Didion Meta Recruitment Ad Fatigue Strategy
Overview
During an April 2026 working session, Diana Henry (Didion) flagged a significant recruitment problem tied to Meta ad saturation. The "Will you help us push us forward?" ad had been running long enough to dominate feed delivery, causing ad fatigue and contributing to a ~35% drop in job applications. This article documents the diagnosis, contributing factors, and corrective strategy.
Problem Statement
Didion's recruitment pipeline was down approximately 35% at the time of the call. Diana noted she was repeatedly seeing the same ad headline — "Will you help us push us forward?" — in her personal Meta feed, a signal that the creative was over-saturating the target audience. The platform had been defaulting to an older ad set ("Set B") because of its longer performance history, effectively crowding out newer creatives that had been produced but were not receiving meaningful delivery.
"I keep seeing that line, will you help push us forward? That's like what I see constantly. And so I'm feeling like it's getting too much airtime and we are struggling with getting applications. Like we're down like 35%."
— Diana Henry
Contributing Factors
1. Platform Bias Toward Historical Performance
Meta's delivery algorithm favored the older "Set B" ad because it had accumulated more performance data. Newer creatives, despite being available, were not being surfaced at meaningful scale. Diana correctly identified the dynamic: ads with longer run history accumulate data advantages that make it harder for newer creatives to compete for delivery.
2. Budget Under-Spend
Monthly ad spend was running at approximately $545 against a $700 maximum budget:
- Google Ads: ~$400/month
- Meta Ads: ~$145/month
Under-spending against the budget cap is a signal that the campaigns may not be competitive enough in auction — potentially limiting reach and compounding the visibility problem.
3. Stale Creative Rotation
The campaign had not introduced meaningfully new messaging in approximately six months. Both the static and video variants in the active ad set were variations of the same "push us forward" theme, offering no messaging variety to combat fatigue.
Ad Structure at Time of Call
| Set | Status | Creative Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Set A | Off | Static/Video | Turned off after A/B test; B was outperforming |
| Set B | Active | Static + Video | Older creative; longer history; over-delivered |
| Newer creatives | Underdelivered | Unknown | Available but not prioritized by algorithm |
Strategy & Actions
Immediate
- Melissa (Asymmetric) to investigate Meta campaign settings to manually prioritize newer ad creatives and reduce delivery weight on the "Will you help us push us forward?" set
- Evaluate whether turning off Set B entirely for a test period would allow newer creatives to gain delivery data
Messaging
- Introduce new headline variants to break the repetition pattern
- Avoid leading with the same "push us forward" copy across all active ads
Budget
- Investigate why spend is not reaching the $700 cap — this may indicate bid competitiveness or audience saturation issues
- Consider whether reallocating budget between Google and Meta would improve overall recruitment reach
Geofencing & Platform Targeting Notes
- Meta: Already configured as Wisconsin-only targeting; appropriate for general recruitment
- Google: Better suited for fine-grained radius-based targeting; recommended for geographic precision
- LinkedIn: Proposed for senior/executive-level recruitment (e.g., CEO-tier roles) where professional targeting is more effective than broad social
Key Insight
Ad fatigue on recruitment campaigns is particularly damaging because the target audience (potential job applicants) is smaller and more defined than a consumer audience. A single over-served creative can effectively poison the well for an entire hiring cycle. Rotating creatives proactively — before fatigue is visible in application data — is preferable to reacting after a 35% drop.
Related
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