
Would you stop and click your own ad if you saw it in your feed? Not as the person who wrote the copy and argued over the image, but as a tired, distracted user on a quick scroll, half focused on work and half on everything else. That single, honest question forces you to look past nice reports and team pride and see the ad for what it is: either a clear, relevant message that earns a tap or just another tile people flick past without thinking.
People click when an ad feels relevant, clear and low-risk. They ignore it when it feels vague, pushy or fake.
Ask these questions for any ad you run:
If you would personally scroll past the ad, your users probably will too.
User intent means what someone is trying to do at the time they see your ad.
Think in three simple stages:
A good ad matches the intent. A bad ad ignores it and feels out of place.
People see ads everywhere now, and they can easily tell when something feels exaggerated or rushed.
To keep your ads authentic:
If the ad would embarrass you if it ran under your favourite brand’s logo, it needs work.
An engagement strategy is how you plan what happens from ad to click to the next step.
Before you launch any ad, check:
Then make sure the landing page matches the ad message. If the ad promises “3 ways to cut ad waste”, the page should show those three ways immediately, not a generic service page.
Improving ads is easier when you have another set of eyes. A team like WebCastle works across many campaigns and can spot issues you might miss.
WebCastle’s digital team focuses on:
Pick three of your current ads and review them as a normal user:
If most answers are “no” or “not sure”, start rewriting using the guidelines.
If you want outside input, share a few ads and landing pages with WebCastle. Their team can help you rebuild them around clear ad psychology, user intent and authentic marketing—so next time your ad appears in a feed, you would be happy to click it yourself.
Ready to run ads people actually stop for? Work with WebCastle to rebuild your campaigns with clarity and intent.
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