Picture this: It’s 2021, and I’m managing campaigns for this sustainable fashion brand. Their Instagram ads were doing okay – nothing spectacular, just your typical 2.1% click-through rate. We decided to test the exact same creative on Snapchat, mostly because the client was curious and had some budget to play with.
The results? 4.7% CTR and 23% lower cost per click.
I literally double-checked the numbers three times because I thought there was an error. But here’s what I realized: Snapchat users actually expect authentic, slightly unpolished content. While Instagram had become this perfectly curated feed where everything looks like a magazine ad, Snapchat still felt real.
That campaign taught me something crucial – platform psychology matters more than perfect creativity. The same exact ad that performed mediocrely on Instagram absolutely crushed it on Snapchat because it matched what users expected to see.
Now, before you go thinking Snapchat is some magical solution, let me share the flip side. Remember that B2B software company I mentioned? Yeah, I tried targeting 45+ executives with Snapchat ads for enterprise software. The results were… let’s just say I had some very uncomfortable phone calls with the client. Sometimes you learn by doing, and sometimes you learn by failing spectacularly.
The sweet spot clients:
I had this client who owned three yoga studios in Portland. Their Facebook ads were getting expensive, and their demographic was perfect for Snapchat – mostly women aged 22-32 who were already health-conscious. We launched Story Ads showing real students (not models) in actual classes. The authenticity resonated so well that they expanded to five locations within eight months, largely driven by Snapchat traffic.
Where I’ve learned to say “no thank you”:
The hard truth? If your audience primarily hangs out on LinkedIn, don’t force them onto Snapchat just because someone told you it’s the “next big thing.”
Okay, setting up your account seems straightforward, but there are three things that tripped me up early on (and I see other marketers struggle with constantly):
The business verification thing nobody talks about: When you’re setting up at ads.snapchat.com, upload your business documents right away. I learned this the hard way when a client’s account got suspended for 10 days because we thought it was optional. It’s not.
Your billing country matters more than you think: I didn’t realize this until I was three campaigns deep, but your billing country affects which ad formats you can access. US accounts get first dibs on new features like AR Lens Studio integration, while some international accounts have limited access to Dynamic Product Ads.
The Snapchat Pixel setup that actually works: Don’t just copy-paste that pixel code and hope for the best. Download the Snap Pixel Helper Chrome extension first, then test everything in an incognito browser. I can’t tell you how many campaigns I’ve seen fail because the pixel wasn’t firing correctly, and the advertiser had no idea.
Pro tip: Set up your pixel and let it collect data for at least a week before launching conversion-optimized campaigns. Trust me on this one.
I spend probably 2-3 hours a day in various ad dashboards, and Snapchat’s interface has some quirks you should know about:
Campaigns section: This is your strategy hub. Unlike Facebook where people create 20+ campaigns, I typically run 2-4 max per client. Why? Because Snapchat’s algorithm needs volume to work properly, and spreading your budget too thin kills performance.
Ad Sets: This is where the real magic happens. Here’s something most people miss – create separate ad sets for different audience segments even if you’re testing the same creative. The audience insights you get are incredibly valuable for scaling later.
Ads section: Always run at least 3 ad variations per ad set. I learned this after a winning ad suddenly died after two weeks (ad fatigue is real on Snapchat), and I had no backup creative ready.
Reports: Honestly, this is the most underused section of the entire platform. The custom reporting here rivals Facebook’s analytics, but 90% of advertisers just look at the basic overview and call it a day.
Let me be real with you about what actually performs:
Story Ads are still my go-to. They feel native, users expect them, and they consistently deliver the best engagement. Last month, I ran a Story Ad campaign for a meal delivery service that hit 8.2% CTR – triple their Facebook performance with the same audience.
Single Image/Video Ads work for direct response, but they feel more “advertise” to users. I use these when I need clear attribution and don’t care as much about brand perception.
Collection Ads are absolute goldmines for e-commerce – if you do them right. But here’s the catch: they require serious creative investment. I only recommend them for clients with monthly budgets above $5,000 and strong visual assets.
AR Lenses sound cool, but… I’ve had mixed results. They’re fantastic for brand awareness (I saw a 340% lift in brand recall for a cosmetics client), but conversion tracking is limited. Plus, they’re expensive to produce well.
Dynamic Ads – here’s where I’ll be brutally honest: They’re not as smart as Facebook’s dynamic ads yet. The product matching can be inconsistent, especially for fashion brands with seasonal inventory. I’ve had products show up in completely wrong categories.
Step 1: Goal selection (stop overthinking this)
Step 2: Audience targeting (where most people screw up) Start broad. I know this contradicts what every “guru” tells you, but Snapchat’s algorithm needs volume to optimize effectively. My rule: begin with audiences of 500K+ users, then narrow down based on actual performance data.
One thing I’ve noticed: urban areas typically outperform suburbs by 2-3x on Snapchat. I always analyze city-level performance after the first week and reallocate the budget accordingly.
Step 3: Creative development (authenticity beats perfection) Yes, use 9:16 vertical video, but here’s what matters more: authenticity beats production value every single time. My highest-performing ad last year was shot on an iPhone by the client’s 19-year-old intern, not the $5,000 professional agency video.
About sound: 93% of users watch with sound on, but add captions anyway. It increases completion rates by about 12% in my experience.
A/B testing reality check: Most guides tell you to test everything. That’s expensive and time-consuming. Focus on testing one variable at a time: audience first, then creative, then placement.
Retargeting done right: Create custom audiences based on video completion rates (75%+ viewers), not just website visitors. These audiences convert about 40% better in my experience.
Pie chart showing ad budget allocation: 47% to proven winning campaigns, 28% to scaling successful ad sets to new audiences, and 14% to testing new creative concepts
Forget vanity metrics. Here’s what I actually care about:
3-second video views are more predictive than impressions. If people aren’t watching for at least 3 seconds, your creativity isn’t resonating.
Swipe-up rate above 2% is my benchmark. Anything below that, and I know the audience or creative needs work.
ROAS above 3:1 for e-commerce clients, 4:1+ for subscription businesses. Don’t believe those 10:1 ROAS screenshots on LinkedIn – they’re either cherry-picked or using very short attribution windows.
Attribution window reality: Use 1-day view, 7-day click for most businesses. The default 28-day attribution inflates numbers and makes optimization decisions harder.
I also use UTM parameters religiously. Snapchat’s internal tracking is decent, but Google Analytics shows me the full customer journey.
The $3,000 mobile optimization disaster: Early on, I created these beautiful
desktop-optimized landing pages for Snapchat traffic. Terrible idea. 95% of Snapchat traffic is mobile, and that campaign had a 0.3% conversion rate before I rebuilt everything mobile-first. The targeting assumption trap: I targeted “interested in fitness” for a yoga studio and couldn’t understand why ROAS was terrible. Turns out, Snapchat’s fitness interest includes everything from powerlifting to casual dog walking. Specificity matters.
The creative refresh mistake: I left winning ads running for 4+ weeks without refreshing creative. Performance dropped 60% due to ad fatigue. Now I refresh creative every 2-3 weeks, even for winning campaigns.
Snapchat absolutely crushes it for:
Where I constantly struggle:
Lookalike audiences based on video completion rates perform about 25% better than customer-based lookalikes. Most people miss this.
Sequential campaigns – showing different creative to users based on their previous engagement – increased conversion rates by 35% for a fitness equipment client.
Cross-platform attribution: I use Facebook Pixel and Snapchat Pixel together. The overlap data reveals which platform deserves credit for assists vs. final conversions.
Snapchat Ads Manager isn’t the easiest platform to master, but it’s one of the most rewarding when you get it right. The competition is lighter than Facebook, the audiences are genuinely engaged, and the creative possibilities keep expanding.
My advice? Start small, test systematically, and be patient. Most successful Snapchat advertisers I know took 3-6 months to find their groove.
If you’re already juggling multiple platforms and time is tight, prioritize Snapchat only if your target audience is under 30 and responds well to visual content. Otherwise, perfect your Facebook and Google campaigns first.
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