Process Flow
Animated overview of the full workflow
TL;DR
Broad targeting means setting minimal targeting restrictions — typically just location, age, and gender — and letting Meta's algorithm find the best audience using pixel data and conversion signals. It works best for accounts with strong conversion data and clearly defined conversion events. Broad targeting often outperforms detailed interest targeting because it gives the algorithm maximum flexibility to find converters wherever they are.
Step-by-Step Guide
Follow these 5 steps to complete this guide
- 1
When Broad Works Best
When your pixel has 100+ conversions per month. When using conversion-optimised campaigns (Leads, Sales). When your product/service has wide appeal. When you have exhausted your defined audiences and need to scale.
- 2
Setup
Create your ad set with: location targeting (required), age range (required), gender (optional). Do not add detailed targeting interests, behaviours, or demographics. Let Meta find the audience using conversion signals.
- 3
Why It Works
Meta's algorithm is better at finding converters than manual targeting in most cases. Detailed targeting can actually restrict the algorithm from reaching people who would convert. Broad targeting also avoids audience overlap issues between ad sets.
- 4
When Broad Does Not Work
New pixel with no conversion data. Niche products with very specific audiences. Low daily budgets that cannot support broad exploration. Awareness campaigns without conversion optimisation.
- 5
Testing Broad vs Detailed
Run a structured test: one ad set with your best interest targeting, one ad set with broad targeting. Same creative, same budget. Run for 2 weeks with enough budget for 50 conversions per ad set. Compare CPA and conversion quality.
Was this guide helpful?
Your feedback helps us improve our guides