Dennis Yu

600 likes for one dollar

The $ 1-a-day strategy works stronger than ever.

The harder the algorithm is penalizing losers, the harder it’s rewarding winners at the same time.

So increasingly, you’ll see two camps emerge…

1) People who see ads costs go, complain, and get forced out of the game.

2) People who see massive engagement that leads to multi-touch, profitable conversions across multiple channels.

Short-form video is the key ingredient, so get super cheap mid-funnel engagement. I still see clients in many verticals (not just media, sports, and entertainment) get $2 CPMs on boosted posts, while some folks who run conversion ads on cold traffic are at $60+ per thousand impressions.

Next, we need analytics to trace those touches all the way through to the conversions that then occur via Google, email, in-store, word of mouth, and so forth.

99% of Facebook advertisers don’t know that all reporting is the last click– meaning that assists get zero credit.

You have to choose attribution models within Google Analytics and Facebook to see how channels are working together.

Even the more sophisticated buyers think that choosing between 1/7/28 day view/click is attribution– not realizing that this is merely choosing the data input, which is NOT the attribution method (how to award conversion credit).

So even with killer video, without smart attribution (analytics), they will declare failure on the very ads that are actually driving sales, while putting more burden on the last touch ads.

The effect is a downward spiral that results in more pressure on cold audiences to convert– causing positive/negative engagement to go out of whack, CPMs to shoot up, and then complaints.

These same people like to say that “boosting doesn’t work”– because their measurement is wrong and they’re trying to instantly convert on every touch.

Some have realized that when you run reports a couple of weeks after a campaign, attributed conversions go up or that by uploading offline conversions, they were missing out on tracking conversions that got hidden by the Apple cookie issue.

In 2020, you’ll have to decide which of the two above camps you want to be in.


Dennis Yu

Dennis Yu is a former search engine engineer who has spent a billion dollars on Google and Facebook ads for Nike, Quiznos, Ashley Furniture, Red Bull, State Farm, and other organizations that have many locations. He has achieved 25% of his goal of creating a million digital marketing jobs because of his partnership with universities, professional organizations, and agencies. Companies like GoDaddy, Fiverr, onlinejobs.ph, 7 Figure Agency, and Vendasta partner with him to create training and certifications. Dennis created the Dollar a Day Strategy for local service businesses to enhance their existing local reputation and make the phone ring. He's coaching young adult agency owners who serve plumbers, AC technicians, landscapers, roofers, electricians in conjunction with leaders in these industries. Mr. Yu believes that there should be a standard in measuring local marketing efforts, much like doctors and plumbers need to be certified and licensed. His Content Factory training and dashboards are used by thousands of practitioners.

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