Showing posts with label Email List. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Email List. Show all posts

Monday, 14 August 2017

Bryan Eisenberg on email marketing: “Do massive Segmentation and opt out your list”


Bryan Eisenberg was one of keynote speakers at the Fusion Marketing Experience. The event had a very impressive line-up with experts from all parts of digital marketing. Bryan shared his email marketing tips:

With a presentation on the second day about one of his favorite topics “Always be testing” (also the name of his book). This time Brian referred to Adwords and Pay per Click testing, see that article here.


Email marketing: Do massive segmentation

I got to speak to Bryan a bit more about e-mail marketing. Bryan has been running his own newsletter for years with over 40.000 subscribers. Bryan: “Do massive segmentation. Once you think you have segmented, segment again. And if possible, segment again. In good e-mail marketing, you segment first, and then personalize within that segment.”


Segmenting is a very effective email marketing tactic

And he is right, several kinds of research have shown Segmenting as one of the most effective email marketing tactics. Even more: Testing with Target Audiences (in other words: segment testing) is also found to be very effective. 91% of marketers find segmentation testing effective. That is huge. Testing segmentation is the number one effective testing tactic according to research by Marketingsherpa.

Brian continues on massive segmentation: “For instance, you can personalize an e-mail to people who are interested in tv’s versus stereo’s. Segment your e-mail campaigns to previous customers versus subscribers and know what you will be sending to them. First segment and after that go a level deeper and do more personalization. Use a RFM (Recency, frequency and monetary value) formula to calculate the right TV or bundle to offer and what discount percentage to give.”


List hygiene also counts.

Bryan: “One of the things we did on our own newsletter was to opt a large part out. We had 40.000 people on our list and asked everyone that wasn’t active to opt in again. In 7 months the e-mail list was up to the same size, but much better quality. That means higher open rates and click through rates AND better deliverability. Not enough people do this list hygiene thing. At the very least put them [the inactives] on a separate list. There is a technical term for people that aren’t willing to keep their list clean: Pussies.”

He ends with one last tip: “Never forget old content is new content to new people.”


Image by Remy Bergma


Source

Friday, 11 August 2017

Up for the Challenge? Try This Unusual Method to Help Achieve Your Business Goals


Jadah Sellner and Jen Hansard, two moms who co-founded a business called Simple Green Smoothies, added 28,000 people to their email list in 2013. These days, they have an active, engaged list of more than 385,000 people.

My first reaction when I heard those numbers was, “WOW.”

Want to know what propelled their accelerated list growth?
Four times a year, Jadah and Jen host 30-Day Green Smoothie Challenges. People who are interested sign up for the challenge and pledge to drink one green smoothie every day for 30 days. During the challenge, Jadah and Jen send weekly emails that include inspiration, shopping lists, recipes, and smoothie tips.

Challenges are a popular way to attract email subscribers and get people to spread the word about your business. They’re also a lot of fun for your community members.

Let’s take a look at how challenges work and how to design a challenge that will help you reach your business goals.

What is a challenge, and how will it help your business?

When you host a challenge for your audience, you select and promote an action you’d like your community members to take. It’s usually a short-term commitment.

To join your challenge and play along, your community members register for it either by signing up for your email list or joining a group on a social media site. Then you give the participants support, encouragement, and tips during the challenge itself.

Copyblogger hosted a content challenge in January 2016 that helped people build their cornerstone content.

Challenges are often free, but you can potentially charge for them as part of a larger program or online course.

Throughout the challenge, participants focus on one goal — whether that goal is eating healthier food, daily meditation, or writing a novel.

Challenges draw attention to your business. People get excited about challenges and share them on social media, so their friends and family can see what they’re up to (and play along). Dedicated community members will come back to participate in every challenge.
Let’s take a look at three successful free challenges.

Example #1: National Novel Writing Month

One of the very first virtual challenges that came on my radar was National Novel Writing Month. The annual NaNoWriMo challenge encourages participants to write an entire novel (50,000 words) during the month of November.

Writers sign up to receive inspiring and instructional emails during the challenge and get access to the community forums, where they can buddy up to get additional writing support.

The program started in 1999 and today NaNoWriMo is an official 501(c)(3) organization. More than 400,000 people participated in the fiction-writing challenge in 2015.

Example #2: The EFT Tapping challenge

Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) is a form of acupressure — similar to acupuncture — during which you tap on energy meridians with your fingertips to treat emotional or physical issues.

Claire P. Hayes is an EFT practitioner and author, and she regularly hosts seven-day tapping challenges where people can join live daily calls with Claire and other participants.

Claire uses regular challenges to build her email list, explain what she does in an interactive way, and create trust with her audience members.

Example #3: List-building challenge

For my business (BethHayden.com), I’ve invited my community members to play along with me as I attempt to grow my list to 16,000 subscribers by the end of 2016.

Email subscribers who sign up for the challenge get special updates from me about my progress, including tips on what list-building tactics are working and which ones are flopping.

So far, more than 500 people have signed up, so I know it’s a hot topic for my community members. You can sign up here.

How to design and host your own challenge

You don’t need to already have a huge email list to run a challenge, but you do need to have some type of community already established.

If your list is small and you’re not connected with any influencers who can help you promote your challenge, it might not produce the results you want.

So, first decide whether or not you have a large enough audience for your challenge to be effective. If you do and want to host a challenge, follow the five steps below.

1. Identify your business goals

Before you begin brainstorming challenge ideas, think about what you’re trying to accomplish — and how a challenge might help you achieve your goals.

Are you trying to build your email list? Get media attention? Pre-sell a course you’re building?
Write down your primary goal, plus any secondary goals you might have.

2. Brainstorm challenge ideas and select the best fit for your business goals

Take 15 minutes and write down as many challenge possibilities as you can. Then take a five-minute break and walk around the room or get a cup of coffee. To generate even more ideas, try another 15-minute brainstorming session.

Assess each of your ideas based on whether it will help you meet your business goal, how difficult it will be to implement, and whether it’s likely to be something that catches on with your audience.
Remember to think in terms of benefits to your audience, not features of the challenge.

3. Design your challenge

To create your challenge, outline:

  • Complete instructions for your audience, including when it will start and end
  • How you’ll entice people to join
  • How you’ll promote it to your email list, existing social media audiences, and influencers in your network

4. Host the challenge

Once you’ve set your details and announced the challenge start date, focus your content marketing efforts on promoting it.

Publish content related to the topic of your challenge, host webinars, and talk it up on social media. Encourage your participants to share their challenge results and get other people involved.

5. Evaluate the effectiveness of the challenge

After you wrap up your challenge, write down what went right, what went wrong, and how you can improve your plan next time.

Did you meet your business goals?

If you’d like to do another challenge (or run the same one again), set your next start date.

Engage and entertain your audience while growing your business

Challenges can be a fun and exciting way to generate buzz for your business, engage existing subscribers, and build your email list.

As we’ve seen from the examples above, challenges can work for all different types of businesses — so pick a smart challenge idea and run with it!

Have you hosted (or participated in) a challenge you particularly enjoyed? Tell us about it in the comments below.


Source

Thursday, 10 August 2017

The Must-Have Social Media Tool Every Content Marketer Needs


What if we told you about an ultra powerful, infinitely flexible social media tool that allows you to publish business-building content — text, audio, or video — without holding you to any arbitrary rules?

It’s a tool that fixes everything that’s broken about the existing social media sites, new and old.
It gives you an astonishing degree of freedom — to say what you want, the way you want to say it, and in the format that works best for you.

With this tool, no one can ever tell you your content is “overly commercial” or flag an image as “possibly inappropriate.” As long as you aren’t breaking the law, the rules are totally up to you.

You’re in control

You have 100 percent control over the look and functionality of your page. You can keep it simple or trick it out with hundreds of bells and whistles.

You have 100 percent control over what others can do on your page. The tool gives you the power to delete (or even modify) comments, block users, and report comments as spam so other users don’t have to deal with those pests.

You have 100 percent control over how commercial you want your page to be.

You have 100 percent control over how much content you post. In fact, what we’re calling your “page” could actually be 1,000 pages, 10,000, or more.

The tool includes powerful mechanisms for social connecting and sharing, so you can foster conversation and keep an eye on what your audience finds interesting.

And it’s simple to connect to an email list, so you can capture leads for deeper engagement.

What is this “hot new” social media tool?

This is starting to sound like one of those infomercials for a knife that “slices, dices, and juliennes baby vegetables.”

By now you might have guessed it … this “hot new” social media tool that corrects so many existing problems is nothing other than your own self-hosted website.

Wait, I thought social media was Facebook and Twitter?

Social media is simply technology that’s … social. It’s technology that allows for dialogue, interaction, and listening.

You’ll hold conversations on your website’s blog, just like you do in your favorite social media hangout.

It’s a bit like interacting with friends at a dinner party in your home versus meeting them at a restaurant. They’re both opportunities for interaction, and often the more private locale encourages a deeper level of communication.
And while networking sites like Twitter and Facebook can be useful places to broaden your audience, they can never be the foundation of an enduring content platform.

Even blogs that don’t allow comments have a social component. The definition of great content is content that’s shared, that’s talked about, that’s passed along … content that is, to borrow Seth Godin’s word, remarkable.

Most blogs capitalize on this by welcoming comments (and reading them carefully to see what’s going on with the audience), as well as facilitating social sharing over whatever the flavor-of-the-year site happens to be.

(That’s one of the reasons, of course, why you can’t build an enduring content platform on someone else’s real estate. Social networking sites get stale faster than Adam Carolla’s jokes.)

Your site is your centerpiece

Chris Brogan calls it a home base, or you can think of it as a hub.

Your own content-rich site, on a domain you own, managed with good content management software, is where you’ll put about 80 percent of your content marketing time and energy.

A site like this becomes a valuable business asset. Over time, it develops a reputation — both with human readers and with search engines.
It’s where you develop the ideas that will become your unique selling proposition.

It’s where you’ll foster the customer conversations that spark new product ideas.

It’s where you’ll optimize your content for both search engines and potential customers.

You know, you don’t have to call your content a “blog”

Some types of people read blogs, and some don’t.

If your potential customers don’t read blogs, there’s no reason in the world you have to call your content-rich, social-sharing-friendly website a blog.
Call it a resource center, content library, or radio show. Call it an Interactive Directory of Awesomeness for all I care.

Labels are important — so if you don’t want to call your self-hosted content hub a blog, think of something that will resonate better with your audience.

I promise, I won’t tell.

A few website-building tips

The Rainmaker Platform is the complete solution for digital marketing and sales that helps you focus on your business more and your technology less.

It allows you to build your audience with articles, audio, and video, grow your email list faster, earn more with marketing automation, craft killer landing pages, start profitable membership programs, sell online courses and digital products, and much more.

If you opt for creating your website’s blog with a premium WordPress theme for SEO-friendly code, solid security, and professional design, make sure you also have a really good web host (this becomes increasingly important as you start to get more traffic).

And don’t be tempted to start your blog on anything other than your own domain. The few simple hoops you’ll initially jump through will amply pay off down the line.

Drive all of your traffic to your content hub

Spending time engaging with prospects on their favorite social media platforms?

That’s great … just make sure you’re sending them back to your website.
Publishing an ebook that includes groundbreaking advice?

Excellent strategy … be sure it’s loaded with plenty of links to great material on your website.
Putting out a traditionally published book — the kind made out of dead trees?

Include links to landing pages on your website designed to create lasting relationships with those readers.

If you focus your time and energy on driving traffic to your website (and then on to your email list and/or membership site so you can continue the conversation with your audience), you’ll be building an increasingly valuable asset.

How about you?

Do you have a content hub — a centerpiece for your content marketing? Do you call it a blog? Is it where you’re spending most of your time and attention … or do you get seduced into spending your days at the lastest shiny social hangout?

Let us know in the comments how you’re using your content centerpiece.


Source

Thursday, 3 August 2017

Build Your List With Permission-Based Referrals



“There’s a great, wide open Internet out there, continuously accessed by millions of people, and in all likelihood, at least some of them are interested in what I’m offering. Surely there must be a way to reach them, but how?”
If you’ve said or thought that, you’re hardly alone. One of the biggest email marketing challenges for many businesses, particularly those that are new at it, is building a list of opt-in subscribers.
The good news is, it can be done. However, building a large list of quality subscribers takes time, and some people that we speak to don’t feel they have time. They want — need — a big list, and now.

Big List Building Mistake: Buying Email Addresses

This urgency can push them to buy lists of allegedly “opt-in” email addresses, website “traffic” that they believe will result in opt-in subscribers, and any of the myriad products aimed at frustrated would-be list builders.
Aside from the fact that purchased email addresses cause spam complaints and (at AWeber) get accounts terminated, they’re simply a waste of money. You’ll benefit more from other list-building techniques that are:
  • Free (with the exception of some time and effort)
  • Opt-in (people are asking you directly for information)

A Better Way: Get Referrals From Your Current Readers

One of the best examples of this is growing your list by referrals from existing subscribers.
Word-of-mouth is one of the oldest and most powerful means of advertising, and nowhere is it more easily or quickly done than via email. Your subscribers are getting value out of your messages and probably know someone else who would as well. Sometimes a little reminder is all it takes to get them excited about helping you help others, so give them a chance to do that!

Encourage Subscribers To Forward Your Emails To Others.

Here is an example of text you can use in your messages to do so:

Thanks for reading! If you know someone who could benefit from this, feel free to forward it to them!
Not a subscriber yet? Like what you’ve read? Sign up to get future issues delivered straight to you:
http://www.example.com
Until next time!

This Is Not The Same Thing as a “Tell a Friend” Form!

Note the difference between this and using a “tell-a-friend” form to get subscribers to sign up others to your list:
You should only subscribe/email people who are asking to be subscribed. Someone whose email address is entered into a “tell-a-friend” form by one of your subscribers hasn’t asked to be subscribed. Any email you would send to them would be spam.
Tell-a-friend forms also introduce two barriers to recommending your list to others:
  • Mis-typed addresses
  • They force the subscriber to type out the recipient’s email address, which takes more time and effort than forwarding, especially if your subscriber wants to recommend you to multiple people
Encourage current subscribers to forward your message, and avoid those barriers.

Monday, 31 July 2017

The Complete Guide to Email Automation for Beginners






If you’re a marketer, you’ve probably heard of email marketing automation.

Email marketing automation is an essential part of building a profitable email list for any online business.

In this article I’ll try to cover some important points:
  1. How does email automation work? 
  2. What type of events trigger automation? 
  3. The main terms you need to know before getting started 
  4. Email marketing automation tools 

If you are unsure of everything email automation can do for you, then read on…


How does email automation work?

With email automation, when an event happens, an email is triggered (automatically sent). The email is sent from your email marketing tool or from your marketing automation tool.

The relevance of the email, and its timing is important. With a bit of smart automation, you can send the right email at the right time and to the right person, with information that is relevant to them, based on the actions they take on your website.

Another important thing is cleaning your email list. By doing so, you know that the email addresses are real and still active. Read more about how to clean your email list here.


What type of events trigger an automation

Below are some simple examples to understand what I am talking about:
  • Email after someone signs up to your email list 
  • Email when a website visitor is a previous subscriber – When someone is an email subscriber and visits your website, some email marketing tools can track which pages they have visited on your website and then trigger an email based on this. 
  • Survey response – You sent an email to your subscribers and asked them if they were interested in a product. Based on their answer, a different email (or series of emails) is automatically sent. 
  • Cart abandonment email – If you collect the email address of the person during the sales process – or if you already have the email address as the customer is an existing subscriber – you can follow up via email to encourage them to come back. 
Did you know that the average cart abandonment rate for e-commerce providers is over 60%. More than half of shoppers abandon their purchase after adding products to their cart.


What are the main terms you need to know before you start with email automation?

Before you get started with email automation, you need to get familiar with some of the most used terms of email marketing:
  • Opt-in/Subscribe – when someone opts in to receive emails from you 
  • Double opt-in – when someone opts in to receive emails from you and they need to confirm their opt-in 
  • Spam – when someone doesn’t opt-in and you send them emails, or when someone does optin and you overdo it 
  • Unsubscribe – when someone unsubscribes from your email list 
  • Trigger – describes an event that causes something to happen (an email is sent) 
  • Sequence – the sequence of emails that are sent after an event happens 
  • Email campaign/Autoresponder – a series of emails that are sent for a specific event 
  • Bounce rate – the rate at which emails are not delivered. A soft bounce is temporary, but a hard bounce is permanent and means that your message can never be delivered to that email address. 
  • CTR – stands for Click-Through-Rate and is the number of times people click on links within an email 

Email marketing automation tools

The main difference between an email automation tool and a basic email marketing tool, is the functionality and the price. An email marketing tool is used for sending regular emails such as newsletters. With a marketing automation tool you can build automation around those emails.

Some features of a marketing automation tool are:
  • email sequence builder 
  • landing page builder 
  • analytics 
  • program management – manage marketing campaigns across multiple channels 
  • online behavior tracking – email subscribers visiting your website 
  • and more. 

If you’re looking for a marketing automation tool, you have a large variety to choose from.

Here are some popular examples: 

  • ConvertKit – designed specifically for bloggers 
  • GetResponse – growing functionality, but not as powerful as some of the other tools below 
  • InfusionSoft – complex to use but very powerful 
  • Ontraport – doesn’t integrate with as many products as InfusionSoft does 
  • HubSpot – very useful and comprehensive tool, but the price will be higher compared to the other two 


What are the steps for building an email automation sequence

For any sequence that you want to build, the required steps will be similar.



1. Find out who you want to attract


Start by analyzing the customers who have bought from you in the past and try to figure out what are the characteristics and interests of your customers.


2. Do some research about the issues of your existing customers/audience


The next step is to do some research and find out the issues your customers/audience encounter while using your services/product. Doing that will help you come up with an incentive for people to subscribe to your services/product.


3. Use the info collected and create your incentive


Use the information from the above steps to create a buzz around that topic. You could also create a guide as a solution or use the info in your opt-in message. This will get people to sign up and then all you have to do is to offer them a free trial of your product.


4. Direct people to make the action you want them to make


You need to create some sort of a “map”, to think in advance. First you have a welcome email, then some follow-up emails with links to the guide created in the step above. After that, what should they do?
They could become a customer, so you must move them to a customer list
If they don’t become customers, you can move them to a newsletter list

A tool you can use for that is Lucidcharts.



5. Create your emails


When you’re creating the emails, think about the relationship you want to build with the subscriber. Make them feel welcome, as part of the community, tell them about yourself and deliver your promises (free trial, a guide, etc.).

With every email you send, make sure that you are building a relationship as well as providing quality content.


6. Create the sequence in the email automation tool


You will need to create a sequence, add emails to that sequence and then specify when the emails will be sent.

An example:
Welcome email – send immediately
Email no.2 – 2 days later
Email no.3 – 4 days later
Free trial/discount offer – 5 days later
Offer reminder – 6 days later
Add them to a customer list if they bought, or to a newsletter list if they didn’t

*days are counted after the welcome email is sent

Note: Your series of emails will be different depending on the type of service you provide and who you are targeting.


7. Deploy your opt-ins and segment your audience


Now you can setup the opt-ins on your site. Depending on the marketing tool you use, you might have the functionality and opt-ins required, but it’s always better to use a specialized tool.

OptinMonster has some smart functionalities and it also provides multiple ways to collect opt-ins.

Some examples of OptinMonster functionalities:
opt-ins based on your blog categories; this means that you can segment people based on where they opted in.
different opt-ins based on the page they visit
different opt-in based on their location
different opt-in based on their actions (abandon the cart or product purchase)
A/B testing for different opt-ins


8. Drive traffic to the opt-ins


Now that everything is in place, it’s time to drive some traffic to the opt-ins. This could be organic traffic, referrals from other sites, paid traffic from Google, Bing, Facebook Ads, etc.


9. Analyze and optimize your results


Measure what works and optimize it. To improve your opt-in rate you can change the words, the opt-in style or the incentive.

The same thing is available for your email sequence: if you notice that people are not opening your emails, you can test different subject lines. Keep in mind that the way you communicate with your new email subscribers needs to be completely different to the way you communicate with existing customers. You will need to split these two out.
Wrap

Successfully segmenting your email list guarantees that messages are landing in the right inbox at the right time.

You can educate. You can connect. You can sell.

Remember, the number one rule of email marketing automation is to keep your users’ experience as your top priority, so think outside of the (in)box!

Sunday, 30 July 2017

Social Media Invite Emails That Are a Marketing “Do”


 Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, the list of social media networking sites continues to grow. And, once you’ve created your account on the latest social network, or even if you have an established account, how do you get people to find it? Email marketing, of course! Sending an email invitation asking readers to follow your business on a social network may not seem intuitive, but it can be an effective and easy way to grow your following. Your email list is full of people interested in your biz, and getting them to interact with you on social media can help build your relationship with them and keep your business top of mind.
Before we jump into some excellent social media email invite examples, here are a few tips for creating an effective invite. Now it may seem obvious, but always make sure (in any email you send) to include a link and/or a call-to-action button that entices readers to follow you. Also, make sure the email is:
  • Informative – Let your readers know what they’re going to get or find if they do start following your business on social.
  • Easy to read – Remember to include all the social sites you’re on and link to each one – Some people prefer different social sites.
  • Short – Just like any invitation, give important info, make the copy fun and personable and that’s it. Keep readers focused.
Now that we’ve discussed some tips, let’s take a look at a few “do” examples:
The Container Store – The Container Store’s social invite email focuses purely on their social networks, so it’s easy for readers to know what to do. It’s short, fun and shares the different things one can expect to find at each social site (i.e., time-saving tips). Plus, they include calls-to-action in the form of a “Go” button!
Social Email Invites are a Marketing Do
Zulily – Zulily created a charming graphic for their social invite email email which calls out each of their social networks. They also have a catchy headline: “Calling all social butterflies.” Plus, they provide a compelling reason to follow them on each social site (i.e., get inspired, share & shop).
Social Email Invites are a Marketing Do
CETFA – This non-profit included a single, funny and attention-grabbing image in their social invite email. They share their new social sites, plus the ones they’re established on and they give reasons why to follow them on each one.
Social Email Invites are a Marketing Do
The most important thing to keep in mind when creating a social media invite is to answer the following questions: “How can I provide value to my readers and followers?” and “What’s in it for them?” Then, keep followers coming back for more with engaging posts and conversations.
Looking for a little more on this subject? Jay Baer, the social media guru and author of the best-selling book Youtility, has a popular keynote entitled Why Email is Madonna and Facebook is Lady GagaBaer talks about how email and Facebook marketing are really very similar. Check it out for more inspiration.
Have you used email invitations to grow your following on social media? Share your experiences or invites in the comments.

4 Ways to Build Facebook Lookalike Audiences to Expand Your Targeting


 Do you want to reach more consumers with your Facebook ads?
Looking for creative ways to reach more people like your ideal customers?
Lookalike audiences allow you to build new audiences using an established source audience such as people who have viewed your video or previously purchased from you.
In this article, you’ll discover how to use Facebook lookalike audiences to successfully scale your ad targeting.
What Are Facebook Lookalike Audiences?
Facebook lookalike audiences are an advanced targeting option that goes beyond the basic interest and demographic targeting functionality. They’re currently the most effective Facebook targeting tool to find your ideal customer.
At the core of all lookalike audiences is a source audience upon which you build a lookalike audience. Facebook takes all of the data points of your source audience and finds new, similar people using a set percentage sample (which you specify) of the population in your chosen country.

Unlike interest-based targeting, lookalike audiences allow you to create the source audience, giving you more control. As a result, you end up with better-quality audiences because you can find new audiences that are almost identical to your existing ones.
Lookalike audiences are best used to target new cold audiences at the top of your sales funnel. For example, you could run top-of-funnel content campaigns to all of the lookalike audiences you build. This would start to warm them up as you take them from the top of the funnel to the bottom.
Now let’s look at how to create four types of lookalike audiences.

#1: Create a Video Lookalike Audience

Facebook users watch 100 million hours of video on the platform every day, so it should come as no surprise that video is Facebook’s best-performing content.
Video allows you to build brand recognition and trust with your target audience quickly. If you’re running a video-based content strategy and want to scale your campaigns to reach more people, lookalike audiences let you find new people based on those who’ve already watched your videos.

Before you can create a video lookalike audience, you first need to create a custom video audience, which will be the source audience for the lookalike.
Create a Custom Video Audience
Custom video audiences allow you to segment your viewers based on what videos they’ve watched and their level of engagement.
To create a custom video audience, open your Facebook Ads Manager and navigate to the Audiences dashboard. To do that, click the menu button and click All Tools.

Under Assets, click Audiences.

Next click Create Audience and select Custom Audience from the drop-down menu.

In the pop-up box that appears, you’ll see four custom audience options. Select Engagement on Facebook.

Next select Video.

You’ll see the box where you create your custom video audience. Select your engagement criteria from the Engagement drop-down list and choose the videos from which you want to build your audience.

Define the time periodgive your audience a name, and click Create Audience.

You can create an audience for all video views at every engagement level: 3 seconds, 10 seconds, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 95%. To create each one, repeat the process outlined above for the different engagement options.
Build a Video Lookalike Audience
Now you’re ready to create your video lookalike audience. Navigate to the Audiences dashboard in your Ads Manager just like you did when you created the custom video audience. Then click Create Audience and select Lookalike Audience from the drop-down menu.
In the Create a Lookalike Audience box, you’ll see three fields: Source, Country, and Audience Size. For the source, select the custom video audience you created in the previous step.

Next choose your country. This is typically the country in which the majority of your source audience is located. For example, if you work predominantly with UK-based businesses, any lookalike audience you create will be in the UK.

Finally, select your audience size. Audience sizes range from 1% to 10% of the total population in the country you choose, with 1% being those who most closely match your source. You may want to start at 1% and increase the audience size when you want to scale campaigns to reach more people.
When you’re finished, click Create Audience. You’ll receive a notification when your lookalike audience is ready to use, which could take up to 30 minutes.

#2: Set Up Email List Lookalike Audiences

Email-based lookalike audiences often deliver the best results. Why? Because you can take your existing customer list and use that as the source for your lookalike audience, essentially cloning your customer base.
As with video lookalike audiences, first you’ll need a custom email audience of your subscribers/customers before you can create an email-based lookalike audience.
Create a Custom Email Audience
Navigate to the Audiences dashboardclick Create Audience, and select Custom Audience from the drop-down menu. In the first pop-up box, select Customer File.

You have two options for adding your email data: upload your data as a file/copy and paste the data, or import it from MailChimp. If you’re uploading your email list, click Choose a File or Copy and Paste the Data.

Next upload the email list (which is a CSV file in the example).

Then map your identifiers. The more identifiers you use the better match rate you’ll see. In the example, we’ll use First Name, Last Name, and of course, Email Address.

After you click Upload & Create, you’ll see a progress bar and how many rows of data were successfully uploaded.
Now under Next Steps, click Create a Lookalike Audience.

Build an Email Lookalike Audience
In the Create a Lookalike Audience box that opens, you’ll see your custom email audience in the Source field.
Select your target country (from which the majority of your email list comes) and choose the audience size. Consider starting with a 1% lookalike audience and scaling from there. Then click Create Audience.

#3: Create Conversion Lookalike Audiences

Conversion lookalike audiences let you find new target audiences using a website custom audience of people who have completed a specific conversion event.
For example, if you’re an ecommerce business running a discount code lead magnetcreate a website custom audience of people who have triggered a lead event action by opting in for the discount code. Then use that audience as the source for your lookalike audience.

Before you can create the source audience for your conversion lookalike audience, make sure that you’ve set up and installed conversion tracking.
As with video and email lookalike audiences, you need to create the source audience first. It will be a website custom audience of people who have completed a specific event action.
Create a Website Custom Audience for Conversions
In the Audiences dashboard in your Facebook Ads Manager, click Create Audience and select Custom Audience from the drop-down menu. In the pop-up box, select Website Traffic.

From the Website Traffic drop-down menu, select Custom Combination.

Click the URL drop-down menu and select Event.

Choose the event you want to create the audience from (Lead, for example). You’ll see a list of event actions you’re currently tracking using the Facebook pixel.

In the field called In the Last, enter the time parameter for how long people will stay in your audience once they’ve completed the specific action. For example, you might choose 120-180 days to have the maximum number of people in your audience.
Finally, make sure the Include Past Website Traffic box is selectedgive your audience a name, and click Create Audience.
Build a Conversion Lookalike Audience
Now navigate to the Audiences dashboardclick Create Audience, and select Lookalike Audience from the drop-down menu.
In the Create a Lookalike Audience box, choose your website custom audience from the Source drop-down list.

Then select your country and choose the audience size (1% is a good place to start).
Finally, click Create Audience and wait for Facebook to build your lookalike audience. Once it’s ready to use, you’ll receive a notification and it will appear in your Audiences dashboard.

#4: Construct Page Likes Lookalike Audiences

Lookalike audiences for page likes are the easiest to set up because you build them from the fans of your Facebook page. If you have a large number of Facebook fans who actively engage with your organic posts, a page likes lookalike audience is a great way to find new similar target audiences.
Differing from the three lookalike audiences above, you don’t need to create a custom audience for your source audience.
In the Audiences dashboard in Facebook Ads Manager, click Create Audience and select Lookalike Audience. In the Create a Lookalike Audience box, select your page name from the Source drop-down list.

Then choose your target country and select your audience size.
Tip: With all lookalike audiences, the larger the source audience, the better quality the lookalike audience will be (since there are more data points to use). A general guideline for building lookalike audiences is that the source audience must have at least 1,000 people in it.
Conclusion
One of the advantages of using lookalike audiences is the ability to scale your campaigns quickly and easily. Because you create lookalike audiences based on a percentage sample of people in your target country (from 1% to 10%), you can start with a closely defined 1%, and as you reach higher ad frequency, introduce the 2% audience, and so on.
Compare this approach with interest-based targeting, which is more hit and miss when you have to create new audiences from different related interests.
What do you think? Do you use Facebook lookalike audiences for your Facebook ads? Please share your thoughts in the comments below.