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What Nigerian Performance Marketers Really Think About ROI, Channels, and the Future
Performance marketing in Nigeria is in a very unique position right now. Global trends are influencing the industry, but most marketers are navigating their own paths. They are finding solutions to infrastructure challenges, learning about what resonates with Nigerian audiences, and managing tight budgets. I spoke with marketers across to understand what works, what doesn’t, and what the future looks like.

Meta Dominating
Let’s be clear. If you ask most Nigerian performance marketers about their preferred channel, you will likely hear “Meta” (which includes Facebook, Instagram, and Threads) repeatedly. Almost everyone I talked to indicated that Meta Ads provides the best ROI, no question.
One media buyer with 3 years of experience stated, “It’s the only Meta I use for now, so I can’t compare.” While this might seem limiting at first, why change what works? If you see results, you should continue using it.
Of course, it’s not universal. Someone managing campaigns for various sectors mentioned that Meta is great for e-commerce, but for fintech, Snapchat works better. “It has to do with the target audience.” Another marketer with over a decade of experience in hospitality highlighted the importance of considering both the industry and the audience. What succeeds for one sector might not succeed for another.
An agency marketer put it simply: “Our customers are usually very active on this channel.” This is clear. Nigerian audiences are present on Meta, engaging, and making purchases.
What Performance Marketers Actually Track
Metrics are not one-size-fits-all, but a few that dominate:
– ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) is the most tracked metric.
– CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) and Conversion Rate are also significant.
– CTR (Click-Through Rate) is still crucial for optimization.
One hospitality marketer keeps tracking straightforward, focusing on “Conversion Rate and CPA (Cost Per Conversion)” before checking ROAS. Meanwhile, someone in iGaming is specifically focused on “sign-ups that lead to first-time deposits”—not every conversion is equally valuable.
The Attribution Crisis
Attribution is a common complaint. Getting to know which ad or channel leads to a conversion can be overwhelming. Marketers struggle to identify what truly drives results.
- 67% of those I talked to said attribution and tracking are still nightmares.
- Tracking and analytics frequently come up as pain points.
- One marketer captured it well: “Lack of accuracy in data attribution skews performance.”
A hospitality marketer pointed out the difficulty when products are not sold online. Offline visits and phone calls cannot be easily tracked. This leaves marketers guessing how to allocate their budgets instead of relying on solid data.
The Budget Realities
Rising ad costs emerged as the second most common challenge. This pressure forces marketers to be more strategic and resourceful. When combined with limited budgets and client constraints, it’s evident: Nigerian performance marketers are expected to achieve more with less money.
So, what’s changing?
- Marketers are testing more channels before committing fully to a single winner.
- Some divide their budgets 50-30-20 or distribute them evenly across several channels.
- Others disregard “industry best practices” and rely on what has worked for them previously.
An iGaming marketer summarized it: “Ad costs” affect ROI more than anything else.
Creative Is King And Queen
Despite discussions about channels and tracking, “poor creative quality or ad fatigue” consistently surfaces as a top concern. One media buyer was clear: “Poor creatives” are the biggest issue.
A hospitality marketer who has seen it all believes that in 2026, the successful ones will be those who produce “Lots of creatives and continuous testing.” It’s not just about good creatives; it’s about consistently presenting something fresh and different.
Channel Combinations That Work
Experienced marketers don’t put all their bets on one channel. They diversify to achieve better results. Here’s how some of the top marketers do it:
The Meta + Google Ads combination: One agency marketer explained, “how he uses Meta to build awareness, then Google Ads to capture people ready to buy. Meta’s audience targeting and engagement work for the top of the funnel, while Google’s search intent is aimed at ready-to-buy customers.”
The Multi-Platform Approach: In hospitality, one marketer spreads the budget across Instagram, Google, and Snap, testing all three before investing more in the best performer. It’s good since audiences aren’t confined to one platform..
Industry-Specific Stacks: The iGaming marketer combines “Meta, Trafficstars, Trafficjunky, and X ads”; this mix works when the audience cuts across both mainstream social media and niche, adult-focused sites.
Looking Ahead: The 2026 Landscape
When I asked about trends shaping the next 24 months, a clear pattern appeared:
- Everyone is discussing AI-driven ad optimization. Marketers expect AI to address significant headaches, such as attribution issues, creative performance, and smarter budget allocation.
- Local creative content is becoming essential. As competition increases, generic ads won’t suffice. Marketers require content that resonates with Nigerian audiences—using the right language and referencing cultural moments.
- The growth of TikTok and short-form video was mentioned by multiple respondents. Although only a few of our samples used TikTok Ads, several see it as an emerging force in Nigerian performance marketing.
- First-party data is becoming increasingly vital. Privacy changes that complicate tracking mean brands need to own their customer data. It’s not just about keeping pace with global trends—it’s about resolving attribution issues once and for all.
- Influencer–performance campaigns are evolving. Influencers are no longer just for brand awareness; marketers want direct results and hold influencers accountable for performance.
When I asked marketers what would define true success in 2026, here’s what stood out:
- Getting real results
- Trying new channels
- Staying ahead of the changes.
- Constant creative testing
- Quickly understand your metrics and act on data
- Adjusting to changing trends
- Delivering consistent quality results
What’s clear? The marketers winning will be those who adapt quickly, keep learning, maintain strong creativity, and thoroughly understand their data. Relying on one successful strategy for years is no longer an option.
Key Takeaways for Nigerian Performance Marketers
1. Meta Works, But Stay Flexible: Meta works, but real breakthroughs come from testing unexpected channels. Sometimes your best opportunity for growth lies where others aren’t looking.
2. Fix Attribution Before You Scale: If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it. Nail down accurate tracking before ramping up your budget to know what’s effective.
3. Creative Volume Beats Perfection: When your audience is tired of seeing the same ad, producing new creatives and content volume is more crucial than obsessing over one “perfect” campaign.
4. Combine Channels, Don’t Isolate your channel: The right question isn’t “which channel?” but “which combination?” The best marketers combine platforms to leverage each one’s strengths.
5. AI is not here to replace your job, but marketers who embrace AI will surpass those who don’t want to adapt. Start learning now.
In Conclusion
Performance marketing in Nigeria is challenging, but offers great opportunities. Increase in ad costs and tracking issues are real problems, but they also present chances for those who can solve them better than their competitors.
Success is not about having the biggest budgets or access to every channel. It’s about understanding your audience, continuous testing, measuring the right metrics, and acting fast.
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