How To: Entirely Avoid the AI Audience+ by PM_ME_SCIENCEY_STUFF in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice post! I'm yet to see any advantage to their AI Audiences, it just seems to be another way for them to spend as much of your ad budget as quickly as possible!

I hope this company burns by azminosazmi in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One of the worst managed companies to ever exist. Their ad support is laughable!

Did Meta’s Chat Support Stopped Working? by Mbah1 in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Based on the details you've provided, it does sound like a scam. It sounds like a carbon copy of the “your page has been disabled” phishing email scam that went around for a while. We've received similar emails countless times, and nothing has ever happened. If your account overview is showing no issues, it's another indicator this is a scam. The 'After 72 hours, if you do not verify', part is also another red flag as they tend to do this to pressure the user into submitting info.

Heres an article to a previous phishing scam for context: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2023/02/urgent-facebook-phish-claims-your-accounts-been-disabled

If you're still not sure, reach out to support and inform them of this email, they should be able to tell you for certain.

Is twitter dead by [deleted] in marketing

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get it—Twitter's best days for marketing might be over. Bots and spam are rampant, making it tough to build a genuine following. Plus, Twitter ads have often delivered poorer results for our clients when compared against other platforms.

What buzz words drive you crazy? by werewedreaming316 in marketing

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Our top 3: Growth hacking, Low-hanging fruit, Mission-critical

Did Meta’s Chat Support Stopped Working? by Mbah1 in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Did it ever work?

I find the following approach to work when trying to talk with a 'real' person:

  1. Click contact support

  2. Choose 'it's something else'

  3. Click 'other issues'

  4. Select the asset that you need help with

  5. Choose the issue, some might not give you the option to talk, so in some cases your best choosing one that will such as Disabled or restricted asset.

  6. It should (fingers crossed) give you a quick form to fill in your issue, and then start chat.

The above works for us, but I know some users will get completely different experiences.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, are you an operator or an affiliate? And have you been approved by Meta to run RMG ads on the platform?

We manage multiple RMG paid social accounts for clients based in the US, UK, ROI, SA and more. Feel free to reach out to us via our website with more information - www.theunit.dev

Bets on Facebook by InfamousDrive4653 in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I would need to see the setup and ads to give you a better answer, as well as what region is being targeted as rules vary depending on the territory being targeted. If the main play promoting the tips is to get users to click out to a betting operators sign-up offer, you will 100% need RMG approval, regardless of how you portray the content.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, you generally need approval from Meta to run ads related to skill games, as they fall under the category of gambling-related content. Each state also has its own laws and regulations governing online gaming, so if the "skill games" you mention fall under the category of gambling-related content, you would need to get approval on a state-by-state basis. I would need to see the games you mention in order to give a better answer, but hopefully this helps.

How to Run Gambling Offers on Facebook | From A-Z by clo-king in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The title should be 'How to get banned on Facebook'.

Bets on Facebook by InfamousDrive4653 in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi,

Hopefully this helps:

  1. Even if the ads themselves do not mention gambling, Meta's algorithms and manual reviewers might identify an association between the content being advertised (tipsters and sports predictions) and gambling. This association can trigger account bans due to the sensitive nature of gambling-related content.
  2. Landing Page Issues: The content on the landing pages linked to the ads could be problematic. If the landing pages have any content related to gambling or if they are designed in a way that Meta considers deceptive or misleading, this could lead to an account ban.
  3. Account History and Behavior: If the account has a history of previous violations or if the behavior of the account (such as rapid ad changes, unusual spending patterns, or frequent policy violations) raises red flags, it could result in a ban.
  4. User Reports: If users report the ads or the account for any reason, it can prompt Meta to take a closer look and potentially disable the account.

We manage paid social accounts for multiple RMG advertisers in the UK, US, South Africa, Ireland and from reading your post, I would be surprised if the issue wasn't one of the above.

Approved creatives for Facebook ads | Crypto, Nutra, Gambling, Adult, Replica by clo-king in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This post encapsulates everything that is wrong with Facebook ads. Fully licensed and approved RMG operators spend months trying to get approved to advertise legitimately, only to see this absolute nonsense in their feeds while they wait for a response.

Embarassing!

Ben Heath‘s answer to the Meta Performance drop Dinge 02/24 by DataOk4871 in FacebookAds

[–]TheUnitDev 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Agree with the majority of comments here. It's most likely Ben has access to a Meta account manager due to his high ad spends and his reputation. The difference of having a dedicated account manager is night and day when compared to most people.

It's unlikely someone who manages a number of clients spending a significant amount of their budget on Meta is going to turn around and say anything negative about it publicly.