Bids are one of the most important variables when it comes to optimizing budgets, setting target values, and getting the most value from your Meta campaigns.
Automatic bidding strategy (known as Highest volume or value) implies that Meta algorithms will manage the bids for you and determine which auctions to get in and try to maximize the results for your budget while with Cost and Bid control strategies you can take much more control over your costs and overall efficiency of your campaigns.
And although it's great to have the option to control the bidding, it's not always necessary and won't guarantee better ads performance in some cases. As Meta says, the more control you have, the more constraints you place on Meta to find lower-cost opportunities for your desired outcomes. So choose wisely 😉
There are 3 types of Bidding strategies on Meta allowing to control bids and costs per optimization events. What is the difference and how each one works?
Highest volume or value (formerly known as Target cost). After creating an ad and entering the auction you define the average cost you're ready to pay per optimization event and you always stay within a tight window of your average cost (the cost may be 10% higher or lower than your average cost), but you never go into auctions with the cost outside of this window.
Note, not all optimization goals are available for target cost.
Cost per result goal (formerly known as Cost cap). This bidding strategy allows setting your desired cost per auction with no hard caps on bids. Similar to a bid cap, Meta also starts seeking low-cost conversions and keeps increasing bids when there are no auctions at low prices available, but unlike the bid cap strategy, it will go over your bid cap when Meta thinks there is a good likelihood of conversions. So this strategy is supposed to keep your average cost within a specific threshold to bring the most efficient results.
Example: If you set a cost cap of $5 and an optimization event becomes available for a $5.30 bid, Meta will likely go after this conversion. But first, it's going to pick up anything that is much cheaper, cost-wise. If there are enough optimization events at, say, $2 cost, that's where the bid would stay until all the cheap options are depleted.Bid cap. In this case, you set the hard cap on the cost per optimization event and your ad won't enter any auction which costs more than X per purchase. With a bid cap, Meta starts from the lowest price auctions and goes up when low price auctions are depleted, but it will not go for any purchase with a price higher than your determined cost.
Note, you may not spend your entire budget once you hit the cap, as others would be winning the auctions while your bid is too low.
Bïrch allows setting up and changing Bidding strategies using automated rules for Meta campaigns. So if you don't utilize your campaign budgets to the full or keep getting too few conversions - you can try changing bid strategies and the bid thresholds to figure out what bidding strategy brings you more profitable results.
Check out the video below for more details on how to set bid management rules in Bïrch:
Please feel free to contact our team in Intercom chat or at support@bir.ch in case of any questions!. We'd be happy to help ;)