
Building a Strong Brand for Your Agritourism Venture
June 15, 2026How to Create Effective Facebook Ads for Your Farm Business
Organic reach on Facebook has dropped significantly in recent years, making it harder than ever for your farm business to get seen without paying to play. But Facebook ads—done right—can be one of the most cost-effective tools in your marketing toolbox. Whether you’re selling meat boxes, running a glamping site, or promoting farm experiences, this guide will walk you through how to make Facebook advertising work for your farm.
Boosted Posts vs Facebook Ads: What’s the Difference?
Let’s start by clearing up a common source of confusion: the difference between boosted posts and proper Facebook ads. If you’ve ever clicked the blue “Boost Post” button on your page, you’ve already run an ad—technically. But boosted posts are the most basic form of Facebook advertising, offering limited control over your campaign.
Boosts are fine for increasing the visibility of posts that are already performing well—such as a farm update, recipe blog or an Instagram reel—but they’re not ideal for driving sales or bookings.
If your goal is something more specific, like getting people to buy your wool products, book a glamping stay, or enquire about farm tours, you need to use Meta Ads Manager (formerly Facebook Ads Manager). This tool gives you more control over your audience, your objectives, your creative format, and how your ad is delivered.
In short:
- Boosts are quick, simple, and good for visibility.
- Ads via Meta Ads Manager are more advanced, flexible, and powerful—ideal for results-driven campaigns.
Setting the Right Goal: Matching Ads to Farm Business Outcomes
One of the most important decisions when setting up an ad campaign is choosing your objective. Facebook needs to know what action you want your audience to take so it can deliver the ad to people most likely to do that.
Here are the most relevant objectives for farm businesses:
- Traffic: Directs people to your website or product page.
- Engagement: Encourages likes, shares, and comments—great for community building.
- Leads: Collects email addresses or booking enquiries directly through the platform.
- Messages: Prompts people to message you via Messenger or WhatsApp.
- Conversions: Tracks specific actions like sales or bookings on your website.
Each objective serves a different purpose. For example, a meat box business might focus on conversions, while a craft course or glamping site may benefit more from leads or messages, especially if booking requires a conversation or quote.
If you’re unsure, think about this question: What do I want someone to do after seeing this ad?
The answer will guide your objective.
Targeting the Right Audience: Quality Over Quantity
One of the biggest benefits of Facebook advertising is its targeting ability. Rather than shouting into the void, you can speak directly to people who are most likely to buy from you.
Meta allows you to build audiences based on:
- Location: You can target people within a specific radius of your farm—useful for local-only services like farm tours or courses.
- Demographics: Age, gender, relationship status, education, and more.
- Interests: Such as smallholding, farm shops, BBQs, crafting, eco-living, etc.
For example, if you sell lamb boxes, you might target adults aged 30–60 with interests in local food, sustainability, or cooking. If you run foraging courses, your audience could include people interested in rewilding, vegan cooking, and the outdoors.
You can also create:
- Custom Audiences from your website visitors or email list.
- Lookalike Audiences to find new people who share characteristics with your current customers.
Start narrow and expand slowly. A well-defined niche audience will often perform far better than a generic, catch-all one.
Choosing the Right Ad Format for Your Farm Business
Your content matters as much as your targeting. Facebook offers several ad formats—choosing the right one depends on your message and the type of product or service you’re promoting.
Common formats include:
- Single Image: Great for highlighting a special offer or showcasing one key product.
- Carousel: Allows you to showcase multiple products or features—perfect for meat boxes, yarn collections, or course options.
- Video: Tells a story and brings your farm to life. Great for showing your process, from field to fork or fleece to finish.
- Reels-style (vertical video): Optimised for mobile and perfect for Instagram—ideal for visually striking products like food, flowers, and fibre crafts.
Keep your visuals high quality, and your messaging clear. Use benefit-led headlines, short punchy text, and a strong call to action.
Examples of ad copy:
- “Want to know where your meat comes from? Our lamb boxes are delivered direct from our farm to your door.”
- “Treat yourself to a countryside escape this autumn. Book your glamping stay today—spaces filling fast!”
- “Our handmade British wool is perfect for your next cosy project. Shop now and support sustainable farming.”
Don’t Forget Instagram and WhatsApp
When you run a Facebook ad, you can also choose to place it on Instagram—highly recommended for businesses with visually appealing products or a millennial/Gen Z customer base.
Instagram is particularly strong for:
- Food and drink products
- Artisan crafts (like wool, cheese, skincare)
- Experience-led offerings (glamping, farm stays, events)
Likewise, if you frequently receive bookings or enquiries via messaging, consider adding WhatsApp for Business to your ads. This is ideal for service-based businesses like farm events, training courses, or glamping where customers may want to ask questions before booking.
A “click to message” button streamlines this and encourages quick, informal communication.
Getting the Most from Your Budget
The good news is you don’t need to spend hundreds to see results. Even a small daily budget of £5–£10 can go a long way if you’ve done your groundwork.
Budget tips:
- Start small and test different versions (A/B testing).
- Run ads for 5–7 days at a time to gather enough data.
- Monitor key metrics like click-through rate (CTR), cost per result, and return on ad spend (ROAS).
Avoid the “set it and forget it” approach. Check your ads every couple of days to make sure they’re still performing, and pause anything that’s under-delivering.
We often recommend using a micro-advertising approach—small, targeted campaigns that rotate between different audience segments to avoid ad fatigue. This method has worked particularly well for clients like Castle Circus House, where rotating niche ads helped fill over 90% of office space in a competitive market.
Tailoring Your Ads to Different Farm Business Models
Different types of farm businesses will need slightly different ad strategies.
Ecommerce (Wool, Meat Boxes, Honey):
- Use conversion campaigns or catalogue ads.
- Retarget visitors who looked at your shop but didn’t buy.
- Highlight delivery information, product benefits, and customer reviews.
Service-Based (Courses, Glamping, Events):
- Use lead generation or messages as your objective.
- Offer a downloadable freebie to encourage sign-ups (e.g., “Glamping packing list”).
- Share testimonials and behind-the-scenes videos to build trust.
Bespoke or High-Ticket Items (Sheepskins, Private Dining, Farm Experiences):
- Run a two-phase campaign:
- Awareness (e.g., storytelling video or farm tour)
- Follow-up conversion ad targeting those who engaged with the first ad.
The more personalised and visual your content, the better your results.
Bringing It All Together: Marketing Ecosystem Matters
While Facebook ads are powerful, they work best as part of a bigger marketing ecosystem. Think of them as a way to amplify your message—not your only message.
To get the most from your ads:
- Pair them with a well-structured website that’s easy to navigate and mobile-friendly.
- Follow up ad engagement with email marketing—offer a freebie in exchange for their email, then nurture them.
- Recycle successful ad content into blog posts, reels, or organic posts.
- Use a scheduler like Cloud Campaign to stay consistent and plan ahead.
Final Thoughts: Facebook Ads Are Worth It—With the Right Strategy
Facebook and Instagram ads aren’t a magic bullet, but with the right setup, they can massively increase visibility, sales, and enquiries for your farm business. Whether you’re just dipping your toe in or ready to go all-in, it pays to think strategically, track results, and keep improving.
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