A Adam Ihsan, Easton Automations May 23, 2026 Facebook Ads

Facebook and Instagram Ads for Local Service Businesses: A Plain-English Guide to Not Wasting Money

Facebook and Instagram ads are one of the best ways to reach local customers right now, and one of the easiest ways to burn through a few hundred dollars and have nothing to show for it. The difference usually comes down to a handful of decisions made at the beginning that most people get wrong because the ad platform makes the wrong choices feel easy.

Why local service businesses get different results than what the ads promise

Facebook's ad platform is designed to optimize for whatever you tell it to optimize for. If you tell it to get clicks, it finds people who click. If you tell it to get leads, it finds people who fill out forms. Those are not the same as paying customers. Local service businesses often discover this the hard way: they run a campaign, get a pile of leads, call every one of them, and half are not in their area or have no intention of buying anything this month.

The platform is not broken. The objective just needs to match what you are actually trying to accomplish, and the targeting needs to reflect who your real customer is.

Get the geography right before anything else

This is the single most common mistake I see. Someone runs ads targeted to a 25-mile radius when they only serve Talbot County and the surrounding towns. They get leads from people an hour away who will never book. On Facebook, you can target specific zip codes or draw a custom circle on a map. Start tighter than feels comfortable. You can always expand later. Spending on people you cannot serve is the fastest way to burn a budget.

What makes a local ad actually work

The ads that consistently generate real leads for local service businesses share a few things:

The ad is only half the job. What happens after someone clicks matters just as much. If the click goes to a slow website with no clear way to contact you, the lead is gone. According to WordStream, the average landing page converts at around 2 to 5 percent. A page built specifically for that ad can do significantly better. Keep the message consistent from ad to landing page.

How to set a budget without guessing

For a local service business in a market the size of the Eastern Shore, a starting test budget of around $10 to $15 per day for two to four weeks is enough to get real data without overcommitting. You are not trying to win at that stage. You are learning which ad, which audience, and which offer generates a call or a form submission at a cost you can live with. Once you know what works, you can scale.

The number that matters most is cost per actual booked job, not cost per click or even cost per lead. Leads that never convert are just overhead.

The follow-up problem that kills most local ad campaigns

This is the part nobody talks about. A lead comes in from a Facebook form at 9 PM on a Thursday. You see it Friday morning. By then, that person has either forgotten they filled it out or hired someone else. Research by Annuitas Group found that leads contacted within an hour are significantly more likely to convert than leads contacted the following day. For local service businesses, that window is often shorter because the need is urgent.

The fix is automating the immediate first response. A text that goes out within 60 seconds of the form submission that says "Hey, I saw your inquiry about [service]. I am Adam at Easton Automations. What is a good time to connect?" keeps the conversation alive while you are on a job.

Things that waste money quickly: running ads without a mobile-optimized landing page, targeting too broad a geography, using engagement campaigns instead of lead or conversion campaigns, running one ad for weeks without testing anything new, and not tracking which leads actually turned into jobs (not just which ones filled out a form).

When Google ads make more sense

Facebook ads interrupt people who are not actively looking for you. Google ads show up when someone is actively searching for what you offer. For services where the need is urgent and search-driven (emergency plumber, tree removal after a storm, same-day appliance repair), Google often converts better because the intent is right there. Facebook is better for building awareness and reaching people before they know they need you. The two complement each other if budget allows, but if you have to choose, match the channel to how your customers find you.

Reading your results honestly

After two to four weeks, look at three numbers: how many leads you got, how many of those leads you reached, and how many of those turned into paid work. If you are getting leads but not reaching them, the problem is your follow-up speed. Read about why speed to lead decides who wins the job and consider pairing your ads with missed-call text-back so no inbound lead goes cold overnight. If you are reaching them but not converting, the problem is the offer or the fit. If you are not getting leads at all, the problem is the ad or the audience. Each of those is a different fix. Book a free 15-minute look and I can help you figure out which one applies.

Want this for your business?

I help local Eastern Shore businesses set up and track Facebook and Instagram ad campaigns so the money goes toward real leads, not wasted clicks. Text or call for a free look at your current setup.

Book a free 15-minute look Or text / call (443) 298-2521