Sridhar Ramaswamy, Google’s SVP of Ads & Commerce made announcements about two new products this morning at DMEXCO 2016.
The first centred on event-based optimization in Universal App Campaigns app ads, and the other around the YouTube ‘TrueView’ service.
Universal App Campaigns
According to Google, its app ads have now driven 3 billion installs for developers.
It previously announced crossing the 2 billion threshold at Google I/O back in May so this extra one billion installs have come in just four months.
Facebook also announced in May that it had also driven 2 billion installs so it will be interesting to see what the social network makes of Google’s sudden growth.
On the back of this announcement, Sridhar unveiled a new update giving advertisers around the globe the ability to carry out event-based optimization in Universal App Campaigns.
Here’s Sridhar on the next generation of Universal App Campaigns:
“Across Google Search, Play, YouTube, and the millions of sites and apps in the Google Display Network, Universal App Campaigns can now help you find the customers that matter most to you, based on your defined business goals.”
Universal App Campaigns works by evaluating countless signals in real time to continuously refine ads so a brand can reach its most valuable users at the right price across Google’s largest properties.
As people start to engage with your ads, Google learns where you’re finding the highest value users.
To use Google’s example: Google may know that the users who tap into the most hotel deals are those who watch travel vlogs on YouTube. Using this information, Google will show more of your ads on those types of YouTube channels.
Trivago has been one of the first brands to test this new version of Universal App Campaigns and it was able to find users who were more likely to click on hotel deals in-app to book a room.
As a result, Trivago acquired customers who were 20% more valuable to its business across both Android and iOS.
YouTube ‘TrueView for Action’
Google found in a recent study that 47% of US adults aged 18 to 54 say YouTube helps them at least once a month when making a decision about buying something – that’s around 70 million people going to YouTube every month for help with a purchase.
On the back of this research, Google is rolling out a new YouTube campaign type called ‘TrueView for Action’.
This new campaign allows brand advertisers to make their video ads more actionable with tailored to calls-to-action during and after the video, like “Get a quote,” “Book now” or “Sign up.”
This is an effort to make TrueView work as a direct or performance marketing tool for brand advertisers, in addition to driving brand value.
Sridhar continues…
“This is especially advantageous for brands that offer products or services with high consideration, like financial services, automotive, or travel. TrueView for action can help you move your customers along the path to purchase by encouraging actions like scheduling an appointment or requesting more information.”
Google will start testing this new format with advertisers throughout the rest of this year.
Related reading
Average mobile webpage is now 2.2MB, 68% is images: let’s trim the fat
The problem: the size of webpages sent to mobile phones has quadrupled in just five years. The main cause: images account for 67% of total page weight. Find out if images are ruining your mobile web experience.
Instagram Stories might be killing Snapchat Stories
Imitation might be the sincerest form of flattery, but for Snapchat, imitation could be putting a dent in its business. According to ... read more
Seven ways to elevate your personal and professional SEO performance
In 2017 it is essential that SEO professionals secure the buy-in they need from their business leaders so they can accomplish their professional goals.
Brushing up your mobile & digital skillset with online learning (aka the MOOC)
The beauty of the MOOC (massive open online courses) is threefold: there are thousands of courses, a good proportion of them are mobile or mobile-related, many from top Universities; they’re affordable and you can fit them in around your work.