Meta Ads (Facebook Ads) interview questions and answers Part - 2

Part 1 : Meta Ads (Facebook Ads) interview questions and answers

30. How to drive app installs with Facebook Ads?

Steps:

  1. Use “App Installs” campaign objective
  2. Link your iOS/Android app
  3. Target users by device, interests (e.g., “mobile gamers”)
  4. Use a 15-second demo video
  5. Track with Facebook SDK (not just Pixel)
    Good answer: “I optimize for installs by targeting device-specific audiences and using demo videos that show the app solving a real problem—in under 15 seconds.”
 

 

31. Tips to optimize ads for mobile?

Best practices:

  • Use vertical video (9:16) for Stories
  • Short copy (under 125 characters)
  • Big, readable text (thumb-friendly CTA buttons)
  • Fast-loading creatives (avoid heavy files)
    Good answer: “Since 98% of Facebook users are on mobile, I design every ad for small screens—vertical video, bold visuals, and one clear message.”
 

 

32. How to measure ad effectiveness?

Match metrics to goals:

  • Awareness? → Reach, impressions
  • Traffic? → Link clicks, CTR
  • Leads? → Cost per lead, form completions
  • Sales? → ROAS, CPA, conversion rate
    Good answer: “I never look at ‘likes’ for a sales campaign. I tie every metric back to the business goal—like ROAS for e-commerce.”
 

 

33. What is a Lookalike Audience?

Meaning: Facebook finds new people who resemble your best customers.
How: You give it a source (e.g., past buyers), and it finds similar users.
Tip: 1% = most similar (higher quality); 10% = broader reach (lower cost)
Good answer: “Lookalike Audiences help me scale profitably—by targeting people who act like my existing buyers, not just random users.”

 

 

34. What role do interests play in targeting?

Meaning: You can reach people based on pages they like, topics they follow, or groups they join.
Example: Target “yoga,” “Lululemon,” and “meditation apps” to reach fitness enthusiasts.
Good answer: “Interests help me find people already engaged in topics related to my product—making my ads feel relevant, not random.”

 

 

35. What’s the minimum audience size?

Rule of thumb: At least 1,000 people, but ideally 10,000–50,000+
Why? Too small → Facebook can’t optimize. Too broad → wasted spend.
Good answer: “I aim for 20K–100K in my target audience. It gives Facebook enough data to optimize without being so broad that I lose relevance.”

 

 

36. How to use Audience Insights?

Purpose: Learn about your audience’s behavior, interests, and habits.
How:

  • Go to Meta Ads Manager > Audience Insights
  • Compare audiences (e.g., “yoga lovers” vs. “gym goers”)
  • See what devices they use, pages they like, income level
    Good answer: “I use Audience Insights to refine targeting—like discovering my audience also follows ‘meal prep’ pages, so I test that interest in my next campaign.”
 

 

37. How to set a Facebook Ads budget?

Steps:

  1. Define goal (e.g., 10 sales at $20 CPA = $200 needed)
  2. Start small: $10–$20/day per ad set
  3. Let campaigns run 3–7 days before judging
  4. Scale what works
    Good answer: “I calculate my break-even CPA first, then set a test budget that allows the algorithm to learn—usually $10–$20/day for 5 days.”
 

 

38. What is ad frequency and why does it matter?

(Same as Q29—combine in response)
Good answer: “As covered earlier, frequency shows repetition. Too low—people forget you. Too high—they block you. I keep it under 5 for conversion campaigns.”

 

 

39. How to optimize ad delivery?

Key tactics:

  • Choose the right campaign objective
  • Use Campaign Budget Optimization (CBO)
  • Enable automatic placements (let Facebook pick best spots)
  • Feed the algorithm at least 50 conversions/week
    Good answer: “I trust Facebook’s algorithm by giving it a clear goal, enough data, and a flexible budget—then I optimize based on performance, not guesses.”
 

 

40. What is Campaign Budget Optimization (CBO)?

Meaning: Set one budget at the campaign level, and Facebook automatically shifts money to the best-performing ad sets.
Benefit: Saves time and often improves results vs. manual budgeting.
Good answer: “CBO lets Facebook be the smart spender—moving budget to winning audiences in real time, so I don’t have to babysit every ad set.”

 

 

41. How to choose ad placements?

Options: Facebook Feed, Instagram Stories, Reels, Marketplace, Audience Network
Best practice: Start with Advantage+ Placements (automatic)—Facebook finds the best mix. Later, exclude underperforming ones (e.g., Audience Network if low quality).
Good answer: “I use automatic placements first. Once I have data, I turn off low-performing spots and double down on what converts—like Instagram Feed for fashion.”

 

 

42. How to troubleshoot underperforming ads?

Checklist:

  1. Is the Pixel working? (No tracking = no optimization)
  2. Is the audience too small or too broad?
  3. Is the creative boring or unclear?
  4. Is the landing page slow or confusing?
  5. Is frequency too high? (>6 = fatigue)
    Good answer: “I diagnose like a doctor: check tracking first, then audience, then creative. Most failures come from a weak offer or poor post-click experience.”
 

 

43. How to calculate ROAS?

Formula:
ROAS = Revenue from ads ÷ Ad spend
Example: $500 in sales from $100 ad spend → ROAS = 5 (or 5:1)
Good answer: “ROAS shows profitability. If my product costs $30 and I spend $10 to get a sale, my ROAS needs to be at least 3:1 to break even.”

 

 

44. How to improve a low conversion rate?

Fix the funnel:

  • Ad: Make the offer clearer (“Free trial” not “Learn more”)
  • Landing page: Match the ad message exactly
  • Trust: Add reviews, secure checkout badges
  • Speed: Page must load in <3 seconds on mobile
    Good answer: “Low conversions usually mean a mismatch between ad promise and landing page reality. I align messaging, simplify forms, and add trust signals.”
 

 

45. What is Dynamic Creative?

Meaning: Upload multiple images, headlines, and CTAs—and Facebook automatically tests combinations to find the best performer.
Example: Upload 3 images + 2 headlines → Facebook shows “Image A + Headline 2” to users most likely to click.
Good answer: “Dynamic Creative saves time and boosts performance by letting Facebook test thousands of ad combos—so I don’t have to.”

 

 

46. What is an Instant Experience ad?

Meaning: A fast-loading, full-screen mobile ad that opens inside Facebook (no website needed).
Use case: Great for product showcases or lead gen—feels like a mini-website.
Good answer: “Instant Experience keeps mobile users engaged without sending them off-platform—perfect for e-commerce or app promotions.”

 

 

47. How do you approach ad creative design?

Process:

  1. Goal first: Is it for awareness or sales?
  2. Audience second: What do they care about?
  3. Hook fast: First 3 seconds must grab attention
  4. Mobile-optimized: Vertical video, minimal text
  5. Clear CTA: “Shop Now,” not “Click Here”
    Good answer: “I design for the scroll—bold visuals, benefit-driven copy, and one clear action. And I always preview it on my phone first.”
 

 

48. How to manage ad approvals?

Tips:

  • Avoid >20% text in images (use Facebook’s Text Overlay Tool)
  • Don’t make unproven claims (“Lose 20 lbs in 3 days!”)
  • Check Ad Policies before launching
  • If rejected, edit and resubmit quickly
    Good answer: “I follow Facebook’s rules closely—especially around health, finance, and image text. When in doubt, I test with a small budget first.”
 

 

49. How to structure a lead generation campaign?

Steps:

  1. Use “Lead Generation” objective
  2. Offer something valuable (free guide, discount)
  3. Keep form short (name + email only)
  4. Enable auto-fill (so users submit in 1 tap)
  5. Follow up fast (email within 1 hour)
    Good answer: “I treat leads like gold—so I offer real value, make it easy to submit, and follow up instantly to maximize conversion.”
 

 

50. How to handle ad disapprovals?

Action plan:

  1. Read the rejection reason in Ads Manager
  2. Fix the issue (e.g., edit image, revise copy)
  3. Resubmit or appeal if it’s a mistake
  4. Learn from it—update your checklist
    Good answer: “Disapprovals are part of the game. I quickly fix the issue, resubmit, and document it so my team avoids the same mistake next time.”
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