Meta Ads Market Research
When to Use
Before launching a new campaign or entering a new market — to understand the competitive landscape, what types of ads are working, and where opportunities exist.
Step 1: Define Research Scope
Ask:
- What industry or category? (e.g., SaaS, e-commerce, local services)
- What markets or countries?
- What product or service type?
- Any specific competitors to analyze?
Finding the right competitors to analyze:
- Do NOT start with the biggest brands — their ad strategy is not replicable for small businesses
- Start with: businesses of similar size, similar budget, similar market — 5 to 10 competitors
- Search by category keywords in Meta Ad Library, not by brand name
- Use web search: "[your niche] Facebook ads competitors" to find real SMBs running ads
Step 2: Competitive Ad Intelligence
Use Meta's Ad Library, web search, and web fetch to find what competitors are running.
What to analyze for each competitor ad
Surface-level (what you see):
- Primary hook / headline
- Offer or value proposition
- CTA (sign up, buy, learn more, book call)
- Creative format (video, carousel, single image, Stories, Reels)
- Visual style and tone
Deeper-level (why it works):
- Psychological trigger used (fear, social proof, urgency, exclusivity, transformation, authority)
- Emotional hook angle (who/what/when/where/why/how angle)
- Audience targeting signal (what audience does this ad seem to be reaching?)
- Ad endurance — how long has this same ad been running? (Long-running ads = proven to work)
- Ad saturation — how many different ads is this brand running? (Many variants = active spender)
How to find them:
- Meta Ad Library: search by category keyword, not just brand name
- Google Search: "[niche] Facebook ads case study", "[competitor] what ads are they running"
- Web fetch competitor landing pages — understand their full funnel, not just the ad
What to document for each competitor:
- Brand name
- Primary hook and psychological trigger
- Offer / CTA
- Creative format
- Estimated spend signal (High / Medium / Low — from Ad Library if available)
- Ad endurance (how long running, if identifiable)
- Landing page URL
Step 3: Market Trend Research
Use web search to find:
Industry benchmarks:
- Average CPM for this industry and target geo
- Average CPL or CPA by objective
- Seasonal or timing factors
Creative trends in this category:
- What hook angles are dominant? (e.g., "results transformation" vs. "social proof")
- What formats are gaining traction? (Reels outperforming static? Carousels working for DTC?)
- Any new creative approaches emerging?
Bidding and competitive landscape:
- Is this a highly competitive category (CPM high)? What does that mean for budget planning?
- Are there identifiable "ad saturation" patterns — same angles repeated across competitors?
Step 4: Full-Funnel Path Analysis
Map the complete user journey for top competitors — not just the landing page, but what happens after.
For each top competitor:
- Ad → Landing page: What does the landing page promise that the ad set up?
- Landing page → Next step: What does the page ask them to do next? (Form, checkout, call, chat)
- Post-conversion: What's their follow-up sequence? (Email capture? Retargeting?)
This reveals:
- Whether competitors are running a full funnel or just top-of-funnel ads
- What offer depth is needed to compete (some categories need a tripwire product, some don't)
- Retargeting patterns (are they chasing visitors who didn't convert?)
Step 5: Gap and Opportunity Analysis
Based on all findings, identify:
White space — Angles or formats no one is using in this category
- Look for underserved emotional triggers (e.g., everyone uses fear, no one uses belonging)
Market saturation points — Where competitors are all saying the same thing
- If 5 competitors use the same hook angle, that angle is table stakes — you need it plus something else
Differentiation opportunity — What unique angle could the user's brand use?
- Consider: different audience segment, different emotional trigger, different offer framing
- Ask: what do competitors promise? What do they NOT say that their audience cares about?
Step 6: Strategic Positioning Recommendation
Based on the research, recommend:
Top 3 creative angles to test — ranked by:
- Differentiation level (how unique is this angle?)
- Category fit (does it match how this audience thinks?)
- Ad format match (which format does this angle work best in?)
For each angle, specify:
- The hook type (transformation / fear / social proof / authority / urgency / exclusivity)
- The specific angle within that type
- How to adapt it for the user's brand (not copying — translating the principle)
Step 7: Output Format
## Competitive Research: [Industry/Category]
### Competitors Analyzed
| Competitor | Primary Hook | Trigger Type | CTA | Format | Spend Signal | Ad Endurance | LP URL |
|------------|-------------|-------------|-----|--------|-------------|--------------|--------|
| [Name] | [Hook] | [Trigger] | [CTA] | [Format] | [Level] | [Long/Short] | [URL] |
### Industry Benchmarks
- Average CPM: $[X]
- Average CPL: $[X]
- Competitive intensity: [Low / Medium / High]
### Creative Trends in This Category
1. [Dominant hook angle and why it works]
2. [Emerging format or approach]
### Full-Funnel Gaps
[Where competitors are weak in the funnel]
### Recommended Creative Angles to Test
1. [Angle 1] — Why it differentiates — Format: [what to use]
2. [Angle 2] — ...
3. [Angle 3] — ...
### Strategic Positioning
[1-2 sentences on recommended overall positioning in this competitive landscape]
Key Research Sources
- Meta Ad Library: ads.facebook.com/ads-library — search by category keyword, not brand
- Google Search: "[niche] Facebook ads", "[competitor] ads", "[industry] Meta case study"
- Web Fetch: Pull competitor landing pages and analyze the full funnel path
- SimilarWeb / SpyFu: Competitive traffic and estimated ad spend
Restrictions
- Do not make up data — only report what you actually find
- Do not use competitor branding or trademarks in ways that violate Meta policies
- Present findings objectively — don't bias toward a predetermined conclusion
- Do not recommend copying competitor ads directly — recommend adapting winning principles