What this is: Admaxxer lets you build new Meta and Google Ads without leaving the product. Create a Meta campaign, an ad set under it, and an ad inside that ad set — the full funnel — or a complete Google Search campaign with an ad group, keywords, and a responsive search ad. Everything is created paused by default, so nothing spends until you set it live, and nothing reaches the ad platform until you review a plain-English summary and confirm. This lives in the Ads Manager page — click Create and pick the account to build in.
Build a campaign, an ad set under it, and an ad inside that ad set. Reuse an existing creative from the account, or write a new link ad with your own image, headline, primary text, and call-to-action.
Build a complete Search campaign: a daily budget, an ad group with your keywords, and a responsive search ad — all created together, in a single step. New Search campaigns ship complete so they can actually serve.
Nothing spends until you say so — and nothing is created until you confirm.
The AI agent does not create campaigns. Creation is always a human action in the dashboard, with an explicit confirmation. The agent can analyze your performance, pause or resume campaigns, and adjust daily budgets — but it never builds a new campaign, ad set, or ad.
ads_management permission. See the Meta token guide. If your connection is read-only, the wizard shows a short notice and a link to reconnect — nothing is lost.Campaign → ad set → ad — the full funnel, created paused.
From Ads Manager, click Create and pick your Meta account. Name the campaign and choose an objective — what you want the ads to achieve: Sales (purchases and revenue, optimizes toward a pixel event), Traffic (clicks to your site), Leads (form fills and sign-ups), or Engagement / Awareness (reach and interest). Then pick where the budget lives: Campaign budget (also called CBO) puts one daily budget on the campaign and lets Meta spread it across your ad sets; Ad-set budget gives each ad set its own daily budget instead. If any special ad category applies (housing, employment, credit, financial products, or politics), select it — Meta requires this for regulated topics.
An ad set is the targeting bucket. Name it, then define your audience: pick one or more countries, an age range (18–65), and a gender. If your campaign objective is Sales or Leads, you'll also choose the pixel the ad set optimizes for, so Meta learns from the right conversions. If the budget sits on the ad set (not the campaign), enter its daily budget here.
Name the ad, then choose the creative one of two ways. Reuse a creative that already exists in the account and it runs as-is. Or write a new link ad: choose the Facebook Page it runs as, write the primary text (the main copy), an optional headline and description, the link people land on, a call-to-action button (Shop Now, Learn More, Sign Up…), and paste an image URL — we fetch your image and attach it to the ad for you. Review the summary, confirm, and your campaign, ad set, and ad are built — paused, ready for you to set live.
Campaign → ad group → keywords → responsive search ad — created together, paused.
From Ads Manager, click Create and pick your Google account. Name the campaign, set a daily budget, and choose a bidding strategy: Maximize conversions (Google aims for the most conversions your budget can buy), Maximize clicks (the most site visits for your budget), or Manual CPC (you set the most you'll pay per click). Pick the countries and languages to target. The search-partner network is off by default (your ads show on Google search itself) — a sensible starting point.
Name the ad group and add the keywords you want to show up for. Each keyword has a match type that controls how closely a search has to match: Broad reaches the widest set of related searches (e.g. running shoes can match “buy trainers online”); Phrase matches searches that include your phrase in order ("running shoes" matches “best running shoes for men”); Exact only matches very close terms ([running shoes]) — the tightest, most precise option. On manual CPC you can also set a default max cost-per-click for the ad group.
A responsive search ad is a set of headlines and descriptions that Google mixes and matches to find what works best. Provide 3 to 15 headlines (each up to 30 characters), 2 to 4 descriptions (each up to 90 characters), the final URL people land on, plus two optional display paths (up to 15 characters each) that dress up the visible link. The wizard counts your characters as you type, so you see any limit before Google would. Review, confirm, and the whole campaign is built — paused, ready to set live.
The three tiers you build, top to bottom — the same on both platforms, with slightly different names.
Creation is built to be safe and predictable — so a few things stay off the table on purpose.
Q: Will my new campaign start spending right away?
No — everything is created paused by default, so it spends nothing until you set it live. When you're ready, resume it from the list (one click, then confirm). If you'd rather it start delivering immediately, there's an explicit switch, and the confirmation screen spells out the most it could spend per day before you agree.
Q: Can the AI agent create a campaign for me?
No. Creation is always a human action in the dashboard, with an explicit confirmation. The AI agent can analyze performance, pause or resume campaigns, and adjust daily budgets, but it never builds a new campaign, ad set, or ad. That's a deliberate design choice — building a new campaign is a decision you make and confirm yourself.
Q: My Meta connection says it's read-only. How do I create on Meta?
A one-click Facebook login connection is analytics and reporting only. To create (or pause, resume, and edit budgets) on Meta, connect with a pasted access token that includes the ads_management permission. The wizard shows a short notice with a link to reconnect when your connection is read-only — follow it, re-paste a token with ads_management, and creation unlocks. Your analytics keep working either way. See the Meta token guide.
Q: What happens if the ad platform rejects something?
You'll see a clear message describing what needs fixing — for example a keyword or an ad that doesn't meet the platform's rules — and nothing is created. For Google, we check your setup with Google before you confirm, so validation problems appear at the review screen. For Meta, if a later step ever fails, everything already created stays paused exactly as it was and you continue from where it stopped — nothing is duplicated.
Q: Is there a limit on the daily budget I can set?
Yes — a new daily budget can't exceed $100,000 per day. This ceiling is deliberately lower than the limit for editing an existing budget, because a slipped decimal point on a brand-new campaign is the costly mistake. If a number is out of range you'll see a message before anything is created.
Q: Could a double-click create two campaigns?
No. Your confirmation is single-use, so submitting twice can't build the same thing twice. If your confirmation ever times out, the review screen simply refreshes and asks you to confirm again — it never silently creates a duplicate.
Q: Where do my new campaigns show up after I create them?
Right in the Ads Manager list, in the account you created them in — paused. Drill from a campaign into its ad sets (ad groups on Google) and its ads to see everything you built, then pause or resume at any level. To set a campaign live, resume it and confirm.
Q: Why does Admaxxer pace its requests to the ad platforms?
To keep your ad account safe. We deliberately space out the requests we send to Meta and Google so a burst of activity can never put your account at risk. Ad-account safety comes before speed, every time — you might occasionally see a brief wait, which is this protection working as intended.
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