Engine · Layer 02 · Validation channel

Facebook Ads for B2B isn't dead. It's just done differently.

A small-budget validation channel that proves whether your offer pulls qualified inquiries, before scaling to higher-CPC channels.

B2B buyers are people. They scroll Facebook and Instagram in their off-hours. The platforms reach them at moments of low intent but high attention. The smart play is not "mass B2B reach" but "small-budget offer validation" — test whether your value proposition converts before committing five-figure monthly spend to Google Ads or SEO.

The fastest way to test whether your offer works.

Google Ads at B2B keywords is expensive. SEO takes 10–12 months. Facebook Ads sits between them: cheap enough to test fast, qualified enough to produce real inquiries. We use it as the validation step before committing larger budgets to longer channels.

Reason 01

Cheap inquiries while you learn.

B2B Facebook inquiries can come in at 1/10th the cost of a B2B Google Ads inquiry. The trade-off: lower intent. But for offer validation, that trade-off is exactly the right shape.

Reason 02

Reach decision-makers off-hours.

Procurement officers, CEOs, technical buyers scroll Facebook at lunch and at home. The platforms reach them where Google Search doesn't. Different moment, different value.

Reason 03

Forces you to define "qualified" early.

Facebook will produce inquiries. Many of them won't be qualified. This pressure forces your sales team to build the MQL → SQL screening logic that every other channel will need.

Reason 04

Validates the engine before you scale.

If Facebook Ads can't produce a qualified inquiry at any cost, your sales team probably can't close inquiries from any channel. Better to discover that early, on a small budget.

Two example industries. Different economics.

Below are typical Facebook Ads benchmarks from current mmldigi clients. Your numbers will differ by category, geography, offer, and creative. These are starting points for setting realistic expectations.

CNC machining (custom orders)
~$45
per qualified inquiry · 2025 average

High-ticket B2B with multi-stakeholder buying. Higher per-inquiry cost because qualification bar is higher. Inquiry-to-deal conversion is meaningful when it lands.

Hardware accessories (wholesale)
~$12
per qualified inquiry · 2025 average

Lower-ticket B2B closer to consumer. Cheaper inquiries because the qualification bar is lower. Higher volume needed to produce equivalent revenue.

What's in the campaign, what's not.

Facebook Ads for B2B is a different practice than consumer Facebook Ads. The deliverables below reflect that difference.

01

Audience definition

Job titles, industries, company sizes, interest layers, lookalikes from your customer list. Built for B2B targeting, not consumer behavior.

02

3-second hook video production

Most B2B Facebook ads die in the first second. We design the first 3 seconds to be the hook, not buildup. Our in-house video team produces every asset.

03

Closed-funnel landing pages

Lead form vs landing page A/B testing per campaign. Lead form usually wins on Facebook, landing page wins on Instagram. We test, not assume.

04

Daily performance monitoring

Facebook decay curves are fast. Creative fatigue shows up in 7–14 days. Daily monitoring is operational hygiene, not optional.

05

Inquiry quality screening

Facebook produces inquiries fast — including junk ones. We screen against your MQL criteria before passing to your sales team. Volume isn't the goal. Qualified volume is.

06

Weekly creative refresh

New hook, new ad copy, new variation every 7–14 days. Facebook Ads is a creative-velocity game, not a budget game.

Four phases. Most other agencies skip phase 01.

The temptation on Facebook Ads is to "just launch and optimize." But B2B Facebook Ads needs offer validation and creative briefing before any spend. Skip those, and you'll burn budget for 3 months learning what we'd have told you in week 2.

Phase 01
Audience + offer research
Customer interviews, audience definition, offer testing, hook design. The brief that lets the creative team build for real conversion paths, not vanity engagement.
2 weeks
Phase 02
Launch
$15K/month minimum to give Meta's optimization enough conversion volume to learn. Manual audience layers, daily monitoring during week 1. First inquiries typically arrive in week 1–2.
2–3 weeks
Phase 03
Learning phase optimization
Weekly creative refresh, audience refinement, A/B testing, conversion funnel iteration. By week 6, the qualified inquiry baseline is usually established.
Weeks 4–10
Phase 04
Scale or decision
At week 10, the data tells the story. If qualified inquiries are flowing at sensible cost, we scale. If not, we tell you honestly and pivot to Google Ads or SEO, where the buyer intent is higher.
Week 10+

What we won't do, even if you ask.

× What we don't do
  • Run reach campaigns without lead capture. Facebook impressions on B2B without form fills is paying for air.
  • Use the consumer e-commerce playbook. B2B Facebook Ads has different conversion economics, different audiences, different creative needs.
  • Run "boosted posts." Boost is for organic content engagement, not lead generation. Different tool, different outcome.
  • Take engagements under $15K/month. Below that, there isn't enough conversion volume for Meta's optimization to learn. The math doesn't work.
  • Promise inquiry costs in week 1. Facebook needs the learning phase. Anyone who promises a specific CPL number sight-unseen is fictionalizing.
  • Continue spending if month 3 data shows the offer doesn't validate. We'll tell you to stop, not extract a longer retainer.
Next step

Validate your offer in 10 weeks.

On a 30-minute call, we walk you through Facebook Ads benchmarks for your industry, discuss whether your offer has the shape to validate on paid social, and design the test campaign before any spend commits.

Book a research call