Reading Ads Manager
Your ads are live. Now comes the part that separates people who improve from people who guess: reading the numbers. Ads Manager throws dozens of columns at you, so let's cut it down to what actually matters.
By the end of this lesson you'll know
- Why the default view misleads you
- How to build a custom column set
- How to use breakdowns without over-reading
- The vanity-metric trap to avoid
The default view is not your friend
Ads Manager opens on a generic set of columns that rarely match your goal. It happily shows impressions and post likes while burying your cost per lead. The fix is simple: build a custom column set once, save it, and never squint at the defaults again.
Build your custom columns
Use the Columns → Customise columns menu to show only what helps you decide. A solid starting set for most small businesses:
- Amount spent — what it's costing.
- Results and cost per result — the number that matters most.
- CTR and CPC — how the creative and click are doing.
- CPM — how expensive your reach is.
- Frequency — early warning for fatigue.
- ROAS — if you're selling and tracking value.
Save it as a preset so it loads every time. We'll define each of these properly in the next lesson.
The goal of your column set isn't to see everything — it's to answer one question at a glance: “Is this making money at an acceptable cost?” If a column doesn't help you decide that, it's clutter.
Breakdowns: useful, but handle with care
The Breakdown menu splits results by placement, age, gender, region or time. These can reveal where your winners are — but there's a trap. Meta optimises for the lowest overall cost, not the cheapest-looking row. Cutting a placement just because one line looks pricey can shrink Meta's options and make delivery worse.
Likes, comments, reach and even CTR can look great while your cost per sale is terrible. Never celebrate a metric that isn't your actual goal. A viral-looking ad that sells nothing is an expensive ego boost, not a win.
Mind your attribution window
Remember from Module 3: the attribution window setting changes the numbers you see, and a slice of conversions are modelled. So compare like-for-like, and sanity-check Ads Manager against your real sales — it's directional, not gospel.
Spend five minutes building and saving one custom column preset today. It quietly upgrades every reporting session you'll ever have — you'll read faster and decide better.
Key takeaways
- The default columns hide what matters — build a custom set and save it.
- Show spend, cost per result, CTR, CPC, CPM, frequency (and ROAS if selling).
- Use breakdowns carefully — don't cut placements Meta needs.
- Ignore vanity metrics; judge by your real goal and check against actual sales.