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  1. Gads account organization
    9 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  2. Search ads
    36 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  3. Display Ads
    16 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  4. Video Ads
    17 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  5. Analytics
    19 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  6. GAds Optimization
    8 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  7. Audience Manager
    8 Topics
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    1 Quiz
  8. GAds tools and settings
    26 Topics
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  9. Google Ads and Facebook
    9 Topics
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Lesson 4, Topic 17
In Progress

Create relevant ads

01.02.2022
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The devil with relevancy is in the details, of course. There are three ways ads can miss the relevancy mark and fail to get attention: wrong person, wrong creative, wrong moment. By chipping away at each of those, advertisers can make progress toward creating more relevant, helpful, attention-worthy ads.

1. Focus on consumers’ intent, not just their demographics   

Creating helpful advertising means anticipating your consumers’ needs, but that requires knowing what they’re in the market for. That’s where intent signals come in. Intent signals go beyond an audience’s identity or context to reach someone based on their intent: what they want, what they’re in the market for, and what they need at any particular time. Meeting someone’s intention is what has made search so powerful for so long—the ability to quickly help someone with what they want or need in the moment. Taking intent signals from not just search, but maps and apps too, creates a fuller picture of intent, which makes targeting even more powerful.

Here’s how intent signals can drive relevancy and attention: Let’s take the example of someone interested in buying a winter coat. To date, if you wanted to target video ads for winter coats, you could guess a demographic that might be more likely to buy winter coats (say, women 18 to 34) or use psychographics to target people who might be particularly into preparing for winter (say, ski enthusiasts). Intent signals eliminate that guesswork. You can serve ads to people who searched for winter coat deals, spent a lot of time scouting nearby ski resorts, or scrolled through coats in a shopping app.

Across the many brands that have already used intent signals, the results are telling. Campaigns that use intent-based targeting on mobile have 20% higher ad recall lift and 50% higher brand awareness lift relative to campaigns that only use demographic targeting.

Brand metric lifts for intent-based targeting compared to demographic-based targeting alone

2. Customize creative at scale

Your ads can be helpful when they reach relevant groups of people, and they’re even more helpful when the ad creative itself is relevant too. But creating relevant creative at scale can be expensive and arduous.

Tools like YouTube’s Director Mix can help solve for this. Director Mix turns brands’ layered files into dozens—or even hundreds—of personalized video ads by swapping images, text, and other video elements, and serving them based on intent signals.

McDonald’s recently used Director Mix to drive relevancy for the Big Mac with millennials. The brand created 77 different six-second ads targeted to its audience’s viewing interests, such as watching a movie trailer or live comedy clip. The customized six-second ads earned more than double the ad recall of the control ads in the campaign.

Custom creative at scale: A few stills of McDonald’s six-second video ad creative

3. Match your message to the moment

Ad formats and targeting have gotten more sophisticated, and storytelling possibilities have gotten more interesting as a result. As brands experiment with multi-part stories told to the same viewer over time in various cuts of creative, nailing the right sequence could be the difference between someone tuning out and paying attention. To build a story that unfolds to a viewer over time, you can use Video Ad Sequencing to string together creative across multiple ad units to the same consumer.
Gone are the days when one piece of creative does all the heavy lifting.
The ability to sequence your messages can be a game-changer for garnering attention. You can pivot, you can react, and you can take consumers down a different path depending on which ads are working for them. For instance, you could start with a fifteen-second TrueView ad to build awareness, continue with another longer spot that communicates product attributes, then follow with a six-second bumper ad to stay top-of-mind and drive to purchase.

Ubisoft has experimented with just this kind of ad sequencing to unfold a story to a viewer over time. To drum up excitement for its “Assassin’s Creed” video game among gamers, the team cut several six-second bumper ads from a longer trailer and served them sequentially to core gaming affinity audiences. Ubisoft reached YouTube’s mobile-first audience, which was more inclined to watch shorter ads, by unfolding the same story in a way those viewers found appealing. The campaign reached almost 15 million unique users, drove a 25% best-in-class awareness lift, and a 224% search lift for “Assassin’s Creed.” Some of the viewers even went back and engaged with the original trailer.

Improving the “average video ad”

As consumers’ expectations for ads evolve to be more personalized and assistive than ever before, ensuring that your ad campaigns meet the new definition of relevance isn’t just “nice to have.” It’s a marketing imperative.

  • Take advantage of intent signals from search, maps, and apps to go beyond demographics and psychographics.
  • Tailor creative at scale to the audience or the content. 
  • Build sequential stories to get—and keep—attention in every moment.

As consumer attention becomes an ever-scarcer resource, raising the bar for relevant ads will help brands win.