Your ad is running. You've spent $150. You've got 8 clicks, 1 add-to-cart, 0 sales. The data looks bad, but you're not sure if you should kill it or let it ride another day.
Most dropshippers guess. The ones making money use numbers.
The rule: 50 clicks or 3 days, whichever comes first
Don't pause an ad based on feel. Wait until you have enough data to make a real decision.
At 50 clicks, you have a statistical foundation. Before that, you're just throwing darts. One lucky click can make a losing ad look viable. One unlucky click streak can kill something that would've worked.
If an ad is bleeding money at $10 per click or worse, spend three days max with a smaller budget ($10–15/day) and then assess. If it hasn't shown signs of life by day three, it's not a timing issue—it's a creative or targeting issue.
What the data actually tells you
After 50 clicks, look at these numbers:
CTR (click-through rate). Most TikTok and Instagram ads land between 0.5% and 2%. If you're at 0.2%, the creative isn't resonating. Kill it.
If you're at 3%+ CTR but 0% conversions, the problem is downstream—landing page, price, or checkout friction, not the ad itself. Fix those before killing the creative.
Cost per add-to-cart. On a $20 product, this should be $2–5. On a $50 product, $5–15. If you're at $25 per add-to-cart and the product is $20, the math doesn't work.
Conversion rate. 0.5–2% is normal for cold traffic. If you're at 0%, either the targeting is wrong (you're reaching people who don't care about this product) or the product page is broken.
The pause vs. kill decision
Pause if:
- CTR is good (1.5%+) but conversions are low → fix landing page, not the ad
- You've only spent $30 and got 8 clicks → too early to tell, lower budget and wait 3 days
- Ad was running well, now it's dropping → probably ad fatigue, rotate to a new creative angle
Kill if:
- CTR is under 0.5% after 50+ clicks → the hook isn't landing, move on
- Cost per conversion is 3x your profit margin → math doesn't work, not worth optimizing
- It's been 3 days and spend is high with zero traction → targeting or product is wrong
The nuance that matters
An ad with 0.3% CTR and 50 clicks is fundamentally different from an ad with 2% CTR and 50 clicks. The first one is a creative problem. The second one is a conversion problem.
A creative problem requires a new video, new hook, new angle. A conversion problem requires testing your landing page, your product photo, your price, your shipping time indicator—anything that happens after the click.
Most people kill ads with CTR problems too fast and optimize conversion problems for too long. Get it backwards and you'll burn budget.
The honest part
Sometimes an ad is just bad. You created a mediocre video, or the product doesn't actually solve a problem people care about, or you targeted the wrong audience. An ad isn't a signal to throw money at optimization—it's a test.
If the test fails after 50 clicks and three days, that's data. Use it. Kill the ad, learn from it, move on.
The fast ones who make money test a lot and kill fast. They don't fall in love with a single video. They produce more angles, run more tests, and ruthlessly cut the ones that don't move the needle.
Next: set up automated rules in your ad account so low-CTR ads pause themselves after 50 clicks. You've got better things to do than babysit losers.