Imagine you are on your way to the office, and you might pass four or five billboards at most. Hundreds of brands would love to occupy those spaces, but only a handful get the opportunity. Maybe the brands that are getting a chance to stand out are not necessarily the ones spending the most money, but are those that capture attention.
The same rule now applies to digital advertising. Every time we open social media apps, we see thousands of brands compete for a limited number of ad impressions. Fashion brands, beauty brands, automotive companies, D2C startups, homegrown businesses, and large enterprises are all fighting for the same attention through influencer marketing and user-generated content.
But the Meta advertising strategy that worked two years ago is becoming increasingly ineffective. The reason is that the platform itself has changed.
The Earlier Strategy: Audience First, Creative Second
Till 2024, Meta advertising was built around audience targeting. The process was straightforward. A brand would create an advertisement, define a target audience based on interests, demographics, and behaviors, and then rely on Meta’s delivery system to show that ad to the selected users.
Marketing teams spent enormous amounts of time building audience segments, creating lookalike audiences, and refining targeting parameters. The creative mattered, but the real advantage often came from identifying the right audience, and performance would follow.
What Changed After Meta’s Andromeda Update
Meta has invested heavily in AI-powered advertising infrastructure, and in December 2024, it finally introduced Andromeda, the next-generation AI-powered ad retrieval system.
The system, which was earlier dependent on advertisers to tell Meta who should see an ad, now increasingly wants advertisers to focus on creating better ads while its AI determines who is most likely to respond to them.
Instead of relying as heavily on advertiser-defined audiences, Meta’s AI became significantly better at analysing user behaviour, engagement patterns, and conversion signals to determine who was most likely to respond to an ad. The platform began taking on a much larger role in audience discovery, allowing advertisers to focus more on the quality of the creative itself.
An analysis of over 3,000 eCommerce advertisers representing $834 million in Meta ad spend found that many advertisers experienced disruption during Andromeda’s rollout as older optimisation approaches became less effective.
The message is becoming clear: “Give Meta a strong creative and a clear objective, and the platform will do much of the audience discovery itself.”
Why Creative Has Become the New Targeting
Creative targeting means building advertisements that naturally resonate with the people you want to reach. Instead of defining the audience first, the creative itself becomes the mechanism that attracts the right users.
Meta’s systems evaluate early engagement signals, watch time, clicks, and conversion behaviors to identify users who are most likely to respond positively and expand delivery accordingly. This means that creative quality has become the primary factor that is going to affect the performance directly.
The brands that are recognizing this shift and adapting them in the marke strategies are attracting more clicks and audiences compared to those that continue relying on old targeting frameworks.
The Hidden Cost of Low Creative Hit Rates
As Meta’s advertising ecosystem becomes increasingly creative-led, brands are producing more content than ever before through influencers, freelancers, UGC creators, and creator partnerships. The assumption is simple: more content increases the chances of finding a winning ad.
Many brands evaluate creators based on audience size and engagement rather than their ability to communicate a product’s value. As a result, they face a creative hit-rate problem.
A company may produce ten creatives, but only two generate meaningful performance. The remaining eight fail to scale.
Consider the economics. If sourcing and producing a creator-led ad costs approximately ₹15,000, creating ten ads requires an investment of ₹1.5 lakh before significant media budgets are even deployed. Add advertising spend on top of that, and the cost of identifying winning creatives rises substantially.
The challenge here to create more winning content. This is why improving creative hit rates is becoming one of the most important priorities for modern brands. If a company can increase its hit rate from two winning creatives out of ten to five winning creatives out of ten, the economics of advertising change dramatically.
Higher hit rates do more than reduce creative waste. They increase confidence in media buying. When brands know they can consistently produce winning creatives, scaling budgets becomes significantly easier because growth is no longer dependent on constantly searching for the next successful ad.
Reach Does Not Always Translate Into Sales
One of the biggest misconceptions in modern advertising is assuming that someone who understands reach automatically understands conversion. Creators are often exceptionally skilled at capturing attention. They understand trends, hooks, platform behaviour, editing styles, and audience engagement. They know what makes people stop scrolling and what increases views.
A marketer approaches content from a different perspective. They think about positioning, value propositions, customer psychology, purchase triggers, objections, and calls-to-action. Their goal is not simply to make someone watch a video but to persuade them to take action.
Consider a beauty brand selling an anti-smudge lipstick. A marketer understands how to highlight the product’s strongest benefit, communicate the USP, address objections, and place the call-to-action strategically. Their focus is conversion.
A creator may know how to make the content entertaining and engaging, but that does not automatically translate into persuasive sales communication.
This difference between an expert and an influencer is becoming increasingly important because many brands are effectively outsourcing their sales pitch to people whose expertise lies in content creation rather than marketing. The result is often content that generates reach, engagement, and impressions without generating proportional business outcomes.
This is why performance-focused brands such as Snitch invest heavily in structured creative systems designed to improve creative hit rates. The goal is not simply to produce more content every month, but to consistently create a higher percentage of creatives that are capable of scaling.
The Brand Consistency Problem Needs Your Attention
When hundreds of creators produce content independently, every creator interprets the brand differently. The language, visual style, production quality, and even the messaging change. Resulting to this, the brand begins to lose its identity with time.
But there are some brands that have made remarkable ads that, even when an ad just starts, consumers immediately recognize advertisements because they have a distinct look, tone, and personality.
Today, many performance ads look remarkably similar because they follow the same creator-led formats. And due to this, the audience remembers the influencer or creator but forgets the brand name. That may generate short-term content volume, but it can weaken long-term brand recognition.
The Future Belongs to Brands That Can Scale Winning Creatives
The biggest lesson from the very new Andromeda Update is that advertising is no longer primarily a targeting game. It is increasingly a creative game.
As automation has already been implemented in targeting, bidding, placements, and optimisation, the areas where brands can create meaningful differentiation are becoming increasingly limited.
Creative is one of the few remaining levers that can influence how audiences engage, how algorithms learn, and how campaigns scale. The brands that improve their creative hit rates, build repeatable production systems, maintain brand consistency, and create content designed not only to attract attention but also to drive action are going to be successful.
Because in a world where Meta’s AI can find the audience, the real competitive advantage is no longer who you target. It is what you create.
(Views are personal)
















