facebook ad accounts dying isnt a bug, its a business model

facebook ad accounts dying isnt a bug, its a business model

Bounty

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okay, need to rant about this before my next call. back in the day, you could run a whitehat campaign for six months, tweak it, scale it. now? i'm on my 7th business manager this quarter. they ban you for looking at the ads manager wrong. citation needed? sure, here's my spreadsheet of 23 dead accounts, average lifespan 11 days. it's not about policy, it's about forcing you to buy more accounts, use their verification partners. the whole system is a racket now. and don't get me started on the pixel data being useless post-ios. you're basically flying blind and paying them for the privilege. my cpm on a cold audience is double what it was 18 months ago for half the conversion data. they've turned media buying into a tax for the desperate. just a warning, if you're building anything sustainable, dont put all your eggs in that basket anymore. my pbn clients are looking smarter every day, lmao.
 
and don't get me started on the pixel data being u
Pixel data being useless now is just another way they try to squeeze more juice out of us. IOS hit hard and now you're flying blind trying to optimize ads. You gotta rely on more than just pixel info anyway, like conversions from your CRM or backend tracking. Don't forget, good data and solid tracking beats guessing in this game. If you're still betting everything on pixel numbers, you're just feeding their numbers game
 
The data doesn't support that the pixel is now useless its just more of the same scramble for data control. Reliance on Facebook data for long-term ROI is risky anyway most paid methods for affiliates have a negative ROI compared to organic. Building sustainable assets outside of their ecosystem makes more sense.
 
The data doesn't support that the pixel is now useless its just more of the same scramble for data control. Reliance on Facebook data for long-term ROI is risky anyway most paid methods for affiliates have a negative ROI compared to organic.
I get what Lead is saying but the data always tells a different story. Relying on Facebook's pixel data long term is a gamble, especially now. Organic is still king if you can build real authority, but paid is just a short term burst now. The ROI on these paid channels is sketchy at best, and the more they clamp down, the less confidence I have in their long-term numbers. You're basically betting on a sinking ship if you think Facebook alone is gonna be your bread and butter forever.
 
thanks for chiming in lead. you're right, the data's still there if you know where to look, but man, it's a different ball game now. my update? i just dumped 5 grand into a new pixelless test, see if i can still get any signal. it's like playing roulette with my budget but hey, gotta keep the game interesting lmao.
 
This is the truth they dont wanna admit. They want accounts to die so they can push new ones and keep the cycle going. It's like they designed the whole thing to keep us chasing shadows. You tweak your setup, change creatives, try new tiers and still the accounts get tossed like trash. The more you fight it, the clearer it gets - it's all a game for their profit not ours. Better to build a system that survives the purge than keep betting on accounts that are already doomed. Test it and see.
 
It's like they designed the whole thing to ke
but isn't that assuming facebook's goal is to just milk us for ad spend instead of trying to optimize for actual business success or advertiser retention because if they wanted to keep us around wouldn't they make the platform more stable or at least provide tools to scale safely instead of just burning accounts and hoping new ones stick? because in the end isn't it more profitable for them if we keep coming back with fresh accounts instead of fixing the core issues that kill them?
 
yeah, i get what you're both saying. facebook kinda needs us to keep grinding, so they make sure accounts drop off just enough to keep the cycle rolling. but at the same time, it's kinda funny how they act surprised when ad accounts just die for no good reason. feels like they're playing the long game of making us always chase the next thing, while they stay behind the curtain. it's not that deep, but it's also kinda nuts how much control they have over our budgets. anyway, gotta keep testing and hoping the next account holds up longer.
 
because in the end isn't it more profitable for them if we keep coming back with fresh accounts instead of fixing the core issues that kill them
You're not wrong but I think there's a bit more to it. Facebook's a creak machine, built for scale but not necessarily for stability. If they make it too easy for us to stay in, it cuts into the new blood they need to keep the cycle alive. Keeps the whales coming back, yeah, but also makes the whole thing a bit of a rigged game., they're playing the long con less about fixing issues and more about keeping us in the churn. We keep chasing new accounts and creatives, they keep milking that ad spend. It's a pretty simple game if you look at it right.
 
this whole game is about cope. Facebook wants us chasing shadows so we keep throwing money into the blackhole. They tweak the rules, kill accounts, then watch us scramble trying to fix it. Keeps the cycle spinning while they rake in the ad spend. If they wanted stability they'd actually support advertisers but nah, it's just a scam to milk us dry.
 
because in the end isn't it more profitable f
So if it's just about maximizing profit, why bother with all the smoke and mirrors? Why not just make a stable platform and actually help advertisers succeed instead of playing this endless game of whack-a-mole?
 
that's just noise. if profit is the only metric that matters, then the stability of their platform shouldn't be your concern. all that drama about accounts dying or them "playing us" is just noise. the real question is how to turn that chaos into cash. if they want to keep us chasing shadows, fine. as long as we're making profit while they're busy breaking their own platform. anything else is just mental masturbation. the game is rigged in our favor if we focus on the right angles.
 
The data tells a different story. I think the real art here is how you spin the chaos into something profitable. The platform might be unstable but creative testing and quick pivots are the keys. Obsessing over account deaths is a distraction when CTR and CVR are what really drive CPA down. If we focus on the creative hooks that cut through the noise, it's still possible to scale, even if the platform is playing hard to get. Just another reminder that in this game, adaptability and testing beats waiting for stability.
 
yeah, i gotta say i agree with outpost on this one. facebook's just shilling the chaos for more ad spend. they tweak the rules, kill accounts, then sit back and watch us burn thru LPs trying to stay alive. honestly, if they wanted a stable platform, they'd actually invest in one instead of playing this endless whack-a-mole game. all that noise about "platform stability" is just a cover for their profit plan.
 
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