Have you heard of Local Awareness Ads?

Local Awareness Ad campaigns are easy to set up and let you reach Facebook users based on the business location they’re closest to.

In this article you’ll discover how to target customers near your business with Local Awareness Ads on Facebook.

Why Local Awareness Ads?

Instead of using boosted posts or Facebook ads to drive online engagement, your business can get a greater return on its advertising investment with local awareness ads that are designed to bring customers through your door.

You can set these ads up to serve people near your location with directions to your store. Or you can choose to provide a phone number so they can easily call you. Or let users message you if they have a question. All with the click of a button from your ad.

The best part is how easy it is to scale your campaigns to promote multiple locations to local customers. Here’s how.

#1: Create Your Local Awareness Campaign

While you can create a local awareness ad from the Ads Manager, you’ll want to create these campaigns in Facebook Power Editor because it gives you more flexibility with audience targeting.

If you don’t use the Power Editor Chrome extension, you can access the Power Editor dashboard from the Facebook Ads Manager by clicking on the Power Editor link in the horizontal menu at the top of the page.

Once you’ve opened Power Editor, you’ll need to start a new campaign by clicking the Create New button. Then you’ll open the Objective drop-down menu and select Local Awareness from the list.

From here, enter the first location of the business you want to promote. It’s important that you use only one location per local awareness ad campaign so you can optimize the performance of individual campaigns in the most granular way possible.

#2: Define the Ad Target

To determine who sees your ads on Facebook, you’ll edit the audience section of your ad set. You need to determine two parametersthe geographic location you want to target and the custom audience you want to target.

For instance, the ad group we created above is targeting everyone who logs into Facebook in Aventura, Florida. If you want to promote your local clothing boutique, you could refine this audience with behavior targeting to reach only shoppers in Aventura, Florida.

There are hundreds of targeting combinations you can use on Facebook. If you want to use more than one targeting method per business location or in a split test, be sure to create a new ad set for each one. This will let you accurately track the performance of each targeting method.

For instance, if you want to target online shoppers as well as in-store customers, create two different ad sets so you can customize the budget and track the performance of each one separately.

#3: Design Your Ads

To get the most out of local awareness ads, you need to give the people who see your ad a reason to stop by your store or contact you. Let people know why they should pay attention to your message early in the ad copy.

First, in the text portion of your ad, consider highlighting a promotion and include a call to action.

Next, choose an image that is relevant to what you’re offering. If you’re a restaurant and you want more reservations for dinner, you might use a picture that shows a plated meal or a welcoming host. If you’re trying to attract in-store shoppers, an image like the one in the ad below would work well.

Finally, use the description line to give customers one more reason to click on your ad. You’ll also want to include one of Facebook’s call-to-action buttons to encourage viewers to call your establishment, get directions to your location, send you a message or learn more about your offer on a specific page of your website.

Following these steps, here’s what a local awareness ad might look like.

Remember you’ll need to create ads in each ad set of your campaigns.

#4: Scale Your Campaign for Multiple Locations

If you have more than one brick-and-mortar location, you can quickly scale your local awareness campaigns for all of your stores.

First, select the original campaign and duplicate it.

Next, rename the copied campaign to match the additional location name. In the example below, the copied campaign is renamed for Boston.

Select both ad sets for the newest location and change the location targeting to match the audience in the additional location.

Conclusion