided some settings for that…

Facebook Campaign Budget Optimization

UPDATE: I was initially concerned that this was going away. After scouring Facebook documentation, I found no mention of ad set minimums and maximums when using Campaign Budget Optimization. However, I reached out to Mike Manning of Facebook, and he confirmed that this feature will be retained.

After September 2019, you can still control spending at the ad set level by using ad set spend limits. If you set a minimum spend limit, Facebook will aim to spend that amount. If you set a maximum spend limit, Facebook will not exceed that amount.

Help Center has been updated to reflect this.

How Campaign Budget Optimization Works

Let’s use an example Facebook provides in their documentation. Assume you have three ad sets and spend $10 per ad set.

Without Campaign Budget Optimization, Facebook will attempt to spend $10 per ad set, regardless of performance. With Campaign Budget Optimization, Facebook will react to the performance of each of your ad sets. You may then instead spend more or less per ad set to get the most results.

Here’s a visual representation without and with Campaign Budget Optimization…

Campaign Budget Optimization

Without Campaign Budget Optimization, the campaign resulted in 10 conversions. But, one ad set clearly outperformed the other two. With Campaign Budget Optimization, Facebook optimizes to distribute more of the budget to the high performing ad set, resulting in 15 conversions.

This is all in theory, of course. This is how Facebook says it works. If the feature is valuable, this is how it needs to work.

How is Campaign Budget Optimization Helpful?

Assuming it works and is actually more efficient than the old method (which I realize is a leap), Campaign Budget Optimization does simplify the campaign creation process.

Setting budgets can be a challenge. One of the primary questions I get revolves around how to set budgets based on the size of the audience. And when you split up targeting into multiple ad sets, it becomes a guessing game regarding how you should distribute your budget.

At minimum, this will be good for the less experienced advertiser who struggles with setting budgets.

My Tests with Campaign Budget Optimization

When this feature originally rolled out as an option, I tested it. I had very underwhelming results. At the time, I received worse results with Campaign Budget Optimization than without it. I then quickly abandoned it.

Lately, however, I’ve heard from several members within my Power Hitters Club – Elite community who are using it and getting good results. I’ve since begun to experiment with it again.

My focus with this feature is on two promotions: 1) My free webinar and 2) My Facebook ads quiz. Both utilize the Lead Generation objective.

For each promotion, I created separate campaigns by country or country group. I then have multiple ad sets within each campaign for both cold and warm audiences. Facebook optimizes budget at the campaign level.

I am seeing solid results. Not results that blow me away, but results that I would normally expect. If I’m not getting results that are superior to what I received while setting the budget at the ad set level, I’m at least getting results that are in line with expectations.

This, though not a glowing endorsement, is a sign that the feature is improving since my original tests.

When Won’t Campaign Budget Optimization Work?

This is going to be a controversial change. Advertisers have their routines. We’re accustomed to setting budgets at the ad set level, and most of us think we’re pretty good at it now. Many will see this as forfeiting control.

If you are still angry about ad distribution optimization — and you create separate ad sets for each ad so that you can control the budget spent by ad — you aren’t going to be happy about this.

I can tell you that I’ve long let go of this concern. If I create multiple ads within an ad set, I let Facebook do its thing. I’m done losing sleep over it.

So, I’m going to try and embrace this change, too. But there are going to be frustrating moments. There are going to be times when I won’t agree with Facebook’s optimization.

This happens at the ad level, too. Facebook distributes budget almost entirely to one ad over another. One ad didn’t even get a chance. We want to see what will happen when that ad gets seen!

When it comes to Campaign Budget Optimization, I immediately envision some potential problems. As mentioned earlier, it may be cheaper to get engagement or email addresses from some countries. But, people from these same countries may be less likely to buy. So, ultimately, it may make sense to spend more to get the engagement or email address.

Does Facebook know this? Probably not. If your objective is engagement, traffic, or leads, Facebook is focused on getting you those things at the lowest possible cost. They won’t focus on whether these people ultimately buy from you because it isn’t your primary objective of this campaign.

What Should You Do If CBO Doesn’t Work?

The example above seems to be an immediate problem area. Facebook’s algorithms are unlikely to be smart enough to understand that even though a certain user may result in the cheapest engagement or registration, they may not be a good target long-term. At least, I’m going to assume that Facebook’s algorithms aren’t smart enough to sort this out. I’d be hugely impressed if they are.

UPDATE: Since ad set minimums and maximums will indeed survive, this helps tremendously. While you don’t truly set a budget at the ad set level, you can get pretty close by setting minimums and maximums. While I wouldn’t advise using this regularly, this is a very good solution in cases where Facebook isn’t spending the way you’d prefer.

Otherwise, advertisers will simply need to do the same thing they’ve been doing when confronted with similar ad optimization issues. Force Facebook to spend and distribute the way we want.

To do that, we would need to create separate campaigns per ad set (or group of similar ad sets). If you don’t trust Facebook optimization and you feel the need to do this exclusively, it’s going to create some significant headaches.

I would not recommend taking this approach going in. Give Campaign Budget Optimization a chance. See what happens. Then, where necessary, adjust.

Preparation

If you’re reading this in February, March, April, or May, this change is still a bit in the future. You have time to experiment with this feature and prepare.

However, note that your existing campaigns will migrate to Campaign Budget Optimization. That’s a big deal. That could change how your campaigns are currently running.

In August, this will become an urgent issue. At that point, it will be important to check all active campaigns as the very structure will be changing.

Your Turn

As I type this, about eight months remain until the change goes into effect. There’s time for Facebook to improve Campaign Budget Optimization. There’s also time for us to get better at understanding how to use it efficiently.

What are your thoughts on this upcoming change? Let me know in the comments below!