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Keep Tabs On Your Competition With Political Ad Libraries

While initially designed for public oversight, these libraries have become valuable tools for competitive research.

Keep Tabs On Your Competition With Political Ad Libraries
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Facebook and Google introduced political ad libraries following the 2016 elections. These platforms created the libraries to address concerns about the content and impact of online political advertising. The goal was to increase transparency in digital political campaigns.

While initially designed for public oversight, these libraries have become valuable tools for competitive research. Campaign teams, analysts, and researchers now use them to study advertising strategies, test messaging, and monitor spending across the political landscape. This unexpected development has made ad libraries an important resource for understanding modern political campaigns in the digital space.

This article explores how to access, use, and interpret the political ad libraries for these platforms.

Accessing Political Ad Libraries

Facebook and Google have made their political ad libraries publicly available online. To access Facebooks Ad Library, visit www.facebook.com/ads/library. Note that you must be logged into a Facebook account to use this tool. Once there, you can search for ads related to social issues, elections, or politics across Facebook and Instagram.

Googles Political Advertising Transparency Report is accessible at transparencyreport.google.com/political-ads. No login is required for Googles tool. Both platforms allow users to search by keywords, advertisers, or regions.

Whats Included

These libraries provide detailed information about ad spending, impressions, and targeting, offering valuable insights into digital political advertising strategies. For each ad, users can typically view:

  1. Ad content: The actual text, images, or videos used in the ad.
  2. Run dates: When the ad was active on the platform.
  3. Spending data: Ranges of how much was spent on the ad.
  4. Impression data: Estimates of how many times the ad was viewed.
  5. Demographic information: Age ranges and genders of people who saw the ad.
  6. Geographic data: Locations where the ad was shown.
  7. Disclaimer information: Details about who paid for the ad.

This wealth of information allows for in-depth analysis of political advertising trends and strategies across different campaigns and issues.

How To Use Political Ad Library Information

Campaigners can derive valuable insights from this data, including,

Conclusion

Keeping tabs on your competition is an essential part of politics. In digital campaigning, your competition also includes other campaigns, even within your own party. Look to bigger campaigns for hints about whats working for them in terms of advertising.

Chances are if theyre spending heavily on a message or tactic, its working for them and its worth trying out on your campaign.

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