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Google Ads tests ‘View-Through Conversion Optimization’ for Demand Gen campaigns

Auditing and optimizing Google Ads in an age of limited data

Google Ads is testing a new “View-Through Conversion Optimization” feature in its Demand Gen campaigns.

What’s new. This test was spotted last week. It adds a setting allowing advertisers to include view-through conversions (VTCs) in their bidding models.

How it works. This applies to YouTube (Image + Video) traffic.

  • More channels are “coming soon,” per the early beta.
  • The feature could improve early-stage efficiency where clicks are scarce but influence is high.

Why we care. View-through conversions reveal what happens when people see your ad, skip the click, but come back to buy. You can turn it on early to train algorithms faster, boost brand lift, and stretch your creative dollars. This is especially important on YouTube because conversions often trail views by days or weeks.

Zoom out. The move underscores Google’s push to make Demand Gen more competitive with Meta’s Advantage+ and TikTok’s Smart Performance offerings, which both leverage impression-driven optimization signals.

What’s next. Expect broader rollout and performance data as Google fine-tunes how view-through data interacts with its automated bidding systems.

First seen. This update was first spotted by Thomas Eccel, Google Ads specialist at JvM IMPACT.

Read more at Read More

How to know if your GEO is working

How to know if your GEO is working

Let’s get one thing straight before the industry turns “GEO” into yet another three-letter source of confusion.

Generative engine optimization isn’t SEO with a new hat and a LinkedIn carousel. It’s a fundamentally different game.

If you’re still debating whether to swap the “S” for a “G,” you’ve already missed the point.

At its core, GEO is brand marketing expressed through generative interfaces.

Treat it like a technical tweak, and you’ll get technical-tweak results: plenty of noise, very little growth.

CMOs, this is where you step in.

SEOs, this is where you either evolve or get automated into irrelevance.

The question isn’t what GEO is – that’s been done to death.

It’s how to tell if your GEO is actually working.

The North Star: Share of search (not ‘share of voice,’ not ‘topical authority’)

The primary metric for GEO is the same one that should already anchor any brand-led growth program: share of search.

Les Binet didn’t coin a vanity metric for dashboards. 

Share of search is a leading indicator of future market share because it reflects relative demand – your brand versus competitors.

If your share is rising, someone else’s is falling, and the future tilts your way. 

If it’s declining, you’re mortgaging tomorrow’s revenue. That’s the unglamorous magic of it.

It isn’t perfect. But across category after category, share of search predicts brand outcomes with a level of accuracy that should make “awards case studies” blush.

And yes, GEO affects it, often through PR. 

When an LLM recommends your brand (linked or not), some users still open a new tab and Google you. 

Recommendation sparks curiosity. Curiosity drives search. Search is the signal.

Expect branded search volume to rise as generative usage grows, because people back-check what they see in AI results. 

It’s messy human behavior, but it’s consistent.

Your first diagnostic: plot your brand’s share of search against your closest competitors. 

Use Google Trends or My Telescope for branded demand, and triangulate with Semrush. 

Watch the trend, not the weekly wobbles.

And do not confuse share of search with share of voice. 

Different metric. Different lineage. Different purpose.

Dig deeper: From search to answer engines: How to optimize for the next era of discovery

The two halves of the signal: Brand demand and buyer intent

Share of search has two practical layers for GEO diagnostics:

  • Brand search: The purest signal of salience. Are more people looking for you than last quarter, relative to the category? That’s how you know your brand availability is increasing inside generative engines and the culture around them.
  • Buyer-intent traffic: The money end. Of your non-branded search clicks, how much is clearly commercial or buyer-intent versus informational fluff? And how does your share of that buyer-intent traffic compare to competitors?

You won’t know a rival’s exact click-through rates – and you don’t need to.

Use Semrush to estimate non-branded commercial demand at the topic level for you and them, then compare proportions. 

Cross-reference with your own Google Search Console (GSC) data. 

Export everything and segment aggressively by intent. 

Where tool estimates diverge from your actuals, you’ll learn something about the noise in third-party data and the real shape of your market.

If your brand search is flat but buyer-intent share is rising, congratulations – you’re harvesting demand but not creating enough of it.

If brand search is rising but buyer-intent share isn’t, you have a conversion or content problem – your GEO is sparking curiosity, but your site and assets aren’t turning that into qualified traffic.

If both are up, pour fuel.

If both are down, stop fiddling with prompts and fix your positioning, advertising, and PR.

Dig deeper: Fame engineering: The key to generative engine optimization

Competitors are winning in AI answers. Take back share of voice.

Benchmark your presence across LLMs, spot gaps, and get prioritized actions.

Compare share of voice and sentiment in seconds.

Category entry points: The prompts behind the prompts

GEO lives or dies on category entry points (CEPs) – Ehrenberg-Bass’ useful term for the situations, needs, and triggers that put buyers into the category.

CEPs are how real people think.

“I just left the gym and I’m thirsty.” That’s why there’s a Coke fridge by the exit.

“I’ve just come out of a show near Covent Garden and need food now.” That’s why certain restaurants cluster and advertise there.

These are not keywords. They’re human contexts that later materialize as words.

Translating that to GEO: your customers’ prompts in ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and AI Mode reflect their CEPs.

Newly appointed marketing manager under pressure to fix organic? That’s a CEP.

Fed up with a current tool because the price doubled and support disappeared? Another CEP.

Map the CEPs first, then outline the prompt families that those CEPs produce. 

The wording will vary, but the thematic spine stays consistent: a role, a pain, a job to be done, a timeframe.

Once you’ve mapped CEPs to prompt families, you can evaluate your prompt visibility – how often and in what context generative engines surface you as a credible option.

This is a brand job as much as a content job. 

LLMs don’t “decide” like humans. They triangulate across signals and citations to reduce uncertainty. 

Distinctive brand assets, third-party coverage (PR), credible reviews, and consistent evidence of capability all raise your odds of being recommended.

Notice I didn’t say “more blog posts.” We’ll come back to that.

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Measure prompt visibility, then validate in GSC

Once you’ve outlined your prompt families, test visibility systematically.

Run qualitative checks in the major models. Log the sources they cite and the types of evidence they appear to weight.

Are you visible when the CEP is “newly promoted CMO, six-month plan to grow organic pipeline”?

Are you visible when it’s “VP of ecommerce losing non-brand traffic to marketplace competitors, needs an alternative”?

If you’re absent, don’t complain about model bias – earn your spot with PR, credible case studies, and assets that reinforce what the engines are trying to prove about you.

Next, switch to the quantitative side. 

In GSC, build regex filters for conversational queries – the long, natural-language strings (4 to 10 words, often more) that resemble prompts with the serial numbers filed off.

We don’t yet know how much of this traffic comes from bots, LLM scaffolding, or humans typing into AI-powered SERPs, but we do know it’s there.

Track impressions, clicks, and the proportion that are clearly buyer-intent versus informational. 

If your conversational query clicks are growing and skewing commercial, that’s a strong signal your GEO is turning curiosity into consideration.

The two-second rule: Why informational content won’t save you

Here’s a hard truth for the SEO content mills: informational traffic is about to become even less valuable.

Most AI citations offer only fleeting exposure. 

Brand recall takes more than a glance – in both lab and field data, you get roughly two seconds of attention to make anything stick. 

Most sidebar mentions and AI Overview snippets don’t deliver that, and the memory fades fast anyway.

If your GSC export shows that 70% or more of your clicks come from “how-to” mush with no buyer intent, your GEO isn’t working. 

It’s subsidizing the LLMs that will summarize you out of existence.

Fix the mix – shift your asset portfolio toward category entry points that actually precede purchase.

Dig deeper: Revisiting ‘useful content’ in the age of AI-dominated search

A simple GEO scoreboard for grown-ups

Here’s your weekly CMO/SEO standup. Four lines, no fluff.

1. Share of search (brand) 

Your brand’s share versus your top three competitors, trended over 13 weeks. 

Up is good. Flat is a warning. Down means it’s time to get comms and PR moving.

2. Share of buyer-intent traffic

Your estimated share of non-brand commercial clicks versus competitors (from tool triangulation), plus your actual buyer-intent clicks from GSC. 

The gap between the two is your reality check.

3. Prompt visibility index

For each priority CEP, how often are you recommended by major models, and with what supporting evidence? 

  • Track monthly. 
  • Celebrate gains. 
  • Fix absences with PR and proof.

4. Conversational query conversion

Impressions and clicks on 4–10+ word natural-language queries, segmented by intent. 

Are the commercial ones rising as a share of total? If not, your GEO is a content cost center, not a growth driver.

How to read the scoreboard

  • If those four lines are improving together, your GEO is working.
  • If only one is improving, you’re playing tactics without strategy.
  • If none are improving, stop thinking you can “Wikipedia” your way to growth with topical-authority fluff.

The levers that actually move GEO

What moves the dial? Not more “SEO content.” GEO responds to the levers of brand availability:

  • PR that builds credible third-party evidence: Reviews, analyst notes, earned features, and founder or expert commentary with substance. LLMs love corroboration.
  • Distinctive assets used consistently: Names, taglines, proof points, tone. Engines triangulate. Recognizable signals reduce ambiguity.
  • Customer-centered case studies: Framed around CEPs, not your product roadmap. “Marketing manager replaces X to cut acquisition costs in 90 days” beats “New feature launch.”
  • Tighter copy: Precise, functional language matched to CEPs and prompt families. Kill the poetry.
  • Experience signals: Your site must resolve buyer intent fast. The conversation from AI should land on pages that continue – not restart – the dialogue.

Content still matters, but only as support for these levers.

Most of your old blog inventory was never going to build memory or distinctiveness, and in an AI-summarized world, it certainly won’t. 

Scrap the vanity spreadsheets. Build assets that make both engines and humans more certain you’re the right choice in buying situations.

Yes, content marketing is back in a big way – but that’s another article.

GEO isn’t just SEO

When AI modes become the default interaction layer, and they will – whether through chat, answers, or blended SERPs – the game rewards brands that are easy for machines to recommend in buying moments. 

That is GEO’s beating heart: increasing AI availability. 

Think of it like free paid search. 

If you’re still obsessing over informational traffic and topical hamster wheels, you’ll be caught with the lights on and no clothes. Some of you already are.

SEOs who make the leap become organic-search strategists. 

You’ll speak CEPs, buyer intent, and brand effects. 

You’ll partner with PR, product marketing, and sales enablement. 

You’ll still use the tools – Semrush and GSC – but you’ll use them to evidence strategy, not to justify content churn.

The rest of you? You’ll be replaced by an agentic workflow that writes better filler faster than you ever could.

The humbling truth about GEO

Marketing rewards humility. 

You are not the consumer, and you are certainly not the model. 

Stop guessing. Measure the four lines. 

  • Map the category entry points. 
  • Build the assets that make you easy to recommend. 
  • Cross-reference tool estimates with your own data and let the differences teach you. 

GEO isn’t mystical – it’s brand marketing meeting machine mediation.

So, how do you know if your GEO is working?

  • Your share of search rises.
  • Your share of buyer-intent traffic rises.
  • Your prompt visibility expands across the CEPs that actually precede purchase.
  • Your conversational queries convert at a higher rate.

Everything else is noise. 

Ignore the noise, fix the fundamentals, and remember the only mantra that matters in this brave, generative world:

  • Be recommended by AI, when it matters and not when it doesn’t.

Dig deeper: SEO in the age of AI: Becoming the trusted answer

Read more at Read More

Google to expand ads in AI Overviews to more markets

6 steps to improve your Google Ads campaigns

Google will roll out ads within AI Overviews beyond the U.S. to select English-speaking markets by the end of 2025, the company confirmed during its Google Access event last week.

Why we care. As AI-generated answers become a central part of Search, this expansion could reshape how advertisers reach users – with ads appearing directly alongside AI summaries rather than traditional text results.

Catch up. Ads in AI Overviews were first unveiled at Google Marketing Live 2025, allowing brands to appear within generative responses when users ask complex, multi-part queries.

What’s next. Google’s gradual rollout will give advertisers and users time to adapt to new ad placements and formats – and could provide early insights into how generative AI changes ad visibility, performance, and measurement across Search.

Bottom line. For advertisers, AI Overviews represent both an opportunity and a challenge – blending paid placements into AI-generated answers could drive richer engagement but may also require rethinking how to optimize for discovery and intent in a more conversational search environment.

First seen. This update was shared on LinkedIn by CEO of Profitmetrics.io Frederik Boysen, after hearing it announced Google Access meeting he attended last week.

Read more at Read More

Google rolls out new global ‘Sponsored results’ ad label

How to expand from paid social into Google Ads

Google is globally launching a new “Sponsored results” label across desktop and mobile, grouping text and Shopping ads under a clearer header.

The update marks one of Google’s most visible ad labeling changes in years. It allows users to hide groups of ads directly on the search results page.

How it works. Text ads will now appear under a larger Sponsored results header.

  • The same label will apply to other formats, like Shopping ads.
  • Users can choose to hide entire groups of sponsored results for a more personalized browsing experience.

Why we care. Clearer ad labeling and the option for users to hide sponsored results could influence ad visibility and click-through rates – meaning brands will need to focus even more on ad relevance and creative quality to attract engaged users who actively choose to view their content.

The big picture. The change aims to make ad placements easier to identify while streamlining navigation, part of Google’s ongoing effort to balance user trust and advertiser visibility in Search.

Bottom line. For advertisers, clearer labeling could mean higher-quality clicks from users who better understand when they’re engaging with paid results.

Google’s announcement. We’re improving navigation and introducing a new control for ads on Google Search.

Read more at Read More

5 ways to drive action with your PPC report

PPC reports that drive action

Are you spending hours on client reporting every month, only for your stakeholders to skim it, dismiss the numbers, or ignore your recommendations?

When reports don’t drive action, you lose more than time. Budget approvals, strategic influence, and client trust are all compromised.

Here are five ways to make sure your PPC report doesn’t just get read, but actually moves your audience to take action.

1. Start with your audience, not the data

When building a report, it’s easy to get lost in the data – dozens of metrics, multiple platforms, endless ways to slice performance.

The instinct is to ask, “What data can I show?” 

But that approach creates reports that highlight numbers instead of driving decisions.

A better question is, “Who needs this, and what will they do with it?”

What does your reader need to understand or act on? 

To borrow from the Jobs-to-Be-Done framework – what is this report being “hired” to do?

  • What decisions are your stakeholders responsible for making?
  • What questions do they expect answered?
  • Which goals and KPIs do they need to monitor?
Identify and interview your audience

Once you understand the job your report is meant to do, you can reverse-engineer what belongs in it.

For example:

  • A CMO focused on connecting ad spend to revenue and competitive position will want to see ROAS, market share, and year-over-year growth.
  • An ecommerce manager focused on product mix will care more about category performance, inventory, and seasonal trends.

Off-the-shelf templates and automated reports can’t answer those questions for you – only direct conversations with stakeholders can. 

You don’t need to wait for a new client kickoff to do this. 

Check in with your current stakeholders to confirm your reports still reflect what matters most to them.

2. Establish the source of truth

If you manage platforms like Google Ads and Microsoft Ads, you’re likely reporting on engine numbers.

But engine numbers aren’t always the “source of truth.” 

Sometimes they’re only directionally accurate. Other times, they barely correlate with actual performance.

Here’s the risk when you don’t define that source upfront: you build and present a solid report, only to have it derailed by, “I don’t think these numbers are right.” 

A client questions whether Google Ads is inflating conversions, or a CFO insists revenue must come from the CRM. 

Suddenly, the discussion shifts from strategy to data defense.

Google Ads data doesn't match CRM data

When stakeholders don’t trust the numbers, your report loses its power. You can’t drive action on data that no one believes.

So before building a report, clarify the source of truth. 

A quick litmus test: if you said, “We generated $1 million in PPC revenue yesterday,” what system would leadership check to verify it? 

Whatever they name is your source of truth.

You may never reconcile every dataset perfectly, but alignment matters most. 

Pull numbers from that trusted system where possible, call out known gaps – like offline conversions lagging in Google Ads or modeled data in GA4 – and always identify data sources clearly. 

When your reporting reflects the system leadership trusts, you avoid endless debates about accuracy and keep the focus on decisions that move the business forward.

Dig deeper: How to deliver monthly PPC reports clients love

3. Build invisible CTAs into every section

A strong landing page drives action with a clear call to action

Without one, visitors don’t know what to do next – and conversions drop. 

Reports work the same way, only without a button to click.

That’s why I developed a framework I call “invisible CTAs.” 

An invisible CTA is the intended outcome for each section of your report – the “conversion” you want your audience to experience. 

It doesn’t appear in the report itself, but it guides how you build every chart, annotation, and insight.

Invisible CTAs examples

There are three types of invisible CTAs:

  • Do: The next step they should take based on the data – fix a landing page, approve budget reallocation, or adjust strategy to defend against a competitor.
  • Know: What happened and why, even when there’s no immediate action – a holiday promo drove a 15% spike that won’t sustain, Apple’s privacy updates reduced match rates, or a tracking glitch underreported conversions.
  • Feel: The emotional response that drives urgency or confidence – concern that a competitor is outspending you, encouragement that a new strategy is working, or worry that rankings are slipping.

Don’t shy away from negative emotions. 

When we hide problems to keep reports “positive,” stakeholders won’t commit the resources needed to fix them. 

Think of it this way: which battery icon motivates you to get off the couch and grab your charger? 

Not the full one.

Battery icon illustration

Before building any section, ask: 

  • What’s the one takeaway I want my audience to leave with? 

Then design everything – your charts, metrics, headlines, and comparisons – around that invisible CTA. 

When each section has a clear intent, your audience knows exactly what to do next, even without clicking a button.

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.


4. Apply conversion principles to design and layout

Most PPC reports are still designed like data dumps, not decision tools.

Charts are crammed together, walls of numbers lack focus, and abbreviations or shorthand leave readers guessing.

Your audience shouldn’t have to work to understand what the data means. 

As Steve Krug explains in “Don’t Make Me Think,” good design removes friction and makes meaning obvious. 

The same principle applies to reporting.

Your reports should follow the same conversion optimization principles you’d use on a landing page: 

  • Hierarchy: Prioritize the key story. Bold the outcome. Move secondary data to callouts or appendices.
  • White space: Clutter kills comprehension. Give major insights room to breathe in their own sections or pages.
  • Contrast: Use color, weight, and position to highlight wins and risks.
  • Annotations: Mark charts with context (seasonality, tracking glitches, site changes). 

Look at how these conversion principles transform the very basic “Account Performance” chart into completely different data stories:

Conversion principles applied to design and layout

Every design choice should reduce friction, clarify meaning, and guide your audience toward the right conclusion.

5. Show results in context, not isolation

We often hope the numbers will speak for themselves – but they don’t.

“We drove $17,000 in revenue” means little unless your audience knows whether that’s above goal, below forecast, or right on target.

Without context, stakeholders don’t know how to react. 

They can’t celebrate a win if they don’t know it’s a win, and they won’t prioritize fixes if they don’t see the urgency.

Every metric in your PPC report needs a frame:

  • Benchmarks: Was performance above or below target?
  • Comparisons: How does it trend versus last month, last year, or competitors?
  • Explanations: What caused the change – seasonality, tracking issues, or market shifts?

For example, “$17,000 in revenue” becomes meaningful when you add context:

  • $17,000 is 35% above the goal of $12,600.
  • $17,000 is 11% higher than last October’s $15,300.
  • $17,000 represents nearly 25% of all-channel revenue ($70,000).

The more comparisons, percentages, and explanations you layer in, the easier it is for your audience to understand what’s really happening. 

Combine that context with conversion principles and invisible CTAs to create reporting that’s clear, credible, and built for action.

Show results in context, not isolation

Dig deeper: How to benchmark PPC competitors: The definitive guide

From data dump to decision driver

The purpose of PPC reporting is simple – to help your audience understand what happened and what to do next. 

If your reports don’t accomplish that, you’re not just wasting time. You’re leaving your readers without the clarity they need to act.

When you design reports around your audience’s needs, anchor them to a trusted source of truth, build invisible CTAs, apply conversion principles, and show results in context, you turn reporting into a decision-making tool.

Follow these steps, and your PPC report will stop being a monthly time-sink and start becoming a high-value asset that earns trust, drives action, and strengthens retention.

Read more at Read More

Instacart brings retail media targeting to TikTok Ads Manager

Instacart today became the first retail media network to integrate directly with TikTok Ads Manager. This will allow CPG advertisers to use Instacart’s first-party retail data to target audiences, measure conversions, and drive shoppable experiences – all without leaving TikTok’s platform.

The integration marks a major step in the convergence of retail media and social commerce. By embedding Instacart’s targeting and closed-loop measurement capabilities into TikTok, brands can connect with high-intent consumers at the exact moment of inspiration and track their impact through purchase.

Why we care. For CPG advertisers, this partnership removes a friction point – tying social engagement directly to grocery purchases. It enables smarter audience targeting, more personalized creative, and real-time performance insights within TikTok’s ecosystem, where over 180 million monthly U.S. users can discover products.

The details. Advertisers can now:

  • Target high-intent shoppers using Instacart audience segments.
  • Power shoppable TikTok ads with grocery selection data from Instacart.
  • Measure campaign performance daily through Instacart’s closed-loop conversion data.

The bottom line. By fusing TikTok’s discovery engine with Instacart’s retail data, advertisers can now bridge the gap between inspiration and purchase – turning TikTok engagement into measurable sales with unprecedented precision.

Read more at Read More

Omnichannel Marketing: Definition, Tips, & Strategy

Omnichannel marketing is a way to make your brand feel the same everywhere: website, email, ads, social, SMS, app, and in-store. People can start on their phone, switch to a laptop, and buy later without friction. 

Why is this important? 

Your customer doesn’t think in channels. They see one brand. If your ads, emails, site, app, and store don’t match, money slips through the cracks. Omnichannel marketing closes those gaps and moves more people to buy.

But how many more people are buying from omnichannel campaigns versus single-channel campaigns? 

A lot, actually.  

An Omnisend study found the purchase rate of omnichannel marketing campaigns to be 287% higher than single-channel campaigns. 

Creating a seamless experience for your customers means better brand perception and higher revenue. It’s a real win-win.  

This guide walks you through omnichannel marketing strategy benefits, best practices, and examples. By the end of it, you’ll understand what goes into creating an omnichannel campaign that drives results. 

Key Takeaways

  • Omnichannel marketing creates a seamless customer experience across every touchpoint, including website, email, ads, SMS, social, app, and in-store.
  • Brands using an omnichannel strategy saw purchase rates 287 percent higher than single-channel campaigns in one study.
  • Unlike multichannel marketing, omnichannel connects your data and messaging across platforms so everything works together, not in silos.
  • Benefits include better customer experiences, stronger brand recognition, more personalization, higher loyalty, and increased revenue.
  • To get started, map your customer journey, centralize data, integrate your channels, and follow clear brand guidelines for a consistent feel.

What Is Omnichannel Marketing?

Omnichannel marketing is a marketing strategy that seamlessly integrates all of a business’s marketing channels to create a cohesive shopping experience for each customer. 

As customers move through the sales funnel, an omnichannel strategy ensures all touchpoints seamlessly speak to each other so that no matter where a potential customer makes contact with your business, it feels like the same channel.

Here’s how it looks in practice.

A customer might check out a product on a brand’s website. They decide they’re not yet ready to make a purchase, but then they’re met with ads for that product across different social media channels. They can easily click through and buy the product, even though it’s not the same channel they initially used to shop.

This is what omnichannel looks like on a small scale. At enterprise scale, the same idea gets bigger. Your teams share a single customer profile, so service reps, store staff, and ads all see the same context. POS and ecommerce pull from the same inventory. Loyalty rewards apply online and in-store. Buy online, pick up in store just works. 

That’s an omnichannel marketing strategy: connect data and creative across channels so customers move forward, and your revenue does too.

Omnichannel Marketing vs. Multichannel Marketing

Before we dive deeper into what omnichannel looks like, let’s talk about how it differs from a similar tactic called multichannel marketing. Both obviously occur across different channels. But they work slightly differently.

Omnichannel marketing uses multiple channels, but it ensures that all channels are integrated seamlessly, creating a connected experience. Meanwhile, multichannel marketing just occurs across different channels, treating them more as separate entities than trying to build an interconnected ecosystem.

A graphic comparing multichannel and omnichannel.

Source

Multichannel is useful for quick reach and simple campaigns. Think one-off promos, early tests, short cycles, or when tools and data are basic.

Omnichannel is best for cross-device shoppers, syncing online and in-store experiences, and longer, more complex customer journeys.

Bottom line: start with multichannel, then shift to an omnichannel marketing strategy when you’re ready to connect data and deliver one continuous experience.

Why Omnichannel Marketing Is Important

Your buyers don’t stick to one platform. They search on Google, watch a review on YouTube, see a Reel, ask ChatGPT for a product comparison, click an email, price-check on Amazon, and walk into a store. If you only optimize for organic search, you miss the moments that push customers to act.

Omnichannel marketing lets you show up at key points in the customer journey and connects those touchpoints so the experience feels cohesive. Your ad matches the email. The site matches the app. The cart follows the customer across devices. Service and store teams see the same history. That consistency builds trust and cuts friction, which leads to more sales.

An omnichannel marketing strategy also spreads risk. If one channel slows down, you still have paid social, SMS, marketplaces, and retail working together. 

It improves measurement, too. Shared data tells you which mix drives first purchases, repeat orders, and higher order values.

People discover, compare, and buy across many platforms. Brands that coordinate messages and data across those platforms win more often. If you’re serious about growth in today’s digital world, build an omnichannel marketing strategy so your brand is clear, consistent, and present at every step.

Benefits of Omnichannel Marketing

Omnichannel marketing has a number of benefits. These advantages can provide your business with better results and happier customers.

Think of omnichannel marketing as the glue that holds your entire shopping experience together.

Improved Customer Experience

Omnichannel marketing focuses on creating an interconnected experience no matter where your customers are interacting with your business. Because of this, it creates a seamless customer experience that’s vastly better than if the different channels couldn’t speak to each other.

Here’s what that means for customers: progress carries over (carts, wish lists, support tickets), and context follows them from device to device. If they ask a question on chat, your email workflow resurfaces it. If they browse a size in the app, your site remembers. 

Abandon cart emails are great examples of omnichannel marketing in action. A customer visits your website and adds an item to their cart. They leave your site without completing the purchase. That action is sent to and triggers an ‘Abandon cart’ workflow in your email marketing platform. 

They receive an automated email with the item in their cart and some encouraging words and/or a discount to get them to complete the purchase. 

An abandoned cart email example.

Source

An omnichannel marketing strategy reduces repeats, dead ends, and mixed messages so buyers feel understood and move forward faster.

Better Brand Awareness

Creating a consistent experience across platforms (including in-store) makes it easier for customers to recognize your brand. Plus, as more people have positive omnichannel experiences with your brand, they’re more likely to share it with their friends and family, boosting word-of-mouth referrals and awareness.

Consistency is a key component of a strong brand strategy. When people see the same appearance, messaging, and offers across channels, recall and trust in your brand grows. Pair that with targeted campaigns across search, social, and marketplaces, and your brand shows up more often for relevant terms with the same look and promise.

Personalization

When your marketing channels speak to each other, you’re presented with even more opportunities for gathering customer data that can be used to personalize experiences across all channels, and not just the ones they’ve used before. This personalization is just another way to improve the overall experience with your business, making it easier for customers to work with you.

Use customer actions, like product views, cart adds, and website searches to customize messaging. Recommend items that fit past behavior, pause promos after a purchase, and nudge at the right time (not just more often). Keep consent and preferences front and center. 

Done well, omnichannel personalization feels like help, not hype.

Customer Loyalty

As customers discover how easy it is to work with your business, they’re more likely to stick around and continue to buy from you again and again. Why bother finding a competitor if your business has created such a seamless shopping experience?

Loyalty grows when every interaction feels smooth and familiar. Connect rewards across store and online, recognize returning customers, and close the loop on issues fast. 

A members-only deal from Adidas.

Use lifecycle triggers, like welcome, re-engagement, and win-back, to stay relevant without spamming. The easier you make repeat buying, the less tempted people are to price-shop elsewhere.

Competitive Advantage

Just like we mentioned, there’s no need for customers to shop around and test out your competitors if you’ve provided such a great shopping experience. Omnichannel marketing gives you a major competitive advantage, fueling more of your target audience to head straight to you rather than others in your industry.

Most teams still run channels in silos. You’ll move faster because your data, inventory, and messaging are already in sync. Creative can be reused, offers are consistent, and measurement is clearer. That speed compounds into lower costs and better customer outcomes, an edge that’s hard to copy without a true omnichannel strategy.

Higher Revenue and Conversion Rates

Naturally, if people are sharing their positive experiences, sticking around longer, and ultimately having a great relationship with your brand, you’re going to reap those benefits in the form of higher revenue and conversion rates. Which is the ultimate goal, right?

More relevance and less friction mean more adds to cart, more checkouts, and bigger orders. Omnichannel marketing also improves attribution, so you can double down on the mix that actually drives purchases and repeat business. 

Over time, the flywheel kicks in: Better data leads to sharper targeting, which leads to stronger retention, which leads to higher revenue.

Best Practices for an Effective Omnichannel Marketing Strategy

Your goal is simple: build an omnichannel marketing strategy that feels consistent everywhere and moves people forward. Start with what customers do today, not what you wish they did. Then connect the channels and tools you already use, fill the gaps, and measure what actually changes behavior.

Follow along with these steps to learn more about creating an effective omnichannel marketing strategy that will boost your customer satisfaction.

Collect & Analyze Customer Data

Start by centralizing truth. Pull website analytics, email metrics, ad performance, POS data, support logs, and audience sentiment into one view so you can spot insights like:

  • The channels your customers prefer to use when interacting with businesses
  • Which devices your customers spend the most time on
  • The types of messaging that seem to resonate most with them
  • How your customers feel about your current shopping experience

Then, pick an attribution model that fits your business. Each model is tailored to different types of customer journeys and campaign goals. 

For example, position-based tracking is better for businesses with longer sales cycles, like B2B and lead gen. And data-based attribution is great for omnichannel ecommerce strategies, marketplaces, subscription apps, and retailers with steady traffic.

Check out the graphic below for a full breakdown of attribution models you can use to measure the success of your omnichannel marketing efforts. 

A graphic showing types of attribution models.

Map Out the Customer Journey

Your next step is to map out your current customer journey. Outline each step that a Your next step is to map out your current customer journey. Outline each step that a customer would have to take from first discovering your business all the way to becoming a repeat customer. 

As Matthew Santos, SVP of Products and Strategy at NP Accel, explains, “Customer journey mapping involves visualizing a customer’s various touchpoints with your brand, from initial awareness to purchase and beyond. By understanding these touchpoints, you can identify which channels are most important at different stages of the journey.”

To create your map:

  • Identify your customers: Identify your customers’ names, addresses, and other demographic information. Look in your CRM or use a current buyer persona.
  • Understand their pain points: What drives your customers to make a purchase? What challenges do they want to solve?
  • Find out where they hang out: What platforms do your customers use during the purchase process?
  • Track the conversion path: How do most of your customers convert? Their path is unlikely to be straight. They might visit your website, view your Instagram reels, and then purchase in-person, in your store. Aim to define the most common paths.

In the end, your customer journey map might look something like this:

Customer journey map

Source

Choose & Integrate Your Channels

Now it’s time to identify and integrate your different sales and marketing channels, which could include:

  • Social media
  • SMS marketing
  • Email marketing
  • Your website and online store
  • A physical store
  • A mobile app

Make sure to include all channels that you’re currently using to reach your target audience plus any channels you’ve discovered your customers prefer. 

For example, you might not have previously incorporated SMS messaging into your overarching marketing strategy, but your customer data analysis showed you that your target audience prefers that method of communication.

Once you’ve selected the different channels you’ll use to communicate, market, and sell to your customers, it’s time to get them to work together. 

To properly integrate your marketing avenues and create a successful omnichannel strategy, you’ll need the right technology. Some tools to consider include:

  • CRM: A CRM can help you store customer information so that it’s accessible across channels. It can also help you segment out your audience to create even more tailored and personalized experiences. Omnisend is a great option for building out specific segmentations.
Omnichannel segments feature information.

Source

  • Marketing Automation Software: To build an effective omnichannel marketing strategy, you need marketing automation tools to engage more on social media, send scheduled emails, or move users through the conversion process. Many tools you already use, like email marketing, CRMs, and social media management, have built-in automation features. You can also use a tool like Zapier to build custom triggers.
Marketing automation workflow in Zaps.

Source

  • Social Media Management Tools: This type of tool can make it easy to communicate with your audience across various platforms. Get access to a social inbox that puts all conversations across all platforms in one single messaging dashboard. Use auto-replies or canned responses that ensure communication is consistent across the board. Hootsuite and Sprout Social are both great options to consider for your social media management.
The SproutSocial interface.

Source

Customer Data Platforms (CDPs): A CDP pulls data from all your touchpoints—site, app, ads, email, POS—into a single customer profile. That unified view makes it easier to segment audiences, personalize campaigns, and keep experiences consistent across channels. Tools like Segment or mParticle help you clean, connect, and activate data without needing a dev team for every change.

The Data Cloud marketplace.

Source

Create & Follow Brand Guidelines

Once you’ve set up the right tools and integrated all your channels, it’s time to make sure your teams are all on the same page. If your customer support team is using different messaging than your social media team, your overall strategy is going to feel disjointed.

By creating documented brand guidelines that cover how your customer-facing teams should be communicating with customers and talking about your products, you can ensure your channels feel connected.

Your brand guidelines should include things like:

  • Guidance for brand visuals, like logos, imagery, colors, and graphics
  • How to handle customer support issues or questions to create positive and consistent experiences
  • Tone and voice guidelines with “do’s and don’t’s” examples
  • Copy guidance with channel-specific examples (e.g. email subject lines vs. educational blog content)
  • Legal guidelines on what you can and cannot discuss, if applicable

Share your brand guidelines with your entire team and make sure everyone is familiar with them. Give constructive feedback when you see people straying. 

Brand consistency is the glue that holds an omnichannel marketing strategy together.

Test & Measure Your Efforts

After sharing your brand guidelines across your company and implementing your omnichannel approach, it’s time to test everything out. Run through each of your marketing channels the way you might if you were a new customer to make sure the experience feels seamless from discovery to purchase.

Then, think about how you’ll measure success. 

In omnichannel marketing, you need to consider metrics that touch every part of the funnel. For example: 

  • Discovery: Impressions, educational blog traffic, mentions in the media
  • Consideration: Engagement on social media, product views, visits to company pages
  • Conversion: Orders, checkout rate, CPA
  • Loyalty: Repeat rate, time between orders, customer reviews

Use clean UTM rules, consistent naming, and dashboards that show both channel and journey views. Review the data weekly for anomalies, monthly for trends, and quarterly for bigger bets.

3 Examples of Omnichannel Marketing

Let’s look at a few examples of omnichannel marketing in practice so you can get an idea of what this could look like for your own business.

1. Sephora

Sephora offers an amazing omnichannel experience for its customers. First-time customers are able to sign up for a Sephora account using their phone number, and then keep track of all purchases there.

Customers can figure out what they’ve purchased before and when, which makes it easier for them to restock on the products they love. It also makes it easier for the marketing team to tailor messaging and special offers to each customer’s unique shopping preferences.

Sephora shopping cart

Sephora accounts also track customer rewards points, as well as when their birthday month is. Whether they make a purchase online or in the store, Sephora sends the customer a little sample-size product as a birthday gift.

This omnichannel strategy makes shopping with Sephora feel easy and personal, no matter where someone is making a purchase.

2. Starbucks

The Starbucks app makes for an amazing omnichannel experience that the coffee brand’s customers love. Not only can customers order through the app then pick up in a nearby store, they can also reload gift cards, pay in-store, earn and redeem rewards, and more.

Starbucks Summer Berry drink page

The app also makes it extremely easy to find stores near you and personalizes its offerings based on the local weather. Starbucks is already a wildly popular coffee chain, but their omnichannel marketing strategy helps boost sales even more.

3. Target

Target is another great example of what omnichannel should look like. Again, customers can create an account and easily track past purchases so they can reorder products again and again with ease.

Target also has its own rewards program called Target Circle that allows users to rack up rewards they can put towards future purchases.

Target rewards program page

But one of the best things about Target’s omnichannel strategy is that customers can check online if a product is in stock at stores near them. And it’s wildly accurate, even during huge sales events like Black Friday. 

The Future of Omnichannel

Omnichannel isn’t standing still. AI, automation, and privacy changes are reshaping how brands connect with customers. Search engines and social platforms now answer questions directly, sometimes before a click. In fact, nearly 60% of searches result in zero clicks. 

So how does this apply to an omnichannel marketing strategy?

For marketers, it means two things. 

First, you’ll need stronger first-party data—think email lists, purchase history, loyalty programs—to fuel your targeting as third-party cookies fade. Second, you’ll need systems that can use that data in real time, adjusting offers and content across every channel without manual work.

Expect channels themselves to keep expanding. Voice assistants, connected TV, chat apps, and even in-car systems are becoming part of the customer journey. The brands that win will be the ones that stay consistent across all of them.

The future of omnichannel marketing is smarter, faster, and more connected. Get your data house in order now so you can adapt as AI and new platforms evolve.

FAQs

What is omnichannel marketing?

Omnichannel marketing is the practice of connecting all your marketing and sales channels so customers get one seamless experience. Instead of each channel running in isolation, they work together. For example, a shopper might browse on mobile, add to cart on desktop, and finish in-store, with their data and offers synced across all steps. This consistency builds trust, reduces friction, and increases conversions by making every touchpoint feel like part of the same journey. 

What is the difference between multichannel and omnichannel marketing?

Multichannel means using multiple platforms, but each runs separately. Omnichannel connects those platforms so the experience is unified, not siloed. 

How to implement omnichannel marketing?

Start by collecting customer data, mapping the journey, and picking channels your audience uses most. Then integrate tools like CRM, automation, and analytics to sync messaging and measure results.  

Create Your Omnichannel Marketing Strategy Today

Your customers want an omnichannel experience, so it’s your job to give it to them. Figure out how to make your channels work together so your customers get a personalized, consistent, and seamless experience every time they shop with your business. 

Sounds like a lot, but if you follow the steps above, you can start to build a more cohesive journey for your customers. And if you’re looking for additional help, an omnichannel marketing agency like NP Digital can bring your strategy to life. 

Read more at Read More

ChatGPT Shopping: “Buy Now” in AI Chat Is Here

ChatGPT recommends products — complete with photos, pricing, and purchase links — to its 700 million weekly users.

And now customers can complete purchases without leaving the chat.

BIG deal.

But will ChatGPT recommend your products?

That’s not automatic. And you can’t pay for placement.

What you can do is optimize your site so ChatGPT understands what you sell, trusts your brand, and surfaces your products when buyers search. This guide shows you how.

You’ll learn the eight-step framework for getting featured in ChatGPT Shopping.

I also spoke with Leigh McKenzie, Backlinko’s Head of Growth and founder of the ecommerce brand UnderFit, to get his insights on what’s actually working.

First, let’s look at how ChatGPT decides which products make the cut.

How ChatGPT Shopping Works

ChatGPT Shopping kicks in automatically for some shopping intent prompts.

While it doesn’t fire every time, I found it appears more often than not after testing 100+ prompts.

The key? Typing a prompt with clear buying intent.

Like “e-bikes that can handle potholes.”

ChatGPT – Prompt with clear buying intent

Instead of just explaining things or offering advice, ChatGPT Shopping recommends specific products.

This includes product images, pricing, and links to online stores and websites where users can make a purchase.

Side note: The ChatGPT Shopping experience isn’t consistent. Even with the same prompt, the carousel may (or may not) show. It can also appear at the top, middle, or bottom of the chat. This variability suggests the feature is still evolving.


If your store gets recommended, countless high-intent shoppers will see your products.

For example, when I tested the e-bike query, ChatGPT gave me a brief explanation of what features to prioritize.

But it also provided a visual product carousel with eight products, each in its own card with key details.

(It looks similar to Google Shopping ads, except you don’t have to pay for them.)

ChatGPT – Brief explanation of features & visual carousel

Clicking on any card opens a side panel with:

  • Additional product photos
  • A list of stores, prices, and direct links
  • A short “why you might like this” summary
  • Sentiment pulled from reviews and forums

From there, users simply click “Visit” to reach the merchant’s product page.

ChatGPT – Visit to reach merchant product page

But this experience is changing.

As of September 2025, OpenAI is rolling out Instant Checkout — a feature that lets shoppers buy directly inside ChatGPT.

This is a huge shift.

ChatGPT is no longer just a product discovery tool. It’s a full shopping destination.

ChatGPT – Full shoping destination

Right now, Instant Checkout is only available to Etsy sellers in the United States.

But OpenAI plans to expand this feature to Shopify merchants and other countries soon.

Not on either platform?

They’re also accepting applications for merchants to build their own integrations. (More on this in Step #7.)

How ChatGPT Selects Products to Recommend

A shopper describes what they’re looking for (“running shoes with arch support under $150”), and ChatGPT’s AI goes to work.

ChatGPT – AI process the description

It scans the web for the most relevant products based on that request.

And weighs details like product names, descriptions, features, reviews, brand authority, and other signals to find the best matches.

If your product checks the right boxes — and the information on your site is clear and crawlable — it has a chance to be recommended.

ChatGPT may also consider the user’s location and preferences when making recommendations.

ChatGPT – Consider the user's location

Ultimately, all product recommendations must also pass through OpenAI’s safety systems.

This filters out low-quality, misleading, or unsafe products.

So, what does all of this mean for you?

ChatGPT Shopping is evolving fast — and the brands that keep up will win the most visibility.

Here’s how to ensure ChatGPT can understand, trust, and recommend your products.

1. Add Structured Schema Markup to Your Site

ChatGPT needs structured data to understand what you sell.

Schema markup is code that labels key details on your product pages (and website as a whole): name, price, description, availability, reviews, and more.

Schema Markup Code

It turns raw HTML into data AI tools can parse instantly.

Without it, ChatGPT (and other AI systems) have to guess what’s on your page.

With it, they see clean, structured information they can confidently include in product recommendations.

At a minimum, your product schema should include:

  • Product: Name, description, brand, image, and identifiers (GTIN, SKU, MPN)
  • Offer: Price, currency, availability, and URL
  • Review: Individual reviews with reviewer names and ratings

Detailed SEO Extension – Able Carry – Schema

It may look intimidating, but many content management systems — like WordPress, Shopify, and Wix — offer plugins or built-in tools that generate the markup for you automatically.

RankMath – Schema Generator

Once your markup is in place, test that it’s working correctly using Google’s Rich Results Test or Schema.org’s validator.

These tools make it easy to check that your structured data is valid, visible, and error-free.

Validator – Schema – Backlinko

Pro tip: Go beyond the schema basics. Add AggregateRating for average review scores or FAQPage markup to answer common buyer questions. The more context you provide, the easier it is for AI to surface your product in response to specific prompts.


2. Create and Maintain a High-Quality Product Feed

A product feed is a structured file that packages up your product details and sends them to platforms like Google Merchant Center, Shopify, and Etsy.

It includes details like titles, prices, availability, images, links, and more.

CSV – Product Feed Example

ChatGPT may use data from major platforms like Google to decide which products to recommend.

Pro tip: Want to add your product feed directly to ChatGPT? OpenAI will notify interested merchants when this feature is available. Fill out the Merchant Application form for consideration.


For example, if your Google Shopping feed is outdated, incomplete, or inaccurate, ChatGPT may return bad information about your products.

Or skip recommending them entirely.

That’s why a high-quality, up-to-date product feed is critical.

Side note: If you’re on an ecommerce platform like WooCommerce or Shopify, feeds are usually created automatically.


But keeping feeds accurate is easier said than done.

There are a lot of moving parts, like site updates, refresh schedules, and third-party tools.

And it only takes one slip for mismatches to creep in.

Here are a few common product feed issues — and how to fix them:

Product Feed Problem Why It Happens Fix
Price Mismatch Feed not refreshed, sync delay Enable daily/real-time feed updates. Use one consistent pricing source.
Inaccurate availability Inventory updates on site, but feed refresh lags Sync stock levels in real-time whenever possible. Double-check before campaigns.
Wrong or Truncated Title Feed title auto-truncated or different from H1/meta Align feed titles with on-page H1/meta. Keep product names consistent.
Incorrect image Feed defaults to first gallery image Set hero/product image as primary in CMS and feed
Missing reviews Reviews hidden in JS or not in schema Add Review and AggregateRating schema in HTML
Conflicting schema Multiple apps/plugins overwrite each other Use one schema source. Validate with Schema.org or Google’s Rich Results test

Automation keeps most updates in sync. And manual checks before major launches or sales help catch anything that may slip through.

Here’s how Leigh maintains a balance of the two for his ecommerce store:

“I keep all my product data in a spreadsheet. Whenever I change a product detail, I update it there first. WooCommerce uses that data to update my site’s pages and schema automatically. Then, Channable takes the same spreadsheet and syncs those updates into my product feeds. That way, my site and my feeds are always pulling from the same source, so everything stays consistent.”


3. Make Sure AI Bots Can Read Your Site

If ChatGPT can’t read your site, it can’t recommend your products.

Two simple technical issues block many ecommerce sites from showing up: hidden content and restricted crawlers.

Check for JavaScript

Many AI bots — including ChatGPT — still struggle with content that only loads via JavaScript.

If key details aren’t in the page’s raw HTML, the bot might never see them.

This includes your product descriptions, prices, and images.

Eek.

Here’s how to check if that’s happening:

  1. Pull up a product page on your website or online store
  2. In Google Chrome, go to “Settings” > “Privacy and security” > Site Settings
  3. Under “Content,” click “JavaScript” and toggle “Don’t allow sites to use JavaScript”
  4. Reload the product page you’re testing

Chrome – Settings – Content – JavaScript behavior

If your product details disappear, it means they’re only loading through JavaScript.

To fix this, work with a developer to ensure all essential information is in your site’s raw HTML.

Assess Your Robots.txt File

Your robots.txt file can also block AI crawlers.

This small file tells bots which parts of your site they can (and can’t) crawl.

New York Times – Robots text file

By default, most sites already allow all bots, including ChatGPT’s crawler, OAI-SearchBot.

But it’s still worth double-checking.

Here’s how:

First, go to yourdomain.com/robots.txt. Then, look for a rule like this:

code icon
User-agent: GPTBot
Disallow: /

And this:

code icon
User-agent: OAI-SearchBot
Disallow: /

If it says “Disallow,” then ChatGPT is unable to crawl your site.

GPTBot – Disallow

You (or your dev team) can fix this issue by changing it to “allow.”

4. Write Product Copy That Matches Real Buyer Prompts

ChatGPT matches products to prompts by language, not keywords.

So, if your product copy doesn’t sound like the way people talk, it may not surface in shopping results.

The goal: write the way buyers phrase their prompts.

Find the Language Your Buyers Use

You don’t have to guess how your customers talk.

Use research tools like:

  • Google’s People Also Ask
  • AnswerThePublic
  • Keyword tools like Semrush, Ahrefs, and Moz

Look for modifiers that mimic real queries — terms like “best,” “for beginners,” “eco-friendly,” or “kid-friendly.”

People also ask – Laptop for kids learning

Tools like Semrush’s AI SEO Toolkit show you the actual prompts people type into AI engines.

Semrush – AI SEO Prompt Research – Lingerie

So, instead of manually guessing or testing one by one, you get a ready-made list of conversational queries buyers already use.

Once you understand how your audience speaks, weave the terms naturally into your product titles and descriptions.

This will increase the odds of your products showing up in ChatGPT when shoppers search.

Write Product Titles That Match Buyer Intent

When you’re writing copy, pay special attention to your product titles.

They often feed directly into the shopping carousel.

And they’re the first thing shoppers see before deciding to click.

ChatGPT – Product titles

The golden rule: Lead with what matters most to your audience.

If trust drives decisions — like in categories such as laptops or smartphones — put your brand front and center.

If features, benefits, or use cases are more important, focus on those instead.

Use this simple formula:

[Main Benefit or Feature] + [Product Type] (+ [Brand] if it builds trust)


On Leigh’s site, for example, his titles highlight what buyers care about most: product benefits.

That’s why they’re structured as Benefit (Invisible) + Product Type (Undershirt).

Underfit – Invisible undershirt

But when brand recognition is vital to trust, it makes sense to include the brand name.

Like this product title for a Sony home theater:

Crutchfield – Title include brand name

Don’t worry about cramming every detail into the title.

Most ecommerce platforms give you multiple fields for product info. Use those strategically to sprinkle in conversational keywords.

Make Product Descriptions Feel Like Real Answers

Titles get people to click. Descriptions get them to buy.

This is where you expand on features, benefits, and use cases — all in plain, natural language.

For example, UnderFit’s product copy mirrors the words buyers use when searching for an undershirt.

  • “Stay tucked”
  • “All-day comfort”
  • “Soft, breathable feel”

Underfit – Meta product description as answer

These words aren’t filler — they’re search terms.

Which means they’re likely the same language people use when prompting ChatGPT.

Keyword Magic Tool – Undershirts – Keywords

5. Feature Your Value Proposition Prominently

Your product’s value proposition needs to be clear and visible at the top of your product page.

This ensures ChatGPT immediately understands:

  • What the product is
  • Why it’s better than the alternatives

Huel – Complete Nutrition Bar

But that’s not enough.

The rest of your page should support and reinforce that promise.

This gives ChatGPT a complete picture of your product.

And helps it see your product as the best fit for the query.

This means every section — features, benefits, reviews, specs — should back up your value proposition with proof and detail.

Huel’s Black Edition product page is a great example of this in action.

The value proposition is right under the product title:

“High Protein Complete Meal.”

Huel – High-protein complete meal

This instantly explains:

  • What it is (a complete meal)
  • Why it matters (high protein)

The image reinforces this by highlighting complementary copy:

“This is a meal. Not a protein shake” and “40g protein per meal.”

The product description repeats the promise yet again: “40 grams of protein.”

But it also adds details like “27 essential vitamins and minerals.”

Huel – Black Edition

This repetition is exactly what you want.

While you can (and should) use word variety, your page should tell one clear story from top to bottom.

Explain what the product is, why it’s valuable, and how it delivers on that promise.

So, audit your site.

If copy and images don’t reinforce your core message, rework them until it does.

The more consistent and focused your messaging is, the easier it is for ChatGPT to understand (and recommend) your products.

6. Build Strong Authority Beyond Your Site

ChatGPT doesn’t just look at your product page when deciding what to recommend.

It cross-checks authority signals from across the web to figure out whether your brand (and your product) are trustworthy enough to recommend.

These signals include:

  • Reviews and ratings: Platforms like Amazon, Trustpilot, Google, Yelp, and niche retailers
  • Community sentiment: Real-world feedback from Reddit, Quora, Facebook groups, and niche forums
  • Editorial coverage: Authoritative sites like Wirecutter, TechRadar, gift guides, and industry blogs
  • Awards and certifications: Respected organizations that serve as independent trust markers

How ChatGPT Decides Your Product's Credibility

One way to see which sources matter most for your brand is to run a manual check in ChatGPT.

Type a shopping prompt into the tool, scroll to the answer, and click “Sources.”

ChatGPT – Shopping prompt sources

The links you see there are the sites that ChatGPT used to pull its recommendations.

(And, by extension, the sites it trusts.)

For example, when I asked for a “yoga mat with serious grip for hot yoga,” ChatGPT cited:

  • Niche authority sites like EverydayYoga.com and BrettLarkin.com — smaller but highly trusted in the yoga gear space
  • Mainstream review outlets like New York Magazine and People.com
  • Community threads on Reddit, providing authentic, anecdotal reviews

ChatGPT – Sources as roadmap

Use the sources as your roadmap.

Target them with outreach strategies like expert quotes, partnerships, and co-branded content.

Can’t land mentions on the exact sites ChatGPT cited? Go after similar ones with comparable authority.

And build your presence on community platforms, too.

A strong showing on Reddit, Quora, and niche Facebook groups can boost your brand’s credibility.

7. Sign Up for ChatGPT Instant Checkout

Instant Checkout lets shoppers go from product recommendation to purchase without ever leaving ChatGPT.

Once they find something they like, they can confirm details, pay, and place an order — all within the same chat window.

(Hashtag mind blown)

Instant Checkout currently supports single-item purchases in the U.S. on Etsy.

(But Shopify integration is coming soon.)

If you’re on either platform, you’re in luck. Eligibility is automatic.

For everyone else?

You’ll need to apply and integrate with OpenAI’s Agentic Commerce Protocol (ACP).

Translation: Roll up your sleeves. There’s work to do.

Here’s what you can do now.

Start by filling out OpenAI’s merchant application form.

ChatGPT – Merchants

This lets OpenAI know you want in.

They’re onboarding merchants on a rolling basis and will reach out when you’re accepted.

Once you’re in the pipeline, you’ll need to:

  • Provide a structured product feed that meets OpenAI’s product feed specs. Leigh recommends starting with your existing Google feed and updating it as needed to meet OpenAI’s requirements.
  • Enable ACP checkout. ACP lets ChatGPT place and complete orders in your system. If you’re on Stripe, setup can be as simple as one line of code. If not, you can still integrate using Stripe’s Shared Payment Token API or the Delegated Payments Spec — no provider switch required.
  • Connect your payment provider. You’ll still process transactions and remain the merchant of record.
  • Pass certification requirements. OpenAI requires sandbox testing and end-to-end checks before you go live.

Pro tip: Even if ChatGPT Instant Checkout isn’t available for your store yet, preparing your product data, feeds, and backend now will help you move faster when it is. This should give you a head start as this feature gains popularity.


8. Track Your ChatGPT Visibility

It’s not enough to show up in ChatGPT Shopping.

You also need to measure how well you’re performing.

Start with tracking traffic.

The easiest way is through OpenAI’s built-in UTM tag.

code icon
utm_source=chatgpt.com

This is code that OpenAI automatically adds to all outbound links. And looks like this:

Open AI – Outbound links

Set up a custom segment in Google Analytics to track and analyze ChatGPT traffic to your site.

Once that’s done, look for patterns:

  • Is ChatGPT traffic increasing month over month — or slowing down?
  • How does the conversion rate compare to other channels?
  • Do visitors stick around or bounce right away?

Side note: Not every ChatGPT mention will be traceable. Some users see your product in a chat and search your brand directly on Google instead of clicking. Look for spikes in branded search traffic or direct visits to gauge the broader impact of LLMs.


But traffic only tells you what happens after people click.

You also need to measure what happens before — specifically, which prompts surface your products.

To do this, it helps to understand the kinds of prompts shoppers type.

Most fall into four buckets.

  • Price-based: “Best dog food bowl under $20,” “luxury ceramic dog bowl”
  • Use-case: “Dog bowl for messy eaters,” “raised bowls for large breeds”
  • Feature-based: “Non-slip stainless steel dog bowl,” “slow feeder BPA-free”
  • Problem-solution: “Dog bowl that keeps ants out,” “dog bowl that doesn’t slide on tile”

Shopping Prompt Patterns

Think of these buckets as templates.

Test prompts in each category and ask yourself:

  • Does your product show up? If so, are the details accurate?
  • If not, who does — and why? (Are their reviews fresher, their authority stronger, or their copy closer to buyer language?)

Repeatedly run these checks to gather more data.

You’ll learn which prompts lead to product mentions, how your LLM visibility changes, and how buyers talk about your brand.

Rather automate this process?

Tools like Semrush’s AI SEO Toolkit let you:

  • Track which prompts surface your products
  • Monitor brand sentiment
  • Compare visibility in different platforms

Semrush – AI SEO Overview – Babyletto

Beyond ChatGPT Shopping: Your AI Visibility Playbook

There isn’t a magic formula for getting ChatGPT to recommend your products.

But the brands that consistently get recommended all have three things in common:

  • A rock-solid technical foundation
  • Clear, buyer-focused product copy
  • Strong trust signals across the web

Get these right, and you’re not just optimizing for ChatGPT Shopping.

You’re setting yourself up to be discovered across EVERY AI platform out there.

Want to make sure your foundation is bulletproof?

Read SEO vs. GEO, AEO, LLMO: What Marketers Need to Know for an overview of the most important visibility strategies shaping AI search.

The post ChatGPT Shopping: “Buy Now” in AI Chat Is Here appeared first on Backlinko.

Read more at Read More

What Is Paid Media?

Turning paid ads into profit is a proven path to scalable, predictable growth.

When you nail it, paid media gives you a steady stream of customers, without depending on Google’s latest update or social media’s shifting algorithms. In fact, digital ad spend hit $259B in 2024 and is expected to keep growing.

But which channels are right for you? How can you weave them together into an effective strategy? And what’s the best way to measure your performance?

Here’s what you need to know.

Key Takeaways

  • Paid media is any form of advertising you pay to place on platforms you don’t own, like Google ads, Facebook posts, banner placements, or influencer partnerships.
  • The big three categories are display ads (banners and videos that stand out), native ads (sponsored posts that blend in), and traditional media (billboards, TV, radio).
  • Search ads and influencer partnerships are the most trusted paid channels because they catch people with intent or leverage existing relationships.
  • A winning campaign has seven steps: get your team aligned, set specific goals, budget for real costs (not just ad spend), know your audience, pick the right channels, create compelling ads, and optimize relentlessly.
  • Track five key metrics: return on ad spend (ROAS), overall return on investment (ROI), cost per click (CPC), impressions, and click-through rate (CTR). These tell you whether you’re making money or just spending it.

Paid Media Basics

Paid media is any kind of promotion that meets two criteria: it happens on a platform you don’t own, and you pay for it.

Banner ads are everywhere, like the ones shown in the Wired article below. 

An example of a banner ad.

Paid media drives real revenue, whether you’re running a startup or managing a global brand.

In research from my team at NP Digital, we found that paid ads make up a meaningful chunk of revenue across businesses of all sizes.

A chart showing percentage of revenue from paid ads by company size.

Paid Media vs. Earned Media vs. Owned Media

Think of marketing like a three-legged stool. The three legs here are paid, earned, and owned media.

Understanding how they work and how they work together can help you build a strategy that covers your blind spots and scales over time.

As mentioned earlier, paid media is any promotional placement you pay for. Think search ads, social ads, banner placements, influencer partnerships, and more.

Earned media is unpaid publicity that your business receives from other people and websites. It’s what others say about your brand mentions in news articles, influencer shoutouts, customer reviews, backlinks, or viral social shares.

Owned media is the stuff you fully control. Your website, blogs, social media accounts, newsletters, and email list, fall into this category. You manage the content, the experience, and the message.

Here’s how they fit together:

  • Paid media helps you get visibility fast, especially when you’re just starting out or entering new markets
  • Owned media builds trust, it’s where your brand message lives
  • Earned media amplifies both. It kicks in when people start talking about what you’re already doing well

The best campaigns use all three. Paid gets attention. Owned keeps it. Earned multiplies it.

Categories and Examples: Paid Media in the Wild

Paid media is evolving fast. Search, social, video, and display are table stakes, but newer formats are gaining traction too, including ads inside large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT and Gemini.

Even with all this growth, most formats fall into three core categories: display, native, and traditional. There’s often overlap between them, but these labels help keep things simple.

  • Display ads: These are visually distinct image, video, and text ads that appear alongside content on the web. Website banners, YouTube ads, and interstitial pop-ups are all examples. 
  • Native ads: These are ads that fit within the flow of content and are often indistinguishable from it at first glance. Influencer recommendations, advertorials, and sponsorships are well-known forms of native advertising. 
  • Traditional media: Commercials, billboards, and direct mail are examples of traditional media. You don’t get the same tracking or targeting you’d see with digital, but these channels still play a role in large-scale brand awareness.

Now that we’ve covered the broad categories, let’s break down some of the most common paid media channels, and where each one fits.

Search Engine Advertising (Search Engine Marketing)

 Google, Bing, Yahoo, and even Amazon.

While Google Ads dominates the space, Bing Ads (now part of Microsoft Advertising) can offer lower CPCs (cost per click) and a different audience, especially for B2B brands. Amazon Ads also work well for product-heavy businesses.

We found that search ads across platforms drive some of the highest conversion rates in paid media, second only to channels like LinkedIn and influencer marketing.

A graphic showing average conversion rate by channel for ads.

Here’s what the advertising process looks like:

  • Open an account with the ad network (like Google or Bing)
  • Choose the keywords you want to appear for, such as “gardener in Arizona”
  • Set your maximum bid for those keywords (top bidders appear first)
  • Create your advertisement, which will be text-based
  • Launch your campaign and let Google serve your ad on relevant SERPs

The benefit of SEM is intent. You’re targeting users who are already searching for what you offer, which puts them closer to a buying decision.

And if you’re willing to bid competitively, your ad can appear above the organic result, even above your competitors.

Here’s an example of search engine ads for the keyword “paid media consultant.” Note the “Sponsored” label, which helps users distinguish paid ads from organic results.

Search engine ads for the keyword "paid media consultant."

Third-Party Banner Ads

Banner display ads are shown on a third-party online property, usually a website or app. 

Most people think banner ads only appear at the top of pages. Not true. Inline banner ads also show in the flow of content. A banner ad is simply a square or rectangular display ad (an ad that is distinct from surrounding content).

NP Digital research shows that banner ads are the least trusted of all paid media formats, underperforming search and influencer ads significantly. 

An NP Digital graphi showing trust in advertising by channel.

That said, banner ads are good at raising brand awareness. As customers see the same ad repeated across different websites, “brand memory” strengthens. The average person needs to see a brand at least seven times before they make a purchase.

Here’s an example of a fairly conspicuous banner ad on UK news site the Daily Mail

Daily Mail website example of an ad.

The Google Display Network, the world’s biggest display network, consists of over two million websites and mobile apps that businesses can display their ads on—reaching 90 percent of web users worldwide. When someone clicks on an ad, Google Ads and whoever hosted it share the spoils.

Paid Social Media Advertising

Social media advertising is big business. The global market was worth an impressive $252.95 billion at the end of 2024, and this is set to grow in the future.

According to NP Digital research, Facebook generated over $100 billion in ad revenue last year, making it the top-performing social ad platform. Instagram followed at $70.9 billion.

NP Digital graph showing ad revenue by social network.

Here’s an example of paid media advertising on Facebook. This sponsored post is by McDonald’s and appears in relevant customers’ newsfeeds, enticing them to try their $8 Chicken McNugget Meal. These ads blend into the feed but still offer clear calls to action.

McDonald's ad for chicken nuggets and fries.

And it’s not just for B2C. In the LinkedIn ad below, Microsoft targets professionals in banking with an ebook download offer.

Microsoft Cloud ad for AI for bankers.

Social ads work because they meet people where they’re already scrolling. Nearly 60 percent of the world’s population has at least one social media account.

Even better, social platforms give you advanced targeting tools. Most platforms let you target people by age, gender, and location, as well as their hobbies and other social media accounts they follow.

Video Advertising

Video content gets more engagement than static text or images. In fact, one NP Digital study found that short-form and long-form videos accounted for 31.38% and 15.51% of all engagement, respectively.

NP Digital graph showing the type of content that generates the most engagement.

That kind of engagement makes video a powerful paid media tool, especially on platforms like YouTube, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram.

Video ads show up before or during content users are already watching.

What makes video ads effective is how they combine storytelling with visual cues. Create a stylish, funny, or cool video, and people will naturally want to discover your brand. Like display ads, videos are great for capturing people’s attention on mobile as well.

In-App Ads

In-app ads are paid placements that show up inside mobile apps while someone is using them. These can be banner ads, video ads, interstitials (full-screen takeovers), or rewarded ads where users watch a video in exchange for in-app perks.

You’ve probably seen these in gaming apps, news apps, or streaming services. They appear between levels, in feed scrolls, or before content loads.

An example of an in-app ad.

Source

These ads work well if your audience spends a lot of time on mobile, and even better if you’re targeting users by behavior, interest, or location. App data gives you targeting options you won’t always get on the open web.

Performance varies by industry, but in-app ads tend to perform best for consumer apps, entertainment, retail, and local services.

Digital Out of Home (DOOH) Ads

DOOH ads are digital billboards, transit screens, and signage in public spaces. You’ve seen them in malls, airports, gas stations, elevators, and even gym treadmills.

An example of Digital out of home ads.

Source: BMedia Group

Unlike traditional out-of-home ads, these use screens and software, which means you can update them in real time and target by location, time of day, or audience segment.

They’re a great fit for local campaigns, brand awareness pushes, or national advertisers who want visibility in high-traffic areas. You won’t get click data, but they can be effective for driving searches, visits, and offline conversions.

DOOH is especially useful when paired with mobile or geotargeted campaigns. Seeing a screen ad in a gym, then getting a related offer on your phone, is the kind of multi-touch experience that performs well.

Connected TV (CTV) and Over-the-Top (OTT) Advertising

Connected TV (CTV) and Over-the-Top (OTT) ads show up inside streaming content, on platforms like Hulu, Roku, YouTube TV, and Peacock. These are the ads you see while watching shows or movies on smart TVs, streaming boxes, or even mobile apps.

The big difference? CTV runs on television screens. OTT can run on any device.

An example of CTV and OTT platforms.

Source: Madhive

These ad formats are great for reaching cord-cutters who’ve moved away from traditional cable. They’re also more trackable than old-school TV ads, with options for targeting by location, device, behavior, and even interests.

CTV and OTT ads are especially useful for brand awareness, product launches, and retargeting. You can run short video ads in high-attention environments—and often get better completion rates than on social.

Large Language Model (LLM) Ads

LLM ads are an emerging format of paid placements that appear in large language model tools like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Perplexity. These ad types are still in the early stages, but they’re gaining momentum as AI assistants become part of everyday search behavior.

Right now, some platforms are testing sponsored response blocks or product carousels within AI-generated answers. These typically appear when users ask for recommendations, product ideas, or service comparisons.

For marketers, LLM ads offer a new way to show up during early-stage research, especially in verticals like travel, consumer products, software, and education.

Unlike traditional search ads, these placements are more dependent on content quality and relevance than keyword bidding. That gives brands with helpful, trustworthy content an advantage.

This space is still evolving, but it’s one marketers should keep a close eye on. Testing early gives you a head start as AI search platforms build out their ad offerings.

Sponsorships and Advertorials

Sponsorships, advertorials (paid articles), and influencer marketing are the most prominent examples of paid native advertising. 

These ads blend in with regular content.

Here’s an example: an article written by a company executive who’s part of Forbes Council, a paid program that entitles members to publish a set number of articles every year. It looks like editorial content, but it’s paid for, and the author gets guaranteed publishing rights.

An article written by a company executive that's  a part of Forbes Council.

Sponsored posts are everywhere, especially on social. The Instagram post below is clearly labeled as a “Paid partnership with Gymshark.” This post feels authentic because it comes from a trusted influencer, not a brand’s ad account.

Along with that, since the influencer has a loyal, engaged following—the post has over 140,000 likes—the ROI will likely be positive for the advertiser. 

An Instagram post labeled as a paid partnership with Gymshark.

What makes these work? Trust. When the message comes from someone users already trust, it tends to land better, and perform better.

Benefits of Paid Media as a Marketing Channel

Here are some key benefits of paid media for marketers:

  • You have more control. As you pay to advertise, you get more say over your ad’s appearance. Conversely, if you submit a press release to a publication, they may edit it to suit their in-house tone of voice.
  • You get immediate visibility. Search engine optimization (SEO) costs less than paid media, but it can take three to 12 months to see optimal results. With paid media, if you’re happy to pay, you can appear in front of prospective customers immediately.
  • You can measure results. Paid ads platforms offer detailed analytics so you can see how your ads are doing. Some even provide a quality score so you know which campaigns you need to optimize.
  • You can tailor your ads. You can target your ads to specific groups of customers and even tailor content toward a location. This increases the chances of people responding positively to your advertisements. Similarly, you can advise who you don’t want your ad to show to.
  • You can implement automation. You can be as hands-on or hands-off with your advertising as you want. For example, Google Ads offers automated bidding where it automatically optimizes your bids to appeal to people more likely to help you achieve your goals.

Top 5 Paid Media Metrics for Paid Media

You could track dozens of metrics, but these five matter most.

List of key metrics for paid media success.

There are lots of metrics you can use to track the success of your paid media campaigns. The risk is that you get lost in a sea of data. 

I recommend a simplified approach. One that lets you hone in on channels with potential, drop those that aren’t working, and demonstrate a clear ROI throughout. 

Here are my top five metrics for paid media:

These give you a clear picture of performance and help you decide where to optimize or pull back.

  • Return on ad spend (ROAS): ROAS tells you how much revenue you’re generating for every dollar spent on ads. It’s important to measure this separately because it’s the first thing you need to remedy if you’re not achieving a positive ROI overall. If your ROAS drops, you may need to adjust your targeting, creative, or offers.
  • Return on investment (ROI): This is the big one. If you’re generating more from your paid media campaigns than it costs to run them, you’re on the right track. Account for everything—creative costs, time managing ad accounts, A/B testing, etc.—and not just the ad platform fees.  Paid media without ROI is just spend. Use this number to decide whether to scale or pause.
  • Cost per click (CPC): This is the average amount you pay whenever someone clicks on your ad. Ideally, this should be as low as possible. It’s a ripe area for optimization.  CPC is most useful when viewed alongside CTR and conversion rate. A low CPC doesn’t help if nobody converts.
  • Impressions: This is the total number of times users see your ads. A high reach shows that you’ve chosen a channel that gives you exposure to a large audience, which is important for brand building. Low impression count? It might be time to evaluate the reach of your chosen channel.  Impressions alone won’t drive results but they show whether your ads are getting visibility in the first place.
  • Click-through rate (CTR): This is the percentage of people who see and click on your ad. A high CTR shows that people find your ad interesting and valuable.

How to Create a High-ROI Paid Media Campaign: 7 Steps

Illustration of the steps to create a high-ROI paid media campaign.

Paid media can generate traffic, leads, and revenue, but only if you approach it with a clear plan. Skipping strategy and jumping into ad spend is one of the fastest ways to burn through your budget.

Because large amounts of money are involved, caution is your ally. Many businesses burn through cash before giving up on paid media, wondering what went wrong. 

Your paid media strategy should clearly cover the following:

  • Which internal stakeholders you need to include
  • Goals you want to achieve
  • Characteristics of your audience
  • Platform-specific budgets
  • Viable paid media channels
  • Products and services you want to promote
  • Metrics for gauging success 

The process doesn’t need to be complicated. These seven steps will help you build a campaign that’s focused, efficient, and ready to scale.

1. Obtain Internal Stakeholder Buy-In

Getting buy-in goes beyond simple approval. Your team needs to fully understand what’s happening, why it matters, and what role they play.

Start by identifying who needs to be involved. At a minimum, that usually includes:

  • Marketing leadership (budget, goals, channel mix)
  • Creative teams (ad copy, assets, landing pages)
  • Analytics (conversion tracking, attribution setup)
  • Sales (if the campaign impacts lead gen or pipeline)

Don’t wait until after launch to bring these teams in. Paid media works best when everyone is aligned from day one.

Set up a short kickoff meeting to walk through the campaign plan. Cover what you’re promoting, who you’re targeting, what platforms you’re using, and how results will be reported.

It doesn’t have to be a big formal process. A shared doc, quick sync, or even a Slack thread can go a long way.

The goal is to eliminate surprises and make it easy for other teams to support the strategy.

2. Set clear goals and KPIs

You need to know exactly what you’re trying to accomplish. Metrics are important (we’ll come to those later), but goals lay the foundation. 

If you don’t know what success looks like, it’s easy to waste money. That’s why clear goals are the first thing to lock in, before budgets, platforms, or creatives.

Start by asking one question: What do you need this campaign to accomplish?

This could include:

  • Lead generation
  • Product sales
  • Free trial signups
  • App installs
  • Event registrations
  • Traffic to a specific landing page
  • Brand awareness in a new market

Be specific, not general. “More leads” isn’t a goal. “Generate 250 demo requests this quarter at a CPL (cost per lead) under $80” is. Pass your goals through the SMART test: are they Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Timely? The more detailed you make the goals, the easier they will be to achieve.

After that, you can pick KPIs and metrics that match your objective, which we will be talking about in a little bit.

3. Determine budget

With paid media campaigns, it’s essential to set a budget and stick to it. Many paid media platforms let you set a definite upper limit for your ad campaigns. If you exceed this budget, the platform stops showing your ads.

Your budget isn’t just ad spend, but it fuels the entire campaign. Along with the baseline budget for your paid media ads, you must also consider additional costs. These include ad copywriting, graphic design, and videography. If you use an agency, you’ll have to cover ongoing account management fees.

Start by figuring out what success looks like. If your goal is to get 100 leads at $50 each, you’ll need to spend at least $5,000 in ad budget alone. That’s your baseline.

Then add in the supporting costs:

  • Ad creative (copy, graphics, video, landing pages)
  • Tracking and analytics setup
  • A/B testing budget to compare variants
  • Management costs if you’re outsourcing or using tools

Different platforms also have different minimums and cost expectations. Running paid social on Facebook or Instagram can be more flexible for smaller budgets. Search ads on Google or Bing often require more competitive bidding to see traction.

Don’t spread your budget too thin. It’s better to run fewer campaigns with enough spend to test and optimize properly, instead of trying to be everywhere with limited reach.

And whatever number you start with, keep a reserve. Paid campaigns almost always need tweaking in the first few weeks.

4. Know Your Audience

The more specific you get with your targeting, the less you waste on clicks that go nowhere. If you’re paying for media on a publication or newsletter, you can compare your ideal customer profile (ICP) to the audience specs.

Research all the following points for your ICP:

  • Industry or niche
  • Company size or household income
  • Job titles or demographics
  • Location
  • Pain points and goals
  • What platforms they use most
  • What influences their buying decisions

Here’s how your audience research translates into paid media results:

  • Ad platforms: Choose based on where your audience actually spends time
  • Creative: Match tone, visuals, and messaging to their mindset
  • Offers: Promote what solves their problem, not what you want to sell
  • Targeting settings: Use demographics, behaviors, and interests to narrow reach
  • Retargeting: Build separate campaigns for cold traffic vs. returning visitors

The goal is to reach the right people at the right stage and give them a reason to click.

5. Choose Channels

Not every platform fits every goal. The right channel depends on who you’re targeting, what you’re promoting, and how fast you need results.

Take the following into consideration when choosing where to advertise:

  • Use search ads (like Google or Bing) if you’re targeting high-intent keywords. People searching are already looking for solutions.
  • Use social ads (Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn) to create demand or raise awareness. These platforms are great for targeting by interest, behavior, or job title—even if people aren’t actively searching yet.
  • Use display or retargeting to stay in front of people after they’ve engaged. These can bring users back to your site to finish what they started.

You can also learn a lot by seeing where your competitors are advertising. Tools like Meta Ad Library, Google Ads Transparency Center, and manual Google searches will show you what channels they’re using and how often they show up. Look at their messaging, creative, and landing pages. If it’s working for them, it might work for you.

Budget matters, too. Some platforms are better suited to lower ad spend. Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok can give you meaningful reach on a modest budget. Search or YouTube may require more competitive bidding to see real traction.

For smaller budgets, focus on one or two channels where your audience is most active. Don’t try to be everywhere if you can’t afford to run meaningful tests.

And don’t lock yourself into one format. The best campaigns evolve. Start with the highest-potential channel, then expand once you’re confident in performance.

6. Create Compelling Creative

Here are some of my top tips for designing paid media ads that drive clicks:

  • Don’t be afraid of being “loud”—you want an ad that customers stop and look at.
  • Keep your ad copy clear and concise. 
  • User-generated content and testimonials show prospects why existing customers love your brand.
  • If you’re using search advertising like Google Ads, take advantage of assets that tell customers more about your business for no additional cost. 
  • Run multiple variants of your ads from the get-go for some quick A/B test wins. 

But good creative is more than just how your ad looks, it also covers what you say and how fast you get to the point. Lead with the benefit, keep the message tight, and match your CTA to the user’s intent.

Make sure your offer matches the awareness stage also. A discount works well for bottom-of-funnel buyers. But for top-of-funnel, try a quiz, guide, or video to build interest first.

Finally, try to avoid launching with just one ad. Rotate in multiple headlines, formats, and visuals early so you can learn what actually converts before you scale spend.

In addition, some paid media platforms have ad libraries where you can see examples of paid media ads from your competitors. Meta (Facebook and Instagram), TikTok, LinkedIn, and Google Ads all have libraries. They’re fantastic sources of inspiration. 

7. Optimize Your Campaigns

Like all digital marketing campaigns, paid media is not something you can set and forget. When it comes to optimization, little and often wins the race. 

I recommend checking your paid media accounts at least once a week, even once a day if you’re running a short-term campaign.

Paid media is excellent for running multivariate and A/B testing. You can create multiple ad versions with small differences—such as CTA texts or color schemes—and test them against statistically significant sample sizes. 

But don’t stop at testing creative. Optimization includes your audiences, bidding strategy, landing pages, placements, and even campaign structure.

Here’s what to review regularly:

  • Which ads are getting clicks but not conversions? Pause or adjust those.
  • Which campaigns are spending without results? Reallocate that budget.
  • Are certain audiences or geos outperforming others? Double down where it counts.
  • Is your cost per result trending up or down? That’s your early warning system.

Document what you’re testing and why. Optimization doesn’t mean quickly reacting without thinking. Your team needs to learn over time and building a smarter strategy with every round.

Paid Media and AI: Trends You Need to Know

AI is already shaping how campaigns are built, optimized, and scaled. My team and I ran research looking at AI vs. human-generated ads, for example, and found that AI ads converted at 1.28%, less than half a percentage point below human ads, which converted at 1.54%. Yes, human ads performed better. But not by a huge margin. 

NP Digital graph showing the difference between AI-generated ads vs Human-generated ads and which converts better.

I would urge digital marketers to keep the following four points in mind when it comes There are already a growing amount of applications for AI in the world of paid media:

Marketers are using AI to:

  • Write ad copy faster (especially for high-volume campaigns)
  • Build and test ad creative using AI image and video tools
  • Generate audiences automatically based on existing customer data
  • Optimize budgets in real time across channels
  • Predict what offers or creatives will perform best, before spending anything

These aren’t experimental use cases anymore. They’re being built directly into the tools marketers already use.But things are changing fast. Here’s some key points to keep in mind:

  • Paid media isn’t going anywhere: Most paid media channels will remain viable. People will continue to read their favorite publications, open newsletters, follow influencers on social media, listen to podcasts, and so on. Even if traditional SEO and search ads vanish, LLMs like ChatGPT will need to monetize at some point. 
  • Revenue from ads provides stability: As AI changes the way people consume content online, revenue from ads can actually provide more stability. Unlike organic traffic, they’re not dependent on algorithms over which you have no control. 
  • Paid media helps you build brand citations: Branding will be more important than ever in the age of AI. Citations around the web are one of the ways LLMs identify and measure the relevance of your business to a particular query. For example, if “NP Digital” appears often in AI training materials next to “advertising agency,” my brand is more likely to be referenced in response to related questions. 
  • Now is the time to start experimenting with AI: As was shown in the research by me and my team, AI can perform nearly as well as humans. For a head start when AI is truly ready to assist with paid media campaigns, you should start experimenting and learning now. 
  • That said, AI is a tool, not a strategy. You still need strong positioning, good creative, and clear goals. But if you’re not testing AI workflows now, you’re going to fall behind the brands that are.

Should You Focus on One or All Channels?

Most marketers think they need to be everywhere. That’s usually wrong.

To be clear, I’m a big proponent of omnichannel digital marketing. 

When you’re everywhere, you reach more of your prospects. Yet you would be amazed at how many businesses fail to grasp this simple fact.

With that said, for paid, omnichannel may sound great, but isn’t always the right move.

With large amounts of money at risk, you need to do two things: research and test.  

If you’re just getting started with paid media, stick to one or two platforms where your audience is most active. That gives you enough budget and data to learn what works without spreading yourself too thin.

Once you’ve found a winning message and offer, then it makes sense to expand. You can start repurposing creative, retargeting across platforms, and building a true full-funnel system.

Here’s the truth: omnichannel paid marketing only works when you have the team, budget, and systems to support it. Otherwise, it turns into a mess of disconnected campaigns.

Ask yourself:

  • Do you have the creative capacity to build for multiple formats?
  • Do you have enough budget to collect meaningful data across platforms?
  • Can you track performance in a way that ties everything together?

If the answer is yes, go for it. If not, focus and scale intentionally. The best paid media campaigns start small, then scale up.

FAQs

What is paid media?

Paid media refers to any marketing or advertising content a brand pays to place on a third-party platform. Common examples include search engine ads, social media ads, display banners, video ads, influencer sponsorships, and traditional placements like radio, print, or TV.

The key benefit of paid media is the ability to generate visibility and traffic quickly, often with precise targeting and measurable results. Brands typically use paid media to reach new audiences, promote offers, or support other marketing efforts. It works best when paired with earned and owned media in a broader strategy.

How often should you evaluate your paid media budget?

Most brands should evaluate their paid media budget weekly. This allows time to monitor spend, performance, and early signals on what’s working.

For short-term or high-investment campaigns, daily budget checks are recommended to catch issues before they impact results.

Monthly or quarterly reviews are useful for larger budget adjustments, channel planning, or reallocation based on return.

Consistent monitoring ensures your budget is supporting your goals and allows for real-time optimizations, rather than reactive fixes after performance dips.

How do you build a paid media strategy?

A strong paid media strategy starts with setting a clear objective, such as lead generation, product sales, or brand awareness.

From there, define your target audience and select platforms that align with where they spend time. Creative should match the platform and campaign goal, while KPIs like ROAS, CPC, or conversion rate help track progress.

Budget should be allocated based on priorities and expected return, with room for testing.

Successful strategies are built on iteration—launching, analyzing, and optimizing based on what the data shows.

What’s the difference between earned media and paid media?

Paid media includes advertising you pay for, such as social ads, search ads, sponsored content, and display banners. It gives you control over placement, timing, and messaging.

Earned media refers to organic exposure you don’t pay for—such as press coverage, backlinks, user reviews, or social shares.

While paid media drives immediate visibility, earned media builds trust and long-term authority. Most marketing strategies benefit from a mix of both, with paid media often used to accelerate early reach.

Conclusion

Most marketers treat paid media like throwing money at a wall and hoping something sticks. That’s expensive and frustrating.

The brands winning with paid media treat it like a system. They start with one platform, nail their message and targeting, then scale what works. They track the right metrics, test relentlessly, and aren’t afraid to kill campaigns that aren’t delivering.

If you’re just getting started, pick Google Ads or Facebook—whichever platform your audience uses most. Set a budget you can afford to lose while you learn. Create multiple ad variants from day one so you can see what resonates.

Want to see what’s coming next? Check out the latest paid media trends shaping the industry.

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Why A Mobile Measurement Partner (MMP) Is Crucial In A Privacy-First Mobile Ecosystem 

The app marketing space is hugely competitive, and at the same time, data privacy has become the defining challenge for marketers. From Apple’s App Tracking Transparency (ATT) to Google’s Privacy Sandbox, user-level tracking is harder than ever. To stay competitive, you need partners that give you visibility while keeping you compliant. Among these, one of your most important allies is your Mobile Measurement Partner (MMP). MMPS play a central role in any app’s marketing strategy, both for user acquisition and retention. 
 

Key Takeaways

  • MMPs unify your data: They consolidate insights across paid, owned, and earned channels in one dashboard. 
  • True performance visibility: Go beyond just installs by tracking cost per impression, click, install, and deeper engagement metrics.
  • Better budget allocation: Identify which channels deliver real value and optimise spend accordingly. 
  • Unlock user insights: In-app event tracking shows not just where users come from, but what they do after downloading. 
  • Essential for privacy-first marketing: MMPs help navigate iOS privacy changes and ensure accurate measurement. 
  • Stay scalable: They simplify your tech stack, replacing multiple SDKs with a single, integrated solution. 
     

What is an MMP?

App marketers typically run user acquisition (UA) campaigns across multiple platforms and channels, including: 

  • Paid – Meta, Google, Snapchat, TikTok, Apple Search Ads, etc. 
  • Owned – Website, blog, email 
  • Earned – App reviews in independent magazines and review sites 
Search Ads on Apple.

Source: Apple Search Ads  
 

All this activity should lead to people downloading and installing your app, all of which is great, but also meaningless if you can’t track which activity generated each download. And in today’s privacy-first ecosystem, that visibility is harder to achieve than ever. With Apple and Google limiting user-level tracking, attribution can feel like a black-box.  

An MMP helps you cut through the complexity by attributing, collecting, and organizing app data in a privacy-first way, delivering a unified view of campaign performance across channels, media sources, and ad networks. It gives you this visibility of which channels are performing, and which aren’t.  

For each channel, it will deliver metrics such as: 

  • Cost per impression 
  • Cost per click 
  • Cost per install 
  • Cost per acquisition 

These insights enable you to optimise your marketing spend towards the best-performing channels so that you can scale up your UA activities most efficiently. This is particularly important when you consider that app user acquisition costs have increased by 60% in the last five years, reaching an average of $29 per user in 2024, according to research from SimplicityDX, reported by Business of Apps. Understanding where your budget delivers the best results is essential for staying competitive.  

But it doesn’t stop at downloads. The data MMPs generate enables you to dig deeper into the value of each install by looking at what happens “down-funnel” by setting up in-app events. 
 

Use In-App Events to Generate Valuable Insights from your MMP 

In-app events allow you to track what users do in the app after installing it. Each event is a key conversion point in the user’s journey through the app. They will differ depending on the type of app, but will typically include things like: 

  • User registration 
  • Newsletter sign up
  • Clicks on a push notification 
  • Makes a purchase  
  • Join your loyalty program 

You can set up the in-app events that are most relevant to your app and most useful in understanding the value of each user. Your MMP then enables you to track these back to where the install came from. This might reveal, for example, that Meta generates twice as many installs as Apple Search Ads, but that the users who install after clicking on an Apple Search Ads spend three times more in the app than those who came in via Meta.  
 

A graphic showing the value of different channels.

Simplified Reporting in one Dashboard

An MMP delivers all these insights in one unified dashboard, across all the platforms you use to find new users. It’s a far easier way to get a consolidated, real-time view of what’s happening. Even if you’re only active in one or two channels, the insights an MMP delivers into things like Customer Lifetime Value, churn, and conversion against the in-app events you set up far exceed what each platform will typically offer in terms of reporting. 

An MMP dashboard.

The Benefits of Using an MMP

In summary, the key benefits of using an MMP are: 

  • Unified reporting across all platforms in one dashboard 
  • Granular insights into cost per impression/click/install, customer lifetime value, churn, conversion in in-app events 
  • Insights that enable you to optimise your marketing spend and better allocate your budget. 
     

Why Skipping an MMP is a Risky Move

Falling Behind in Privacy Compliance 
With iOS privacy updates transforming the landscape, MMPs are critical for adapting to new tracking systems and ensuring accurate data collection. They provide the agility needed to stay ahead in a rapidly changing privacy environment. 

Misleading Performance Data 
Without an MMP, you’re forced to rely on self-attribution from platforms like Google, which often overinflate their numbers. We’ve seen examples of platforms over-reporting key metrics like installs, leading to inaccurate performance insights. This kind of misreporting can lead to budget misallocation and misguided strategy decisions. 

Missing out on Critical Insights 
MMPs allow you to measure and optimise performance beyond just installs, providing a more comprehensive view of user behavior and value. Leveraging MMP data can reveal that a lower CPI doesn’t always translate to higher-quality users. By analyzing the relationship between CPI and downstream metrics like trial start rates, marketers can refine their bidding strategies to drive better results. Without an MMP, such nuanced insights, and the resulting optimizations, wouldn’t have been possible. 
 

Overcomplicating your Tech Stack 
Skipping an MMP requires integrating multiple SDKs, such as Meta, which not only complicates the setup but also raises significant data and privacy concerns. 
 
 

Setting up your MMP for Success: Best Practices 

Most of the main MMP providers will have integrations across your tech stack, but this is a point worth checking with them when you are assessing providers. If the MMP is integrated across your tech stack, it will be easier to set everything up and gain the insights that will feed your app’s success. For example, if you have already set up in-app events in an in-app analytics tool such as Mixpanel, these can be carried across to the MMP platform to avoid duplicating effort. 
 

1. Define the In-App Events to Optimize Towards

The first step to maximizing the investment in your MMP is to define the in-app events you want to track. The chosen events should reflect meaningful interactions that signal user engagement or progression toward higher-value actions. It’s vital to define these events, not only to monitor when and how frequently they occur, but also to optimise your user acquisition campaigns to align with each funnel stage. Once the user completes an event, i.e.., installs or registers, the point of optimization within the campaigns may change to encouraging conversion to purchase, for example. 
 

2. How many In-App Events should I Track?

It’s not possible, or even desirable, to track everything that happens in your app. We normally recommend around 5-10 in-app events. These should be the key points you want users to convert against, and the ones you can optimise your campaigns towards. Events should describe an action a user takes and should be a combination of a verb and noun, for example: 
 

  • Registration Completed 
  • Watched Video 
  • Product Page Viewed 
  • Purchase Completed 
  • Subscription Purchase Completed 
     

Event names should be easy to read and not overly descriptive. Upper/lower casing is supported, and it is recommended that the verb should be in the past tense (see the example below). 

Top Events Charts.

 
Once you have defined the in-app events, create a tracking plan that details the naming convention for each event (e.g. subscription purchase completed); the point where it triggers (once a user selects the ‘confirm payment’ button on the billing page); and any parameters that provide more detail on that event (e.g., ‘monthly’, signaling that it is the monthly subscription they’ve purchased), then pass that onto your developers to in build as part of the SDK setup. Now you’re ready for testing. 
 

3. Test Everything to Ensure Success

Testing is vital to ensure that your app behaves as it should and that the in-app events are triggered correctly. Once the in-app events are set up, set up an app testing account to simulate the potential user journey and ensure the events show within the MMP testing environment. Use this account to complete each in-app event, ensuring that: 

  1. The events are triggered at the appropriate points 
  1. The tracking is functioning properly 
  1. The data returned is accurate and reliable. 
     

How to Choose the Right MMP to Boost your App’s Growth

A graphic showing how to choose the right MMP.

Choosing the right MMP to work with is all about finding one that is best aligned with your needs and expectations. Choosing the best mobile attribution platform is a detailed process, but essentially this breaks down into four key areas: 
 

  1. Cost and scalability – When allocating your budget for an MMP, you need to look at the bigger picture. As you expand your marketing efforts using an MMP, the associated costs are likely to rise, not just from increased spending on channels but also due to the higher volume of reported conversions within the platform. Remember to evaluate these costs and ensure they remain within your budget as your campaigns grow. 
  1. Functionality – Ask yourself, does the MMP do everything you need it to do? For example, does it provide a holistic view across multiple traffic sources and in terms of the granularity of data you require to understand each channel’s performance? Or, can it show you how much it’s costing you to acquire a click and a conversion? 
  1. Support level provided – Are you looking/able to run everything on the MMP platform yourself, or do you need the support of a managed service? Consider the level of support the MMP offers, especially for troubleshooting setup challenges or addressing questions about the data displayed in the platform.   
  1. Tech stack integration – Consider what level of integration the MMP offers with your existing tech stack, including in-app analytics tools, CRM tools, and DMPs (Data Management Platforms), and any other tools that you rely on to market and sustain your app. 
     

Final Word: Making the Smart Choice

Even the best app needs a constant influx of new users to replace those who churn and deeper engagement with loyal users. Your MMP is key to achieving this, offering a unified view of marketing performance across platforms. It reveals how many installs each platform drives, their cost, and long-term value. Without an MMP, you’re marketing blind as ASO’s future rapidly evolves. 

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