<b>Case #011: The winner that refused to scale up</b>
We had a survey offer locked at 95% ROI on $80/day. Every attempt to scale it vertically — more budget on the same ad set — collapsed it. Push to $200, ROI fell to 20%. The ad set had a ceiling, and we kept smashing our head against it.
The breakthrough was admitting the ceiling was real and going sideways instead of up.
Instead of one ad set at $200, we built six ad sets at $80 each, each targeting a slightly different slice — separate interests, separate age bands, separate placements. Same creative, same offer, six narrow doors instead of one wide one.
— Single ad set forced to $200/day: $200 spent, 20% ROI
— Six ad sets at $80, total $480/day: blended 71% ROI
Five of the six worked. One died and we cut it on day 2, $160 lost. But the five survivors each held near their original efficiency because none of them was forced past its natural ceiling. We'd multiplied the campaign instead of inflating it.
— Day 14 total: $6,100 spent, $10,400 back, +70% ROI
— Daily spend scaled from $80 to $400 with almost no efficiency loss
Vertical scaling asks one ad set to find more good people than exist in its pocket. Horizontal scaling opens new pockets. The math is unglamorous and it works.
The lesson: when a winner won't scale vertically, it's telling you the audience pocket is small — duplicate sideways into new pockets instead of inflating the one that's already tapped.
The Green Day
@greenday_roi
<b>Case #011: The winner that refused to scale up</b>
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