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Owned by Dakota

AdClass

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This group is dedicated to sharing ad strategies that actually work. Welcome to Skool, AdClass is in session.

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24 contributions to AdClass
why your ai ads aren’t working (and how to fix it fast)
AI ads not converting? this is probably why: most people are using AI like this: “make me an ad” and then wondering why it looks like garbage and doesn’t convert. AI isn’t the problem. your inputs are. it has no idea: - what your offer actually is - what your landing page looks like - what’s already working - what your ads should sound like so it guesses. i built a simple claude skill that fixes this. it forces you to give: - landing page context - winning ads - target audience - offer details then it spits out prompts you can drop straight into image models and get ads that are actually usable. i used it live for my own company and got solid creatives in minutes. you still have to iterate. but you’re starting way closer to something that can convert. full breakdown + the free skill here in the video below, and linked here: https://adclass.notion.site/AI-Ad-Image-Prompter-Copy-This-Into-a-Claude-Project-3308f887988481119947f8ee80d56478 if you try it, post your outputs in the group — i’ll give feedback!
A Hot Mess! Newbie to Advertising. Where to start?
Hi Dakota, I am yet to advertise my Skool communities. I've just hit 10 weeks on Skool, and I have a healthy following on Facebook, but am baulking at pitching to them because I don't know what to say to bring them into my Skool community. I know people say videos of you talking are the key to building trust, stopping the scroll and converting, but recording a video makes me cringe. Is there another way? And what do I write in an ad? I've had a publishing business outside of Skool for going on 21 years and am now bringing the mentoring component over to Skool. I have Author Skool for people wanting to write and self-publish, as well as build a business beyond their book, and the Skool Bookshop for people who want to learn how to promote their books, and for readers who love books and want to connect with authors. Do you have any examples? Insights? 🙏 @Dakota Hermes
A Hot Mess! Newbie to Advertising. Where to start?
0 likes • 5d
Hey Rachael! Great question and congrats on 10 weeks on Skool! Here's the good news: you don't have to do talking-head videos to get results from ads. But let me give you a full picture so you can start smart. On the video fear: Static image ads and carousel ads absolutely work, especially in niches like yours (publishing/authors) where the audience is more thoughtful and text-driven. You can start with a simple graphic + strong primary text copy and test before you ever touch a camera. Where to actually start: 1. Get clear on ONE avatar first. You have two communities (Author Skool + Skool Bookshop), pick the one with the clearest, most painful problem and start there. Don't try to run ads for both at once. 2. For Author Skool, your avatar is probably someone who has a book idea or manuscript but feels stuck... they don't know how to self-publish OR how to turn it into a business. Lead with that pain in your copy. 3. Your 21 years is gold. That's your credibility hook. Use it. "I've been in the publishing industry for 21 years and here's what most authors get wrong..." is a powerful opener. 4. What to write in your ad: Lead with the problem your ideal member is living right now, hint at a counterintuitive insight, then invite them to join your free community. A simple static ad formula to test: - Hook: Call out the pain ("Still struggling to turn your book into a business?") - Body: Agitate + your credibility + tease the solution - CTA: "Join [Author Skool] free — link below" Hook ideas... - Are you sitting on a book idea that could change your life, but have no idea where to start? - I've been in the publishing industry for 21 years, and the #1 reason most non-fiction authors fail has nothing to do with their writing. - "Here's how non-fiction authors are finally turning their book into a speaking career, a course, and a real business without a publisher."
How I Analyze Meta Ads in 5 Minutes (Free Claude Skill — Full Walkthrough)
I built a Claude skill that turns any Meta Ads CSV export into a full interactive dashboard and Word report... in about 5 minutes. In this video I walk through the entire process live, using my own ad account (Local Legend, our home service agency). What it generates: → Weekly report (.docx) with prioritized recommendations → Interactive dark-mode HTML dashboard → Campaign, ad-level, and placement breakdowns → US regional heat map by state → Color-coded KPI cards with week-over-week trends
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"I've been burned by agencies before."
"I've been burned by agencies before." I hear this constantly. And look — some agencies do suck. But blaming every agency is like blaming every barber because you got a bad haircut once. In this video, I tell the story of a guy who kept going back to his barber, kept complaining about his haircuts... until his buddy finally hit him with the truth. Sometimes the barber isn't the problem. Sometimes you're just bald. Translation: maybe your agency can't fix your brand because your offer isn't there yet. Not every agency is bad. But not every business is ready for one either.
0 likes • Jan 27
@Kevin Wissman I think it's highly dependent on the industry that you're in For example with info or online learning I would say you probably want to already be spending anywhere from $20,000 to $30,000 a month in ads before you hand it off to an agency The reason for that is that typically the agency fee is going to be high enough that it doesn't make sense to outsource it until you're making enough revenue from the platform to do so without worrying about the fee But for other industries it's probably different. For example we have a local services agency that works with local contractors For those guys because the retainers are smaller and the ad spend is lower, typically if you're doing $50K to $100K in revenue per month, that makes sense to outsource to an agency
0 likes • Jan 28
@Kevin Wissman love this idea. i'll add it to the list for a future vid.
the one thing that guarantees you'll stay an average marketer
you'll never be a good marketer if you're a rule follower. i mean that. i teach people to buy ads. i give them the fundamentals — the "why" behind how things work. and then i watch them turn principles into prescriptions. i say "it's probably healthier to scale 20-30% day over day" and they take that as gospel. they never break that rule. ever. here's the thing: i almost never follow that rule myself. when i launch something new and i like how it looks? i'll double the budget. triple it. sometimes quadruple it. because i have a feel for it. i know which risks pan out and which don't. last year we had a launch where i needed to spend $4M in a month. you can't do that scaling 20% day over day. it's just not possible. so you have to rework the framework in your mind. figure out what you CAN do to make it work. here's what most people get wrong: they think following rules IS the strategy. but rules are just guardrails. they're not the game. the game is understanding WHY the rules exist — then knowing when to break them. take campaign structure. i tell people: start simple. one campaign, multiple ad sets, test different creative concepts. consolidate where possible so the algorithm can learn faster. that's the principle. but i've got accounts where i'm running 15 campaigns because the business model demands it. i've got others where everything lives in one CBO because that's what's working. there are dozens of data points i consider when thinking about CBO vs ABO and it’s dumb to make a one-size-fits-all rule for that. the real skill isn't knowing the playbook. it's pattern recognition. when i look at an account, i'm asking questions: what's actually happening here? where's the drop-off? is the creative fatigued or is this a targeting problem? what does the sales team say about lead quality? i'm not looking for "the answer." i'm looking for signals. and then i test. big ideas first. i don't waste time testing button colors when the whole angle might be wrong. i test bold stuff — new hooks, new offers, new funnels.
the one thing that guarantees you'll stay an average marketer
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Dakota Hermes
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@dakota-hermes-8390
I run AdClass

Active 13h ago
Joined Aug 20, 2025
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