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The Ultimate Guide to Facebook Audiences: Lookalike Audiences

facebook lookalike audiences

It’s time for the final instalment of our Ultimate Guide to Facebook Audiences…

…and we’re ending it in the perfect place, with Facebook Lookalike Audiences.

Before we get into this, I need to do some housekeeping: if you’re new to Facebook advertising and audience building, you won’t get anything out of this guide if you haven’t already learnt about ‘saved’ and ‘custom’ audiences.

So, make sure you’ve read, understood and tested a few audiences from one of our earlier guides to Facebook Audiences:

Everyone ready? Let’s go…

Scaling

The best place to start this guide is with the Lookalike Audience’s raison d’etre (reason for existence).

When you create a winning saved or custom audience and you start making a high return on your Facebook ads, the first thing you’ll want to do is increase your spend to further boost your profit.

There are several ways to do this:

What are Lookalike Audiences?

Lookalike audiences are an audience (you can advertise to) who are similar to an audience you have already created. Facebook uses data to match people to your existing audience, by their behaviour, engagement and interests.

They are made on a sliding scale from 1-10%, with the top 1% (in your chosen geo location) being the most similar and 10% being the least. As you’d imagine, the higher you set your audience matching % (e.g. 8,9 or 10%), the larger the audience becomes.

You will only be able to use Lookalike Audiences if you have already created a custom audience or installed a Facebook pixel on your website (you can find out more about either of these steps in Part 2 of our audiences guide). This is because Facebook needs data in order to build out lookalikes.

If you’re completely new to Facebook audiences, your route to building a lookalike audience will look something like this:

  1. Place a pixel on your website.
  2. Create a ‘Saved Audience’ based on the interests, behaviours and demographics of your target audience.
  3. Use the data collected by your pixel to build out Custom audiences.
  4. Analyse the success of your custom audiences and ads.
  5. Pick out the best performing and create lookalikes.

 

Advantages

The best reason to create a Facebook lookalike audience is to scale a winning campaign.

Reaching the right people at the right time is half the battle for an advertiser. An audience who take your desired action (e.g. buy, register, subscribe, engage) are invaluable, so building out lookalikes of these people gives you the opportunity to reach more people, over a longer period of time.

There are two other ways to scale your campaigns (vertical and horizontal) but both have their own drawbacks, whereas a lookalike audience allows you to start afresh and begin testing with any budget.

Lookalike audiences are Facebook’s biggest gift to advertisers (in my opinion). When you’re winning, make sure you take advantage of them!

 

How to Build a Facebook Lookalike Audience

Just like Part 1 and 2, I’m going to walk you through the entire audience building process. (This should be much quicker than the other two though!)

You’ll need to start by logging into Facebook Business Manager, clicking on ‘Asset Library’ and finding the ‘Audiences’ option:

Click on the blue ‘Create Audience’ tab and select the ‘Lookalike Audience’ option:

This will open a pop-up window, that you’ll use to build your Facebook lookalike audience:

Source

The first option you’ll need to select is the source for your lookalike audience, this is either the Pixel data from your website or one of your custom audiences.

Click on the text box and Facebook will present you with your available options. These will be split into two categories:

If you are selecting an audience from ‘Other sources’ you won’t be presented with any additional options, but if you decide to go with your pixel data using the ‘Value-based sources’ option, you will be offered the chance to further refine your lookalike audience by ‘Event’…

..Facebook recommends creating lookalikes from people who have made purchases on your website, but you can also choose to ‘Select events with value’, this includes options like add to cart, lead, search, view content, initiate checkout.

These options are all very valuable, but if you’ve followed my guide to Custom Audiences and refined your retargeting audiences at this stage (I definitely recommend doing it this way), you’ll simply need to select this custom audience in the ‘Other sources’ tab, allowing you to skip the ‘Events’ stage.

Location

Location is super-important to almost every Facebook advertiser. Unless you’re purely aiming for engagement (and don’t care where you’re receiving it from) you’ll want to refine your lookalike audience by their location.

Unlike your ‘Saved audience’ location targeting, you cannot choose to select an area smaller than a country e.g. France. However, if you’re building a lookalike audience from a custom audience, and the majority of those people are all located in a particular county/city, Facebook will use this information when building out the new audience.

After you have selected location(s), you’ll see your audience size for the first time:

Audience Size

The final piece of your lookalike audience puzzle is the sliding ‘Audience size’ option. This is the % similarity that you’d like your new audience to be with your original data.

The lower the number you select, the more similar the new audience will be. However, this doesn’t necessarily guarantee that your new audience will make a better return (on your desired outcome).

It’s important to remember that the higher the number you select in your audience size slider, the larger the audience will be. In my example, the difference in size between 1 and 10 is 3.8 million people.

The size of your audience can make a massive difference (as I’m sure many of you will already know) so…

…the best thing to do here is test out a variety of audience sizes. This will depend on the size of your budget, but I’d start out with 3 (or more if the budget allows it), at a variety of points on this scale e.g. 1, 4, 8, or 2, 5, 10.

One way of doing this is to click on the blue text ‘Show advanced options’ which is at the very bottom of the lookalike audience menu:

 

When this is selected, you will be able to create 1-6 audiences. These audiences represent every point that is between them on the sliding scale. For example, if I was to make one audience between the points of 3 and 7, it would include every percentage between these (3, 4, 5, 6 and 7%):

Remember, the only way you can guarantee success in digital advertising is if you’re prepared to test, drop the losers and scale the winners. Test wherever possible and keep a close eye on the split-test results!

And that’s it! When you’re ready, hit the Create Audience button in the bottom right hand corner:

Conclusion

You might’ve noticed that building out Lookalike Audiences is incredibly simple and straightforward in comparison to its ‘Saved’ and ‘Custom’ siblings…

…but this is the last step in your Facebook audience building journey. There are a lot of steps, tests and lessons to learn before you reach this stage.

The better your saved audiences perform, the more data you’ll be able to utilise when building your custom audiences and the better these custom audiences perform, the more value you’ll be able to generate from your lookalike audiences.

This is a three step process that takes time and skill to perfect, but if you’re willing to put in the effort, you can level-up your brand, business or career with Facebook ads.

What are your experiences with lookalikes? Is there anything I’ve missed?

If you’d like to take your next step into the world of Facebook advertising, check out:

Josh is the Founder of We Imagine Media, an award-winning content marketer, best selling author and creator of the www.joshbarney.blog. He creates and strategises content, sharing the most successful tactics with his lovely audience. He hates writing in the third person, follow him on the social links so he can get back to writing as himself.