Meta Ads reporting automation

Meta Ads reporting automation that ends with next actions.

Meta Ads reporting eats hours and still misses changes. I build recurring reports that summarize spend and performance shifts, flag anomalies, and end with the next actions worth taking, combined with revenue data.

Best fit

When this makes sense

Brands rebuilding Meta Ads reports by hand each week
Teams that miss big spend or CPA changes until too late
Operators who want ad data tied to revenue and next actions

What can be built

Workflows the audit can turn into a system.

The best first project is specific and close to daily operations: a report someone rebuilds, an alert someone checks by hand, or a support task that keeps repeating.

Weekly Meta Ads summaries of spend and performance shifts

Anomaly alerts for CPA, ROAS, or spend swings

Meta data combined with Shopify revenue in one view

Plain-English takeaways and recommended next actions

Implementation

From workflow to a build plan.

01

Define the ad decisions the report should drive

02

Connect Meta Ads and revenue data into one view

03

Build the recurring report and anomaly alerts

04

Test against real campaigns and document the rhythm

Proof

Built for measurable operating leverage.

A recurring ads report turned inconsistent campaign reviews into a repeatable weekly rhythm, making spend and CPA changes faster to catch and act on.

See homepage proof

FAQ

Questions before booking.

Can you combine Meta Ads with other channels?+

Yes. Meta data can sit alongside Google, TikTok, and Shopify revenue so you review performance in one place instead of per platform.

Can it alert me to spend or CPA spikes?+

Yes. Anomaly alerts can flag unusual changes in spend, CPA, or ROAS so big shifts do not go unnoticed.

Does the report just show numbers?+

No. The useful version ends with plain-English takeaways and the next actions worth considering, not just a data dump.

Want this mapped against your ecommerce operation?

Book the free audit, walk through the repeated work, and leave with a clear recommendation for the first automation worth building.