How I Run Meta Ads That Feel Honest and Actually Work for Leads and Brand Building

Let me start with this.

I am not a Meta ads guru. I have not cracked the code on ads that sell products every day on autopilot. But I have figured out how to run campaigns that are honest, well-performing, and aligned with my brand. They bring in strong newsletter signups, often at 1.50 euros per lead. They get high click-through rates, sometimes above 8 percent. And they consistently deliver cheap CPMs on brand awareness campaigns.

That is already a win in my book. Because I am not just trying to push products. I am building a world. And these ads help people find it.

Here is how I do it.

I Focus on Building Connection First

I do not try to convince people to buy something on their first click.

Instead, I invite them into the brand story.

This could mean:

  • A landing page with a free download or lookbook
  • A blog post that shares something personal
  • A newsletter signup that promises honest, creative insight

The goal is not instant sales. It is trust and curiosity.

I Write Like a Person, Not a Marketing Bot

Every word in my ads comes from me. I speak how I speak. Clear. Honest. A little raw. People do not want more polished noise. They want to feel like a real person is talking to them.

So I avoid pressure language. No “Only 24 hours left.”

Instead, I say: This is what we made. Here is why we care about it. Maybe it is for you.

That tone works. Not for everyone, but for the right ones.

I Use Simple, Brand-Aligned Visuals

I do not overproduce my ad creatives.

Most of the best-performing ones are clean photos, real videos, or quote cards that reflect our tone.

I test a few options:

  • Product image with emotional headline
  • Founder quote with a calm visual
  • Short video loop showing the feeling of the brand

I do not try to copy trends. I just show what is true.

I Let Data Guide Me, But Not Define Me

Yes, I look at performance.

CTR. CPM. Leads. Cost per result.

But I do not let numbers drive every decision. If an ad feels off-brand, even if it is performing, I stop it.

If something is aligned but slow, I give it a little time. Because in the long run, the people who sign up, follow, and buy are not numbers.

They are humans. And humans feel energy.

What I’m Still Figuring Out

I am still learning how to make ads that directly drive product sales consistently.

But here is what I do know:

  • Our brand awareness ads are strong and cost-efficient
  • Our lead gen ads convert well when the offer is clear and honest
  • Our voice cuts through the noise because it is not trying to be anything else

I will keep testing. I will keep refining.

But I will not compromise the soul of the brand to force performance.