Is it worth paying to promote your posts on Facebook?

Last Updated on June 14, 2015 by HodgePodgeDays

Back in March this year I conduced a little experiment with Facebook. Dear old Facebook had been imploring me for months to try paying to “boost my posts”. I have a little over 2000 people who like my Facebook page and routinely everything I post on these gets very little attention, this is largely due to the algorithms Facebook uses to limit the content people liking pages will see and also to encourage page owners to put their hand in their pocket.

I was running a lovely little competition to win a limited edition print of a cartoon, it was a great prize but for some reason my competition wasn’t as popular as I hoped it would be. I looked at the stats on Facebook, it had been shared to only 67 people out of around 2000 followers. That’s pretty depressing. So I decided to see if paying for Facebook advertising was really worth it.

I paid £3 to boost my post over three days, ok so that is pretty cheap, but I didn’t want to go in high and waste my money.

Facebook advertising

The Facebook advertising ran for 3 days and apparently over those three days paying for it meant that it showed up a fairly impressive 1,152 times in peoples timelines. Am I impressed though? No. Why not? I hear you ask, well firstly it showed up in my own timeline several times each day, which just felt a little spammy for my liking, and it was my post!

Also, I’m not convinced by the accuracy of their stats which seemed to suddenly rocket in the final hours of day three, so I suspected a bit of creative accounting had taken  place to make the Facebook advertising seem more effectual than it actually was, though I can’t prove it, it’s just a hunch.

What else didn’t float my boat? Well my advert had 1,219 “impressions” in total and it only had 7 clicks. Firstly the idea of impressions makes me mad, I don’t really want Facebook to show the same thing to the same person 10 times, I want more people to see it once, twice tops. And 7 clicks? Really? I suspect at least half of those were before I’d boosted the post in the first place.

My rationale for boosting my post and buying some Facebook advertising was to generate additional clicks on the link and more entries into the competition I was hosting. I wasn’t looking to increase my page likes, but that would’ve been nice too. Generating just 7 clicks and no engagement or interaction was beyond disappointing.

My conclusion: I paid £3 for 7 clicks to my blog which seems pretty darn expensive. I also felt like Facebook had maybe spammed some people on my behalf, which could potentially lead them to unfollow or unlike my page, which is the very opposite of what you want to happen. Would I boost a post again? It’s unlikely. Unless they iron out the spaminess, sort out the accuracy of their statistics and do something to improve click throughs etc, it’s probably just a big old waste of my money.

Have you used Facebook advertising? Have you had great success and have I just been unlucky?

9 thoughts on “Is it worth paying to promote your posts on Facebook?

  1. When they first bought in advertising I tested it to try and boost my likes. At that point it was a lot more expensive. I paid for £3 a day and 3 days. I got precisely 6 likes and not much more reach than I would normally have got.

    I came to the same conclusion as you. You’d be better off joining in a like and share group, or joining up with similar niche friends to share each others posts naturally.

  2. Interesting! I wasn’t going to pay to do promote my posts but I’m still glad to see someone has done this and confirm my belief!

  3. I have used it a couple of times, once for a competition and once for a post, and both times it brought new followers and more likes, but I had expected more.

  4. Interesting – I’ve just started a Facebook page for the blog and am constantly seeing the boost option but hearing very conflicting things about whether it’s worth it, including the suggestion that once you start paying, your reach drops to encourage you to carry on. Not sure if that’s true though.

  5. I don’t have a FB page for my blog yet (it’s been under construction for quite some time) I’d always wondered whether paying to promote would be beneficial. It’s obviously not really. Thanks for the insight x

  6. Interesting post. My Facebook page is a bit rubbish really and I don’t really work on it as much as I should. I know it doesn’t show my posts to everyone who has liked it (I only have 127 likes). I have considers paying to boost a post but I really don’t think I will now. I am much more likely to generate 7 clicks with some activity on Twitter. I must admit I would be delighted with 67 shares!

  7. I have even less followers than you and found it even less successful when I experimented with this! Like you I just wanted to see how much of a difference it made and found it to be a complete flop. It was supposedly seen by however many more people but it didn’t bring me any more follows or likes. So no real engagement just a meaningless number. I’ve given up on trying to work out Facebook pages and just let it plod on by itself these days! Ha!

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