OscarMike
Active Member
Hi everyone, I have a question about cost per sale for a print on demand product (mug). My cost per sale is really high. I'm having a hard time lowering it to be profitable. I'm using picture ads. I've read that video ads do the best with cold traffic.
Is it possible to get a cost per sale that is consistently lower than my revenue on day 1 of a marketing campaign?
The reason I ask this question is because one case study I read showed that, in the context of Facebook ads, the cost per sale can come down over time as the facebook algorithm optimizes. A campaign can start out getting sales but the cost per sale is ridiculously high, but then the cost per sale comes down over a few days as ad spend increases.
Another case study showed that, in the context of TikTok ads, that it's possible to get a cost per sale consistently lower than the revenue, on Day 1 of starting the campaign.
Both case studies involved dropshipping from AliExpress. They used video ads.
I've started a Facebook ad campaign that got a sale and my cost per sale was $4 (much lower than my revenue), but the cost per sale increased to $40 after I let it run for 2 days.
Do you mind sharing your experiences?
Should the campaign have an average cost per sale much lower than the revenue on Day 1, thereby producing a profit right from the start?
Thanks
Is it possible to get a cost per sale that is consistently lower than my revenue on day 1 of a marketing campaign?
The reason I ask this question is because one case study I read showed that, in the context of Facebook ads, the cost per sale can come down over time as the facebook algorithm optimizes. A campaign can start out getting sales but the cost per sale is ridiculously high, but then the cost per sale comes down over a few days as ad spend increases.
Another case study showed that, in the context of TikTok ads, that it's possible to get a cost per sale consistently lower than the revenue, on Day 1 of starting the campaign.
Both case studies involved dropshipping from AliExpress. They used video ads.
I've started a Facebook ad campaign that got a sale and my cost per sale was $4 (much lower than my revenue), but the cost per sale increased to $40 after I let it run for 2 days.
Do you mind sharing your experiences?
Should the campaign have an average cost per sale much lower than the revenue on Day 1, thereby producing a profit right from the start?
Thanks
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