● Media Buying Course · Day 1 of 20 · Week 1: Foundations

What media buying actually is

Strip away the jargon. Today is the mental model the entire course hangs on - if this clicks, everything after it is detail.

The one-sentence definition

Media buying is paying a platform to put a message in front of specific people, and then systematically adjusting what you pay, who you target, and what you show - so that each desired action (a sale, a lead, an install) costs as little as possible.

That's it. Everything else - the auction, the learning phase, lookalikes, Advantage+, attribution - exists to serve that one goal: lower the cost of a desired action, then get more of those actions without the cost creeping back up.

You already own the strategy half of this. What you've never done is operate the machine that turns budget into customers. So we'll treat Meta's ad system as exactly that: a machine with inputs you control and outputs you're trying to optimize.

1The three things you actually control

No matter how complex the platform looks, a media buyer only ever pulls on three levers. Hold onto these three - the next 19 lessons are just depth on each:

Lever 1 · Targeting
WHO sees the ad

Audiences, lookalikes, broad targeting, exclusions. Increasingly Meta's AI decides this for you - and that shift is one of the biggest stories in the field.

Lever 2 · Creative
WHAT they see

The image, video, headline, copy. In 2024-2026 this became the single most important lever - we'll spend a full week on why.

Lever 3 · Bidding & Budget
HOW MUCH you pay & how it's spent

Daily budget, bid strategy, cost caps. How aggressively you tell the system to compete for each person.

Analogy · the auction house

Picture a giant auction running millions of times per second. Every time a person opens Instagram or Facebook, a micro-auction fires for the ad slot in front of them specifically. Advertisers compete for that slot. As a media buyer you're not bidding by hand - you're setting the rules a robot bidder follows on your behalf, then judging its results and changing the rules. Tomorrow's lesson opens up that auction completely.

2What "efficiency" and "scale" really mean

You asked specifically about what drives scale and efficiency of client acquisition. These are the two words that matter most in this job, and they pull against each other. Get the definitions exact now:

EFFICIENCY  How cheaply you acquire a result. Measured as CPA (cost per acquisition) or ROAS (return on ad spend). Lower CPA = more efficient. Higher ROAS = more efficient.

SCALE  How much volume you can buy. Spending €1,000/day efficiently is easy. Spending €50,000/day at almost the same efficiency is the real skill - and what clients pay for.

The central tension of the whole job

Almost anyone can find a tiny pocket of cheap conversions. The hard part - the part that separates a real media buyer from a button-pusher - is holding efficiency steady while pushing volume up. As you spend more, you exhaust the cheapest audiences and the system has to reach more expensive people, so CPA naturally drifts up. Your job is to fight that drift. Week 4 is entirely about this.

3Where this happens: meet Ads Manager

Every lesson ends with a grounded look at the actual tool you'll live in: Meta Ads Manager (business.facebook.com/adsmanager). It's the cockpit. Here's the shape of it so the rest of the course has a home:

▤ In Ads Manager · the three-tab cockpit

Ads Manager is organized into three nested levels - left to right, big to small. You'll see them as three tabs across the top of the table:

📊 Campaigns← you set the GOAL here
📁 Ad sets← you set WHO + budget + bid
🖼 Ads← you set the CREATIVE

Notice how the three levers from section 1 map almost perfectly onto these three levels. That's not a coincidence - the tool's structure is the mental model. Lesson 3 takes you through each level in full detail.

⚠ What your future clients will get wrong

Clients (and junior buyers) obsess over targeting - "let's find the perfect audience." In modern Meta, that's the least controllable lever; the AI has largely taken it over. The lever they underinvest in - creative - is now the one that actually moves results. Part of your edge as a founder will be re-educating clients on where the leverage truly sits. Keep that asymmetry in mind from day one.

Today's recap - 30 seconds

Day 1 · Foundations Tomorrow → Day 2: The auction, opened up