Welcome to this week’s edition of Kavanah Media’s Weekly Marketing Rundown! This week is very we explore WhatsApp's new Passkey feature, a ton of updates regarding Meta, Singapores new laws and more.
Enjoying the Weekly Marketing Rundown? Support our work and keep it free for missions teams worldwide: https://www.kavanahmedia.com/donatetoKM
WhatsApp is upgrading its chat backup security by letting you use your face, fingerprint, or screen lock code (a "passkey") instead of having to remember a long, complex password. This change makes it much easier to keep your secret backup chats fully encrypted so no one can read them.
For Mission Teams
This simplified security is vital for the safety of mission strategies, ensuring sensitive seeker data and ministry communications remain secure. Teams should consider adopting this immediately to strengthen their data security protocols, prevent lost access to valuable discipleship chats, and protect users from phishing attacks that target weak passwords.
https://www.theverge.com/news/809842/whatsapp-passkey-chat-backup-encryption
Meta's new ad system, often called Andromeda, is designed to work with many different kinds of ad creatives to succeed. Creative diversification means using unique combinations of ad formats (like video, image, carousel, text, and visuals that appeal to different groups of people.
For Mission Teams
Marketers no longer need to focus on building the "perfect" creative combination. Creative diversification is now key to finding seekers—it allows the ad system to test different evangelism messages (e.g., hope, purpose, community) on various audiences at scale. This approach enables ad systems to optimize performance at scale, reducing ad fatigue and extending the impact of campaigns.
https://www.jonloomer.com/qvt/creative-diversification-important/
Meta reported strong ad revenue and added 60 million new users last quarter. Facebook’s dating feature now attracts 21.5 million daily active users across 52 countries. Most notably, engagement among 18–29-year-olds increased significantly, underscoring Meta’s success in retaining and growing its Gen Z audience despite rising competition.
For Mission Teams
Meta’s unmatched scale and robust user base once again solidify its domination of the market and is viability as a platform teams can leverage for digital evangelism.
https://www.socialmediatoday.com/news/meta-q3-earnings-results-ai-losses-ad-revenue-increase/804211/ and
https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/03/wait-people-actually-use-facebook-dating/
Meta is introducing a new label in business chats on Messenger to clearly inform users how their messages and interactions may be used to improve the platform. In other words, what you say or do in a chat with a business or ministry could help enhance ads, AI capabilities, and response times.
For Mission Teams
This disclosure highlights a crucial security and ethical strategy point: conversations with seekers in Messenger are not end-to-end encrypted like private chats, and Meta analyzes this data to inform its AI and advertising algorithms. Users will see these disclosures in Messenger as they interact with evangelism pages and ads.
https://www.socialmediatoday.com/news/meta-adds-new-labels-business-chats-messenger/725299/
Meta has introduced ads in the status section of WhatsApp this month. Marketers can utilize this new placement to achieve objectives such as lead generation, traffic, sales, and engagement. To use any ad type, WhatsApp must be enabled, and marketers are required to have a WhatsApp Business account.
Kavanah Media team members have begun experimenting with the new ad placement.
For Mission Teams:
Ads Manager will guide teams interested in using the new placement feature. Marketers can refer to the following guide to begin. Please be aware that Meta is gradually rolling out this feature worldwide, and it may not yet be accessible on all accounts. Currently, ad traffic is limited, so Meta advises enabling Advantage+ placements to avoid potential bottlenecks.
Singapore passed a new law that significantly increases the government's power to force social media companies like Meta and TikTok to remove content. Platforms must now remove posts that promote abuse, bullying, or racial and religious disharmony, or face serious consequences, including criminal charges or app bans.
For Mission Teams
This law significantly increases security and content risks for evangelism, as any material discussing conversion or differing religious beliefs may be flagged for causing "religious disharmony." This could result in content takedowns, account restrictions, or even bans from platforms.
It serves as an important reminder that social media platforms, along with the mission teams that use them, operate under the influence of local governments and their regulations. Many countries worldwide are enacting similar laws concerning social media and data privacy.
Teams should assess their risk tolerance before initiating new projects, prepare for potential challenges, and stay informed about the local laws that may apply to them.
Meta is introducing major updates to its lead generation ads, focusing on quality over volume, and using advanced AI targeting and lead verification tools like SMS and work email checks. The platform now offers streamlined CRM integration and new automation features to instantly nurture leads after they express interest, often leading to a 14% lower cost per lead.
For Mission Teams
Meta says Advantage+ Leads campaigns are currently their most advanced ads. Mission teams wanting to leverage Meta's most advanced AI optimizations should consider testing Leads objectives to see how they perform in their context. They can be utilized for Messenger, traffic and more.
YouTube's short-form vertical video format, Shorts, now generates more ad revenue per watch hour for the platform than its traditional long-form content. This significant shift is driven by advertisers increasing their spend on the highly engaging format and YouTube's success in monetizing Shorts, which continues to drive massive viewership.
For Mission Teams
This change confirms that short-form video must be the priority content strategy for finding seekers, as the platform's algorithm is heavily incentivized to promote and monetize Shorts above everything else. Teams should allocate more effort into creating short, authentic, and high-impact Reels and Shorts to maximize digital engagement, visibility, and the efficiency of their video outreach efforts.
https://www.tubefilter.com/2025/10/29/shorts-now-make-more-money-for-youtube-than-long-form/
Looking for ways to use digital tools to grow evangelism and disciple-making? Check out our other resources:
Thanks for reading this edition of Kavanah Media's Weekly Marketing Rundown! For more up-to-date insights in digital marketing, make sure to follow us on Instagram @kavanah_media and stay connected through all our social media channels via the link below.
https://linktr.ee/kavanah_media
Authors: Cody A. and Cherry Messimer
Article Published: November 7, 2025

Comments