Anna for Creative Directors
Creative Performance: The Work Landed. Here Are the Numbers.
Export your ad performance data. Anna turns it into the proof your creative team needs — format breakdowns, variant winners, and cost efficiency mapped.
Creative Performance Analysis: A/B Test Results and Format Efficiency
A creative performance report that analyses A/B test results, format efficiency, and demographic engagement across 240 ad assets. Anna identifies which creative variants win by audience segment, maps production cost to engagement, and recommends where to concentrate creative budget next quarter. Built for creative teams who need data to back their instincts — and kill their mid-tier work.
Across 240 creative assets from Q1, the portfolio averaged a 3.7% engagement rate — up 0.8 points from Q4. Video leads at 5.2%, but UGC and carousel sit within 0.6 points at a fraction of the cost.
The A/B headline: the bold variant — high-contrast visuals, direct copy, no hedging — outperformed safe by 41% on CTR. Bold dominates under-35 audiences. It underperforms with 45+ by 18%. That’s not a reason to soften. It’s a reason to target.
Two hero assets sit in the top-right quadrant: high engagement, high production cost, earned. The rest clusters around statics and UGC delivering 60–70% of video engagement for 20% of the cost. Static keeps the lights on. Video wins the room.
Video Dominates at 5.2% — But Static Keeps the Lights On
Strong SignalVideo delivered 5.2% engagement on 22% of assets and 58% of production spend. Static: 51% of assets, 11% of spend, 2.3% engagement — compounding at always-on frequency.
Hero campaigns deserve video budgets. Product launches, seasonal moments, tentpoles — invest there. For the 38 weeks that aren’t tentpoles, carousels and static outperform on cost-per-engagement by 3.4x. UGC: 4.6% engagement at near-zero production cost.
Don’t produce less video. Stop producing safe video. Mid-tier assets — adequate lighting, competent edit, forgettable concept — are the budget leak. They cost as much as hero work and return static-tier numbers.
Bold vs. Safe: A 41% Gap That Isn’t Uniform Across Ages
Strong SignalThe 41% headline is real — but it’s an average of two different stories. Bold delivers +71% for 18–24s and +31% for 25–34s. Those are growth numbers. At 35–44 the lift collapses to 8%. At 45+, safe wins outright.
The A/B test isn’t telling you to go bold everywhere. It’s telling you to stop being safe everywhere. Segment the creative to the cohort. Bold for growth audiences. Informational for retention audiences.
Running bold untargeted across all demographics underperforms with 45+ by 18%. Running safe across all demographics leaves 71% on the table for your youngest cohort. Both are waste. The fix isn’t a single variant — it’s a segmented creative strategy.
Two Hero Campaigns Justify Their Budget. The Rest Is Instructive.
Strong SignalTwo hero assets sit in the top-right quadrant. They earned their budgets. The rest clusters — and that cluster is the production budget leak. Mid-tier video assets ($800–$1,400) returning static-tier engagement. They cost as much as hero work and deliver forgettable numbers.
Your production budget has a middle-management problem. Assets in the $800–$1,400 range produce engagement between 3.6% and 4.8%. Static assets at $200 produce 2.1–2.5%. The gap isn’t worth the spend.
Concentrate the budget. Hero video for tentpoles. UGC and static for everything else. The middle is where money goes to die.
Engagement Peaked in Weeks 4 and 9 — Both Times We Ran Video
Strong SignalEngagement doesn’t drift. It spikes when video runs and decays when it stops. The baseline sits at 3.3%. Video pushes it to 4.8–5.1%. That’s a +50% lift. But the decay is fast: within two weeks of a video campaign ending, engagement returns to baseline.
Always-on video isn’t the answer. It’s too expensive for the return. Pulsed video at strategic moments is. Time the peaks to product moments, not the content calendar.
W4 and W9 weren’t random. Both aligned to product launches. The engagement spike is a response to relevance, not format alone. Video amplifies the moment. It doesn’t create it. Put video where the product story matters. Let static and UGC hold the weeks in between.
The A/B split runs along generational lines. 18–24s responded to boldness by 71% — directness, contrast, opinions. 25–34s: 31% lift for bold. The inflection hits at 35–44: 8% lift, the gap narrows.
45+ preferred the safe variant. Safe copy was informational, less assumptive — that’s what this cohort responds to. Media plans weighted toward 45+: safe is the right call. Targeting growth with younger cohorts: bold, unambiguous.
Format preferences segment too. Under-35 over-index on video and UGC. 35–44 on carousel. 45+ on static. Build format mix to match the audience you’re activating, not the one you wish you had.
Bold Wins Under 35. Safe Wins Over 45.
| Age Group | Bold CTR | Safe CTR | Lift | Top Format | Dominant Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–24 | 8.2% | 4.8% | +71% | Video | Boldness compounds with youth — go harder |
| 25–34 | 7.1% | 5.4% | +31% | Video + UGC | Strong lift; UGC authenticity resonates here |
| 35–44 | 5.6% | 5.2% | +8% | Carousel | Researching before deciding; detail matters |
| 45–54 | 4.3% | 4.6% | -7% | Static | Safe wins by a whisker; informational copy preferred |
| 55+ | 3.1% | 3.8% | -18% | Static | Clear information beats attitude; trust signals critical |
Three moves for Q2:
1. Concentrate video spend on hero moments. Retire the mid-tier video programme. Reallocate to two or three high-production-value hero pieces per quarter. Hero video earns it. Mid-tier doesn’t.
2. Scale bold — segment your targeting. Run bold-first creative for 18–34 audiences. For 45+ segments, test a bold-visual/informational-copy hybrid: high contrast with the specificity of safe. Worth one clean test.
3. Build a UGC pipeline. 4.6% engagement at near-zero production cost. The constraint isn’t creative — it’s supply. A structured creator programme with 8–10 contributors lets UGC carry 20–25% of always-on volume. That frees budget for hero work.
If Q2 repeats Q1, mid-tier video consumes ~$28K of production budget for static-tier returns. Same spend. Same plateau. Portfolio engagement flatlines at 3.7%.
If the creative team acts, the shift is concrete. Retire mid-tier video. Reallocate to hero + UGC + static. Projected outcome: production spend drops ~30% while portfolio engagement pushes toward 4.2%. Hero video carries the peaks. UGC and static carry the always-on baseline at a fraction of the cost.
Not segmenting bold/safe by age leaves performance on the table. Running bold untargeted across all demographics underperforms with 45+ by 18%. Q1 proved it. Segment the variant to the cohort, or accept the gap.
Export your campaign metrics. Let the numbers make your case.
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