How to Create Successful Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn Ads

social_advertising_wildfire.jpg

Launching a social advertising campaign may be easy. However, creating a great social advertising campaign that actually pays off can be a real challenge. Plus, the rules for success change from Facebook to Twitter to LinkedIn.

The good news is, social media marketing suite Wildfire has run hundreds of successful campaigns for brands across all three networks and can share with us exactly what works and what doesn’t. In Part 1 of their Social Advertising series, part of the Adrants white paper series, the reports shares:

– Best practices for writing ad copy
– Which creative images are most popular with audiences
– The differences in layout and styling on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn
– What not to do when advertising on Facebook

We’ve read the report and it’s chock full of strategies, tips and tactics you can put to use right now in your social media programs. Download the report now.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

The people who navigate retirement with genuine contentment almost always went through a period that looked like depression from the outside but was actually the necessary dismantling of an identity that had outlived its usefulness

The people who navigate retirement with genuine contentment almost always went through a period that looked like depression from the outside but was actually the necessary dismantling of an identity that had outlived its usefulness

Global English Editing

Every time I look at my dog I feel this wave of sadness I can’t explain to anyone — not grief exactly, but something closer to the awareness that this pure, uncomplicated love has an expiration date I’m not ready for

Every time I look at my dog I feel this wave of sadness I can’t explain to anyone — not grief exactly, but something closer to the awareness that this pure, uncomplicated love has an expiration date I’m not ready for

Global English Editing

I’ve been waking up at 5:30 a.m. for three years straight and the hardest part isn’t the discipline – it’s realizing that the quiet hour before anyone needs me is the only time I actually recognize myself

I’ve been waking up at 5:30 a.m. for three years straight and the hardest part isn’t the discipline – it’s realizing that the quiet hour before anyone needs me is the only time I actually recognize myself

Global English Editing

I grew up in the 1970s when nobody asked how I was feeling and honestly, I think that’s why I can sit with discomfort in a way my own kids never learned — because I was never taught that every uncomfortable moment required immediate intervention

I grew up in the 1970s when nobody asked how I was feeling and honestly, I think that’s why I can sit with discomfort in a way my own kids never learned — because I was never taught that every uncomfortable moment required immediate intervention

Global English Editing

I’m 73 and I watched my grandson have a panic attack over a delayed package — and I realized the gap between how I was raised and how he was raised isn’t just generational, it’s a completely different operating system for handling adversity

I’m 73 and I watched my grandson have a panic attack over a delayed package — and I realized the gap between how I was raised and how he was raised isn’t just generational, it’s a completely different operating system for handling adversity

Global English Editing

I’m 77 and the hardest part of retirement isn’t boredom or loneliness. It’s sitting across from my wife at breakfast and realizing we spent forty years building parallel lives under the same roof and now there’s nothing between us and that fact.

I’m 77 and the hardest part of retirement isn’t boredom or loneliness. It’s sitting across from my wife at breakfast and realizing we spent forty years building parallel lives under the same roof and now there’s nothing between us and that fact.

Global English Editing