- Stop worrying about local trends. The key to copy that works anywhere is to focus on your customer's universal, career-threatening 'nightmare', not their postcode.
- Your ad copy is useless without an irresistible offer. Ditch the high-friction "Request a Demo" and give away genuine value upfront with a free trial, tool, or audit.
- The most common reason campaigns fail is a bad offer. Before you spend a penny on ads, define a specific audience, identify their urgent pain, and build a productised solution that solves it.
- Calculating your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) is non-negotiable. It tells you exactly how much you can afford to spend on ads and frees you from chasing cheap, low-quality leads. This article includes a fully interactive LTV calculator to find your number.
- Don't run 'awareness' campaigns. You're paying Meta to find the worst possible audience. Always optimise for conversions (sales, leads, trials) to force the algorithm to find people who will actually buy.
Thank you for your enquiry. Founders and marketers often get paralysed by the idea of writing for a 'global' audience. They think they need to be experts in dozens of cultures, fluent in local slang, and up-to-date on every regional trend. It's a recipe for bland, generic copy that speaks to no one because it's trying to speak to everyone. This is completely the wrong way to think about it.
The truth is, effective ad copy has almost nothing to do with geography. It has everything to do with psychology. A Head of Sales in London is kept up at night by the exact same fears as a Head of Sales in New York or Singapore: missing quota, losing top reps, and getting fired. The pain is universal. Your job isn't to be a cultural commentator; it's to be an expert in that pain. Once you understand that, writing copy that resonates across borders becomes much, much simpler.
Forget local nuances. We're going to talk about the universal language of problems, nightmares, and solutions. This is how you write ads that work whether you're targeting someone in Shoreditch or San Francisco.
So, who are you actually selling to?
Before you write a single word of ad copy, you have to burn your existing customer persona. That document your last marketing hire made? The one that says "Our customer is Sarah, 35-45, Head of Marketing at a B2B SaaS company with 50-200 employees"? It's useless. It leads to ads that say things like "Supercharge your marketing efforts!" which is corporate fluff that gets ignored.
Your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) is not a demographic. It's a nightmare. It's a specific, urgent, expensive, and potentially career-threatening problem. Your job is to understand that nightmare better than they do. Your Head of Engineering client isn't just a job title; she's a leader terrified of her best developers quitting out of frustration with a broken workflow. For a legal tech SaaS, the nightmare isn't 'needing document management'; it's 'a partner missing a critical filing deadline and exposing the firm to a malpractice suit.' Your ICP isn't a person; it's a problem state.
Once you've isolated that specific nightmare, the targeting writes itself. It's no longer about geography. It's about behaviour. Where do people experiencing this nightmare go for information? What niche podcasts do they listen to on their commute, like 'Acquired'? What industry newsletters do they actually open, like 'Stratechery'? What SaaS tools do they already pay for, like HubSpot or Salesforce? Are they members of the 'SaaS Growth Hacks' Facebook group? Do they follow people like Jason Lemkin on Twitter? This intelligence is the blueprint for your entire targeting strategy. Spending a week on this deep research is far more valuable than spending a month trying to A/B test fifty different headlines. It's the foundation for your entire go-to-market strategy. Do this work first, or you have no business spending a single pound on ads.
What's a customer actually worth to you?
Most businesses obsess over getting the lowest possible Cost Per Lead (CPL). It's a fool's errand. It leads you to optimise for cheap clicks from low-quality audiences, which inevitably results in a sales team wasting time on leads that never close. The real question isn't "How low can my CPL go?" but "How high a CPL can I afford to acquire a truly great customer?" The answer lies in its counterpart: Lifetime Value (LTV).
Calculating your LTV is the single most empowering piece of math you can do for your business. It transforms your advertising from a cost centre into a predictable growth engine. Suddenly, a £250 lead from a CTO on LinkedIn doesn't seem expensive; it looks like a bargain. This is the math that unlocks aggressive, intelligent growth. I've run campaigns for B2B SaaS clients where we happily pay over $20 per lead because we know the LTV supports it, like one LinkedIn Ads campaign we ran for a software company that brought in B2B decision makers at a $22 CPL.
Stop guessing. Use the calculator below to figure out what a customer is actually worth to you in gross margin. This number will dictate your entire paid acquisition strategy.
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) Calculator
This calculator helps you estimate the total gross margin a typical customer will generate over their entire relationship with your business. Use these insights to determine a sustainable Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).
How do you write a message they can't ignore?
Now that you know your customer's nightmare and how much you can afford to pay to solve it, you can finally write the ad. Good copy isn't about being clever; it's about being clear. You use simple, direct language that reflects the pain your customer is feeling right now. Here are three universal frameworks that work across any industry or location.
1. Problem-Agitate-Solve (PAS)
This is perfect for high-touch services. You state the problem, pour salt on the wound by describing the negative consequences, and then present your service as the logical solution.
You don't sell: "Fractional CFO Services."
You sell: A good night's sleep.
The Ad: "Are your cash flow projections just a shot in the dark? (Problem) Are you one bad month away from a payroll crisis while your competitors are confidently raising their next round? (Agitate) Get expert financial strategy for a fraction of a full-time hire. We build dashboards that turn uncertainty into predictable growth. (Solve)"
2. Before-After-Bridge (BAB)
Ideal for B2B SaaS. You paint a picture of their current, painful reality (Before), show them the desired future state (After), and position your product as the vehicle to get them there (Bridge).
You don't sell: "A FinOps Platform."
You sell: The feeling of relief.
The Ad: "Your AWS bill just arrived. It’s 30% higher than last month, and your engineers have no idea why. Another fire to put out. (Before) Imagine opening your cloud bill and smiling. You see where every dollar is going and waste is automatically eliminated. (After) Our platform is the bridge that gets you there. Start a free trial and find your first £1,000 in savings today. (Bridge)"
3. Consequence-Based Features
Essential for high-ticket physical products or anything with technical specs. Don't just list a feature; state its direct consequence for the customer. Answer the "So what?" question.
You don't just sell: "A mass spectrometer with a 0.001% margin of error."
You sell: Unshakeable scientific credibility.
The Ad: "Our new mass spectrometer has a 0.001% margin of error. So what? So your lab can publish results with unshakeable confidence, securing more funding and attracting top talent that other labs can only dream of."
Notice that none of these examples rely on location. They rely on a deep understanding of the customer's professional anxieties and aspirations. That's the stuff that actually drives clicks and conversions.
Why your offer is probably the real problem
Let's be brutally honest. You could have the best ad copy in the world, but if it leads to a weak offer, your campaign will fail. And the most common failure point in all of B2B advertising is the offer. The "Request a Demo" button is perhaps the most arrogant Call to Action ever conceived. It presumes your prospect, usually a busy C-level decision maker, has nothing better to do than book a 30-minute slot to be sold to. It's high-friction, low-value, and instantly positions you as a commoditised vendor.
Your offer’s only job is to deliver a moment of undeniable value—an "aha!" moment that makes the prospect sell themselves on your solution. You must solve a small, real problem for free to earn the right to solve the whole thing.
For SaaS founders, this is your unfair advantage. The gold standard is a free trial (no card details required) or a freemium plan. Let them use the actual product. Let them feel the transformation. When the product proves its value, the sale becomes a formality. We've worked on numerous SaaS campaigns, like one Meta Ads campaign where we generated 1,535 trials for a B2B SaaS using this exact principle. It shifts the dynamic from you chasing them to them understanding the value and wanting more. This is the most effective way for UK SaaS companies to get early adopters and build momentum.
If you're not a SaaS company, you are not exempt. You must bottle your expertise into a tool, content, or asset that provides instant value. For a marketing agency, this could be a free, automated SEO audit that shows them their top 3 keyword opportunities. For a data analytics platform, a free 'Data Health Check'. For us, as a B2B advertising consultancy, it's a free 20-minute strategy session where we audit failing ad campaigns. We give away real value, and that builds the trust needed for a larger engagement.
How do you get the algorithm to find your buyers?
Here is an uncomfortable truth about advertising on platforms like Meta. When you set your campaign objective to "Reach" or "Brand Awareness," you are giving the algorithm a very specific, and very stupid, command: "Find me the largest number of people for the lowest possible price."
The algorithm, being a ruthlessly efficient machine, does exactly what you asked. It seeks out the users inside your targeting who are least likely to click, least likely to engage, and absolutely, positively least likely to ever buy anything. Why? Because those users are not in demand. Their attention is cheap. You are actively paying the world's most powerful advertising machine to find you the worst possible audience for your product. It's madness.
The best form of brand awareness is a customer buying your product and having a great experience. That’s it. Awareness is a byproduct of sales, not a prerequisite. Always, always, always optimise your campaigns for a conversion event that is as close to the money as possible. That means 'Sales', 'Leads', or 'Schedule'. This forces the algorithm to sift through your audience and find the tiny subset of people who exhibit behaviours of buyers. It costs more per impression, but you're paying for quality, not quantity.
To pre-qualify your audience even further, you need to align your targeting with intent. On Google Ads, this means focusing on keywords that show someone is looking to buy, not just learn. Instead of "what is lead generation", you target "software for lead generation". We have a whole guide on how to find profitable keywords for the UK market, but the principle is universal. On Meta, you target interests related to the problems you solve or the tools your audience already uses (e.g. competitors, complementary software). This ensures your expertly crafted copy is shown to people who are already in the right mindset to appreciate it.
Conversion-Focused Audience Funnel
Top of Funnel (ToFu) - Prospecting
Goal: Find new potential customers who don't know you yet.
(e.g., Purchasers, Trial Signups)
(e.g., Competitor followers, Related software users)
Middle of Funnel (MoFu) - Consideration
Goal: Re-engage people who have shown interest but haven't converted.
(Excluding converters)
(People who watched your ads)
(Page likes, post comments)
Bottom of Funnel (BoFu) - Conversion
Goal: Get high-intent users over the finish line.
(Last 7-14 Days)
(Last 14 Days)
How should you structure global campaigns?
Okay, so while the message itself should be universal, the way you structure your campaigns should account for economic realities. Running one massive 'Worldwide' campaign is lazy and inefficient. You'll end up with your budget being spent in countries with very low purchasing power, generating cheap but utterly worthless clicks.
The professional approach is to segment countries into tiers based on factors like GDP per capita and CPC costs. This allows you to set different bids and budgets for different regions, ensuring you're investing your money where the highest potential return is.
Here’s a typical structure we use:
- Tier 1 (High-Income): United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, Switzerland, etc. These have the highest CPCs but also the highest purchasing power. This is where you should focus the majority of your budget initially.
- Tier 2 (Developed): Spain, Italy, Japan, South Korea, UAE, etc. Solid markets, slightly lower CPCs. Good for expansion once you've found a winning formula in Tier 1.
- Tier 3 (Developing): Brazil, Mexico, India, Southeast Asia, etc. Much lower CPCs, but also lower conversion rates for high-ticket items. Requires careful monitoring and often different offers or pricing.
We'd always run separate campaigns for these tiers. It gives you control. You can allocate budget more effectively and tailor landing pages or currency if needed. It stops the algorithm from just chasing cheap clicks in Tier 3. For anyone running global search ads, our tiered blueprint for Google Ads ROI goes into this strategy in much more detail.
As you can see from the chart below, the expected cost per acquisition (CPA) varies dramatically between these tiers. Understanding this from the start prevents you from panicing when you see a £15 CPA in the UK while getting £1.50 CPAs in another region. They are not comparable; the quality and value of the lead are completely different.
Estimated CPA Ranges by Country Tier
For standard lead/signup objectives
Potential CPA Difference
What's the plan then?
Getting paid advertising to work, especially on a global scale, isn't about finding a single magic headline. It's about building a coherent system where your customer research, your offer, your copy, and your campaign structure all work together. It takes discipline and a willingness to do the hard strategic work before you even open Ads Manager.
I've detailed my main recommendations for you below:
| Area of Focus | Actionable Advice | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. ICP Definition | Stop using demographics. Define your customer by their most urgent, expensive 'nightmare'. Conduct deep research into their behaviours, not their location. | This provides the universal psychological hook for your ad copy, making it resonate regardless of geography. It's the foundation of everything. |
| 2. Offer Creation | Delete "Request a Demo". Replace it with a high-value, low-friction offer like a free trial, an automated tool, or a free audit. Solve a small problem for free. | The best copy in the world can't save a bad offer. A great offer builds trust and lets the prospect sell themselves, drastically increasing conversion rates. |
| 3. Ad Copywriting | Use proven, pain-based frameworks like Problem-Agitate-Solve (PAS) or Before-After-Bridge (BAB). Focus on clarity over cleverness. | These frameworks tap into universal human emotions and decision-making triggers, making them effective across cultures and borders. |
| 4. Campaign Objective | Never use 'Reach' or 'Brand Awareness' objectives. Always optimise for a high-intent conversion event (e.g., Lead, Sale, Trial Signup). | This forces the ad platform's algorithm to find users who are likely to buy, not just the cheapest users to show an ad to. It's the difference between traffic and customers. |
| 5. Campaign Structure | Do not run a single 'Worldwide' campaign. Segment countries into Tiers based on economic factors and run separate campaigns for each. | This gives you proper control over your budget, allowing you to invest where the highest quality customers are, rather than letting the algorithm chase cheap, worthless clicks. |
As you can see, this is a lot more involved than just writing some text. It requires a strategic mindset and a deep understanding of how all these pieces fit together. Many founders try to do this themselves and end up burning through thousands of pounds with little to show for it because one part of the system is broken.
Getting expert help can shortcut this process significantly. An experienced paid ads consultant or agency has been through this process hundreds of times. We can quickly diagnose the weak points in your strategy, whether it's the ICP, the offer, or the campaign setup. We have the data from hundreds of campaigns to know what benchmarks to aim for and what levers to pull when things aren't working. It's about applying a proven process, not just guessing.
If you're tired of struggling with ads that don't perform and want a clear, strategic path forward, consider getting some expert advice. We offer a free, no-obligation 20-minute strategy session where we can take a look at your current campaigns and give you some actionable insights. It might be the most valuable 20 minutes you spend on your markering all year.
Lukas Holschuh
Founder, Growth & Advertising Consultant
Great campaigns fail without expertise. Lukas and his team provide the missing strategy, optimizing your entire advertising funnel—from ad creatives and copy to landing page design.
Backed by a proven track record across SaaS, eLearning, and eCommerce, they don't just run ads; they engineer systems that convert. A data-driven partnership focused on tangible revenue growth.