How Long Will My Facebook Ad Be Pending Review?
When you create a new Facebook ad, or you edit an old one,
you’re taking a risk. That risk is the almighty Facebook gatekeeper. Every
single ad that runs on the system needs to be reviewed by someone internally at
Facebook. Ads must meet the advertising guidelines for approval before they can
run.
The problem is,
Facebook’s advertising guidelines are long
and complex. Here are some excerpts:
- Ads must not contain false, misleading, fraudulent, or deceptive claims or content.
- You may not use Facebook advertising data for any purpose except on an aggregate and anonymous basis.
- Ads must clearly represent the company, product, service, or brand that is being advertised.
- Ads and sponsored stories in the News Feed may not include images comprised of more than 20% text.
Here’s the thing:
you and I have both seen ads that seemingly violate one or more of the
advertising guidelines, and yet they got through. Facebook’s advertising
gatekeepers are either drastically inconsistent or bad at monitoring, due to
the sheer number of ads created every day. Doubtless, large parts of it are
automated, but it can’t all be automated or else we’d see more issues with just
the automation.
In any case, when
you create an ad, that ad is “Approved pending review.” In other words, it
needs approval from Facebook’s team before it will show up on the site.
Time to Approve
Facebook claims on
their knowledge base article about approval that, on average, ad approval takes
around 15 minutes. Some people will have never experienced a delay longer than
five. Others have likely seen ads floating in limbo for days at a time.
Elsewhere, in the community,
Facebook reps have said approval can take up to 24 hours.
Ads are sent to
review the moment they are created. The common advice for marketers looking to
run limited-time or time-sensitive promotions is to create your ads early.
Unfortunately, this
can hamper the process of split testing, which you will have to anticipate.
Unfortunately, there’s no email you can message or account you can flag in
order to get your pending review ad pushed through faster.
There are various
rumors about factors that can increase your chances of getting an ad through
review. Some marketers claim that increasing ad spend will streamline the process.
The theory, of course, being that Facebook is prioritizing advertisers with a
lot of money. This sounds like a good theory, except the scale of the problem
affects everyone.
When a small
business ups their spending from $25 per day to $250 per day, that’s a sizable increase.
However, when you realize that companies with literal millions of dollars to
spend are also advertising, why would Facebook prioritize a $250 daily ad when
they could instead prioritize a $10,000 per day ad?
The reality is that
changes like that only refresh the pending queue. Each time you edit an ad,
that ad needs to go through the approval process again
Issues With Approval
When your ad is
pending approval, if it’s taking a long time, you
might be at risk for a denial. Thankfully, Facebook will email
you if your ad is denied, including a link to the advertising guidelines and a
note about which guideline you have broken.
Possibly one of the
most common issues to come across is the
20% text rule It’s a flaky rule and depends more on positioning than it
does on actual text coverage.
You can check out
examples of good and bad ads for each major category of guidelines on Facebook’s site. It’s actually a very
handy resource, and will show you examples of some of the things Facebook is
trying to stay away from.
The most common violations tend to be:
- Poor command over the language. Bad spelling, bad grammar, bad punctuation, it’s all under this banner. It’s also the single most left-to-reviewer-discretion guideline in the entire ads program. You’ve surely seen ads with all caps or misspellings, but for every one you see, hundreds are being rejected.
- Cloaked URLs for landing pages – including links to files that aren’t web pages, like PDFs – will earn you a rejection. They can, in extreme instances, also lead to an account termination.
- Inaccurate ad text. Ad reviewers need to learn a bit about your business and product when your ad is under review. They’ll probably even check out your landing page. If your ad turns out to be too different from what you’re actually selling, issues arise.
- Irrelevant images. Sex sells, but on Facebook, it doesn’t sell unless you’re selling whatever the model in question is wearing or doing. You can’t have an ad for a piece of database software and sell it with pictures of Kate Upton.
So how can you make
sure your ads are approved?
Bypassing the Review Process
Well, you can’t
bypass the review process entirely. You can, however, do what you can to comply with the
standards Facebook sets and
ensure your ad gets through quickly.
Having an account in
good standing is a benefit. If your account has
been flagged for ad violations in the past, you’ll struggle
with the review process as you’re
under more scrutiny.
Edited ads are more
likely to be approved than new ads, as long as the edits are minor. Changing
targeting, a tweak to copy, etc. Facebook can compare to the old version and
see both that the old version was approved and the new version is not much
different.
Obviously, you need
to comply with prominent ad guidelines, such as the rules for targeting minors
with alcohol, tobacco, drug or firearms content. The same goes for geographic
restrictions on these products.
Here’s one you might not realize; “you” is a bad
word. If your ad mentions the user directly and personally, specifically if it
uses individual data, it will be rejected.
Be careful with your
copy, choose relevant images, don’t cloak destination links and you should be
good to go.
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