Facebook Pixel
The Facebook Pixel, now called the Meta Pixel, is a tracking snippet from Meta that records visitor actions on your site to power ad measurement, optimization, and retargeting. It lets Meta tie conversions back to the ads that drove them.
In depth
Once installed, the pixel reports standard and custom events such as page views, leads, and purchases to Meta, which uses them to optimize delivery, build audiences, and report conversions across Facebook and Instagram. It is the foundation for retargeting people who engaged but did not convert, and for lookalike audiences that resemble your best customers. Because of signal loss from iOS and browser privacy changes, Meta now pairs the browser pixel with the server-side Conversions API for more durable measurement.
A common pitfall is installing the base pixel but never configuring meaningful event triggers, so the account optimizes toward landing-page views instead of real outcomes. In a scorecard quiz funnel, you can map a custom Lead event to quiz completion and pass the lead score as event value, so Meta optimizes toward visitors most likely to finish and qualify. That turns the pixel from a passive counter into an engine that compounds qualified-lead volume.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
Is the Facebook Pixel the same as the Meta Pixel?
Yes. Meta renamed the Facebook Pixel to the Meta Pixel, but the underlying code and purpose are the same. It tracks site actions for ad measurement, optimization, and retargeting.
What can the Facebook Pixel do for my funnel?
It enables conversion optimization, retargeting of visitors who did not convert, and lookalike audiences modeled on your best leads. Mapping a custom event to quiz completion makes optimization target qualified leads.
How do I make the pixel more reliable amid privacy changes?
Pair the browser pixel with Meta's server-side Conversions API and respect user consent. This recovers events lost to browser restrictions and improves attribution accuracy.