Diagnosing Weak Ads
“My ads aren't working” is not a diagnosis — it's a symptom. The skill is pinpointing where the funnel breaks: the creative, the audience, or the page after the click. Here's how to read the clues.
By the end of this lesson you'll know
- How to read CTR and conversion rate together
- A symptom-to-cause diagnostic table
- How to spot ad fatigue
- What to fix first
The master move: read two numbers together
Almost every diagnosis comes from reading CTR (are people clicking?) and conversion rate (are clickers converting?) side by side. Each tells a different part of the story, and together they point straight at the problem.
| Symptom | Likely cause | Fix first |
|---|---|---|
| Low CTR | Weak creative or wrong audience — the ad isn't connecting | New hook/creative; check audience |
| Good CTR, low conversions | A post-click problem — landing page, offer, or message mismatch | Fix the page & message match |
| Rising frequency, falling CTR | Ad fatigue — same people, too many views | Refresh creative |
| High CPM | Tough competition, narrow audience, or low ad quality | Broaden audience; improve creative quality |
| Barely spending | Learning Limited or an impossible cost cap | Raise budget/broaden; fix the event or cap |
When clicks are healthy but sales aren't, the problem is almost always after the click — a slow page, a confusing offer, or an ad promise the page doesn't keep (message match, from Module 6). People blame the ad; the landing page is usually the culprit.
Spotting ad fatigue
Fatigue has a clear fingerprint: frequency climbs, CTR drops from its peak, and CPA rises even though nothing else changed. It means your audience has seen this ad too often. The fix isn't a new audience — it's fresh creative (which is why Module 6 pushed a testing rhythm).
Fix in the right order
- If CTR is low, the ad never earned the click — fix creative/audience before anything else.
- If CTR is fine but conversions are low, stop touching the ad and fix the destination.
- If it's barely spending, it's a structural/learning issue — next lesson.
The first few days are volatile by design (learning phase). Numbers there are noise, not signal. Give a campaign a fair window before you diagnose anything — judging too early leads you to “fix” things that were never broken.
When you do act, change one thing and let it settle. Overhauling creative, audience and budget at once means you'll never know what actually helped — and you'll reset the learning phase doing it.
Key takeaways
- Read CTR and conversion rate together to locate the break.
- Low CTR = creative/audience; good CTR + low conversions = post-click.
- Rising frequency + falling CTR = fatigue → fresh creative.
- Don't diagnose during learning, and change one thing at a time.