Meta Ads Research

v1.0.0

[Didoo AI] Conducts competitive intelligence for Meta Ads campaigns — analyzes competitor ads, landing pages, and market benchmarks. Use before launching a n...

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Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Meta Ads Research" (elias-didoo/meta-ads-research) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/elias-didoo/meta-ads-research
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

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openclaw skills install meta-ads-research

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npx clawhub@latest install meta-ads-research
Security Scan
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Purpose & Capability
The name and description describe competitive intelligence for Meta ads and the SKILL.md only asks the agent to use Meta Ad Library, web search, and fetch public landing pages — all coherent with the stated purpose. No unrelated binaries, credentials, or config are requested.
Instruction Scope
Instructions are focused on passive research: searching Meta Ad Library, web searches, and fetching landing pages to map funnels and creative angles. This is within scope, but the guidance to 'web fetch competitor landing pages — understand their full funnel' could be interpreted to include deeper interactions (e.g., submitting forms). The SKILL.md does not explicitly instruct any credential use, form submissions, or private-system access; if deployed, you should ensure the agent only performs passive reads and does not submit or authenticate unless you explicitly allow it.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code files — instruction-only — so nothing will be written to disk or downloaded. This minimizes install-related risk.
Credentials
The skill declares no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. The runtime instructions rely on public web resources (Meta Ad Library, search results) which do not require additional secrets, so requested access is proportionate.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable; the default ability for the model to invoke the skill autonomously is present but not combined with any broad privileges or credentials. No evidence the skill attempts to modify system-wide configs or require persistent presence.
Assessment
This skill is instruction-only and appears coherent for competitive ad research. Before installing, confirm these operational points: 1) Ensure your agent runtime is allowed to perform only passive web fetches and is configured not to submit forms or sign up to competitor services (the SKILL.md suggests analyzing funnels but does not authorize interactive actions). 2) Check your organization’s scraping and terms-of-service policies for Meta Ad Library and competitor sites to avoid policy violations. 3) Because the skill can run autonomously, decide whether you want to allow it to run searches/fetch pages without explicit prompts. 4) If you plan to extend the skill to use private accounts (e.g., your own ad account), only grant the minimal credentials needed and review that addition separately. Overall risk is low, but set runtime limits (no form submissions, no credential use) if you want conservative behavior.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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91downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 1w ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

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:

  1. Meta Ad Library: search by category keyword, not just brand name
  2. Google Search: "[niche] Facebook ads case study", "[competitor] what ads are they running"
  3. 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:

  1. Ad → Landing page: What does the landing page promise that the ad set up?
  2. Landing page → Next step: What does the page ask them to do next? (Form, checkout, call, chat)
  3. 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:

  1. Differentiation level (how unique is this angle?)
  2. Category fit (does it match how this audience thinks?)
  3. 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

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