Meta has cleaned up their Ads Manager and replaced the long list of objectives with a simpler set of six. If you’ve ever felt confused about which objective to choose or worried you might pick the wrong one, this update makes your life easier.

These six objectives cover everything from awareness to sales. Once you understand what each one actually does, planning a campaign becomes much clearer.

Let’s walk through each one in plain language.

What a Campaign Objective Really Means

When you start building a Facebook or Instagram campaign, the first thing you do is choose the objective. This is essentially you telling Meta, “this is the result I want.”

That choice matters because:

For example, Traffic finds people who click a lot, not people who buy. Sales finds people who convert, not necessarily people who comment or share. So the objective you select becomes the foundation of your entire strategy.

The 6 Meta Campaign Objectives

Here are the six objectives and what they’re best used for.

1. Awareness

Use it when:
You want people to know you exist. Simple as that.

Awareness campaigns are great for:

Your ad will be shown to people who are more likely to pay attention or remember what they saw.

Good placements: Facebook Feed, Instagram Feed
Common CTAs: Learn More, Discover, Watch Now

2. Traffic

Use it when:
You want people to visit a specific link — your website, blog, app, or landing page.

Traffic campaigns are useful for:

Meta targets users who click often. You may not get purchases from this objective, but you will get visitors.

Good placements: FB Feed, IG Feed, Messenger
Common CTAs: Visit Website, Shop Now, Get App

3. Engagement

Use it when:
You want interaction — comments, shares, likes, saves, or messages.

Engagement campaigns help you:

There are a few formats under Engagement like page likes, post boosts, and event responses.

Strong engagement almost always comes from content people react to emotionally, so this objective works best when your creatives are relatable or entertaining.

Good placements: FB Feed, IG Feed, Messenger
Common CTAs: Like Page, Comment, Share

4. Leads

Use it when:
You want to collect customer information — emails, phone numbers, inquiries, booking requests.

The Leads objective supports:

It’s great when your goal is to build a pipeline instead of pushing for an immediate sale.

Good placements: FB Feed, IG Feed, Messenger
Common CTAs: Sign Up, Get Quote, Subscribe

5. App Promotion

Use it when:
Your main goal is to increase installs or get current users back into the app.

Before you run this objective, your app needs to be set up inside Meta’s developer settings so the algorithm can optimize for real installs instead of random clicks.

Use this objective for:

Your creative should highlight how the app makes life easier or what users get by installing it.

Good placements: FB Feed, IG Feed, Messenger
Common CTAs: Install Now, Use App, Play Game

6. Sales

Use it when:
Your goal is conversions — purchases, add-to-carts, checkouts, or high-intent actions.

Sales campaigns are ideal for:

Meta optimizes toward people who have a higher probability of buying, not just browsing or clicking.

Good placements: FB Feed, IG Feed, Reels
Common CTAs: Shop Now, Buy Now, View Products

Final Thoughts

The new ODAX structure removes confusion and makes it easier to align your campaign with your real business goals. Once you’re clear about what action matters most — awareness, clicks, engagement, leads, installs, or sales — choosing the right objective becomes straightforward.

Start with the outcome you want, pick the objective that matches it, and build your campaign from there.

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