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Today — 20 June 2026Search Engine Land

Google Ads automatically enrols advertisers in conversion-based customer lists

19 June 2026 at 21:48

Google Ads is automatically enabling conversion-based customer lists for eligible advertisers starting, with data processing scheduled to begin on Aug. 18.

The update applies to advertisers already using both Enhanced Conversions and Customer Match but who have not yet activated conversion-based customer lists.

Why we care. As privacy changes continue to reshape digital advertising, Google is increasingly encouraging advertisers to rely on first-party data. Conversion-based customer lists provide another way to build audiences using customer data already collected through conversions.

The feature could help advertisers create more relevant audience segments and improve campaign performance without requiring additional implementation work.

The details. Eligible advertisers do not need to take any action. Beginning Aug. 18, Google will start processing data and automatically make conversion-based customer lists available within affected accounts.

Advertisers can then choose whether to attach those audiences to campaigns and ad groups as part of their targeting strategy.

The catch. Advertisers who do not want the feature enabled can opt out before Aug. 18 by disabling conversion-based customer lists within their account settings.

After that date, Google will begin processing data and generating the lists automatically.

First spotted. This update was spotted by JXT Group Founder Menachem Ani, who shared the comms he recevied about it on X.

Google Ads brings back Target CPA and Target ROAS naming

19 June 2026 at 21:36
6 mistakes that hurt ecommerce campaigns on Google Ads

Google Ads is changing how Smart Bidding strategies are labeled, separating target-based bidding strategies from volume-based bidding strategies.

Starting this month, “Maximize conversions with a Target CPA” will once again be called Target CPA, while “Maximize conversion value with a Target ROAS” will return to Target ROAS.

Why we care. The change is designed to make it clearer whether a campaign is optimising for maximum volume or attempting to hit a specific performance target.

The details.

  • Maximize Conversions remains available for advertisers focused on driving as many conversions as possible within budget.
  • Maximize Conversion Value remains available for advertisers focused on generating the highest conversion value possible within budget.

What isn’t changing. The update is purely organisational.

Google says there are:

  • No changes to bidding behaviour
  • No changes to campaign performance
  • No changes required from advertisers

Campaigns will continue to bid exactly as they do today.

For API users. Google is also aligning the interface more closely with how bidding strategies are represented in the Google Ads API.

Developers should review integrations, reporting tools, and campaign creation workflows to ensure they correctly recognise standalone TARGET_CPA and TARGET_ROAS strategy types.

Google is encouraging API users to monitor future updates related to:

  • The BiddingStrategyType enum
  • Standalone TargetCpa and TargetRoas messages
  • Optional target settings within MaximizeConversions and MaximizeConversionValue

Bottom line. Nothing changes in how Smart Bidding works, but advertisers may find campaign setup and reporting easier to understand as Google restores Target CPA and Target ROAS as clearly defined standalone strategy names.

Yesterday — 19 June 2026Search Engine Land

Google launches AI agent for Ad Manager

18 June 2026 at 21:29

Google is bringing generative AI directly into Google Ad Manager with the launch of Ask Ad Manager, a new Gemini-powered assistant designed to help publishers analyze performance, troubleshoot issues and navigate the platform using natural language.

The beta launches this month as Google pushes deeper into AI-powered ad operations.

What’s happening. Ask Ad Manager is a conversational AI agent built specifically for publishers using Google Ad Manager.

Unlike traditional reporting tools, publishers can ask questions in plain language and receive personalized answers, recommendations and reports based on their own Ad Manager data.

Google says the tool is designed to help users move from analysis to action faster by reducing the time spent generating reports, diagnosing problems and navigating the platform.

What it can do:

Troubleshoot delivery issues.

Instead of manually pulling reports to investigate underperforming line items, publishers can ask the AI agent questions and receive guidance on potential causes and next steps.

Generate reports on demand.

Users can request custom metrics, benchmarks and performance reports through a simple prompt rather than building multiple reports manually.

Navigate Ad Manager faster.

Ask Ad Manager can direct users to relevant pages within the platform and automatically apply the appropriate filters and settings based on the conversation.

Why we care. For publishers managing large inventories and complex campaigns, the ability to quickly surface insights and diagnose issues could reduce operational workload and accelerate decision-making.

The feature also reflects a growing shift across ad tech toward AI agents that can perform tasks and streamline workflows instead of simply generating information.

Looking ahead. Google says Ask Ad Manager is just the beginning of a broader move toward what it calls a more “agentic” future for advertising operations.

The company plans to introduce additional AI capabilities throughout the year, including developer tools such as REST APIs and an MCP server to support workflow automation and integrations.

Google is also developing specialized agents that could help publishers and agencies discover inventory, negotiate deals and execute campaigns more efficiently.

Bottom line. Ask Ad Manager brings Gemini-powered assistance directly into Google Ad Manager, giving publishers a new way to access insights, resolve issues and manage advertising operations through natural language prompts.

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Google is embedding AI into publisher workflows, making it easier to analyze performance and act on insights from a chat interface.
Before yesterdaySearch Engine Land

PPC budgeting in 2026: When to adjust, scale, and optimize with data

18 June 2026 at 19:24
PPC budgeting in 2026- When to adjust, scale, and optimize with data

PPC budgeting in 2026 isn’t just about setting spend levels. It’s about knowing when to adjust budgets, when to scale campaigns, and how the data feeding Google’s automation influences those decisions.

Google’s automation systems have always followed the signals you give them. In 2026, they follow them faster and with more confidence than before, which means clean signal architecture matters more than ever.

The fundamentals of budget management haven’t changed. What has changed is how quickly a poorly architected account can waste budget.

Two budget mechanics you need to understand right now

Before you adjust targets, audiences, or bid strategies, make sure you understand how these two budget controls work.

The ad scheduling pacing change

Google now paces all campaigns with ad scheduling toward the full 30.4x monthly billing cap, regardless of how many days your ads actually run. Before this change, a $100 daily budget on a weekday-only campaign targeted roughly $2,200 in monthly spend across 22 active days. 

Now it targets $3,040, compressed into those same weekdays. The billing ceiling hasn’t changed. The system pursues it more aggressively within your active windows.

If your campaigns use ad scheduling, recalculate your daily budget based on your intended monthly spend rather than active days: divide your monthly target by 30.4 and set that as your daily limit. A $2,200 monthly target becomes a $72 daily budget. Campaigns running 24/7 aren’t affected.

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Campaign total budgets

Available for Demand Gen, Search, Standard Shopping, Performance Max, and YouTube campaigns, campaign total budgets let you set a fixed spend ceiling for a defined period rather than managing a daily limit. 

For Search, Standard Shopping, and PMax, the window is three to 90 days. For Demand Gen and YouTube, it can run up to a year. 

Unlike daily budgets, there’s no daily spending cap. The system can front-load or back-load spend within the flight to hit the total, which makes these useful for promotions and product launches, but worth monitoring closely when run alongside always-on campaigns. 

Budget type can’t be changed after campaign creation, so the decision is final at setup.

What actually controls how Google Ads spends your budget

Efficiency targets usually constrain spend before budgets do

Smart Bidding treats your efficiency target as the primary constraint and your daily budget as the secondary one. 

If you set a $50 tCPA and market conditions are returning leads at $80,the system restricts bids rather than generating conversions above your target. The daily budget cap never gets hit because the efficiency target is stopping spend first. What looks like a budget problem is usually a target problem.

When the gap between target and market reality is that wide, set your initial target closer to where the market is actually converting. Let the system accumulate conversion data and establish what efficiency looks like for your account, then gradually tighten toward your real goal. 

The 10%-20% margin above target is a fine-tuning tool. It gives Smart Bidding enough room to find conversion opportunities when you’re already close to where you want to be, not when you’re $30 away.

Performance Max decides where your budget goes

Performance Max automatically distributes budget across Search, Shopping, Display, YouTube, and Discover. You set the total. Google decides the split. 

Without brand exclusions, PMax will serve branded queries that would have converted through Search campaigns at a lower cost, which inflates its apparent efficiency while increasing your overall costs.

Campaign-level negative keyword lists for PMax have been available since January 2025, with the per-campaign limit expanded to 10,000 in March 2025. If your PMax campaigns predate that rollout, audit whether you have categorical exclusion lists built at the campaign level. 

Jobs, salary, free, login, reviews, and any vertical-specific non-customer queries should be in there before the campaign launches, not added reactively from the search term report.

AI Max expands where your ads can appear

AI Max for Search, generally available since April, expands query matching beyond your keyword list, generates ad copy from your existing assets, and adjusts landing page targeting dynamically. 

The budget risk is query drift: spend that was concentrated on your defined keywords now competes with AI-generated matches. AI Max provides search term reporting, which makes monitoring tractable. Review it closely during the first 60 days and proactively build categorical negatives.

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The signal problem that makes budget allocation fail

An insurance broker running Smart Bidding toward form completions saw conversion volume rise 416% year over year while revenue stayed flat. The conversion action was firing on form starts, not form submissions. 

The system had found the most efficient path to form page interactions and was scaling it confidently. A significant portion of those interactions were Cyrillic-language spam submissions from outside the service area. The dashboard was green. The pipeline was empty.

This is the core mechanism behind most budget waste in lead generation: identical conversion values across all form fills leave Smart Bidding with no basis to distinguish a qualified lead from a bounced session. 

The system optimizes for volume and finds the cheapest path to completions. It follows its instructions precisely. The instructions are the problem.

Primary conversions should be high-intent, high-value actions that directly train Smart Bidding. Secondary conversions, such as newsletter signups, page views, and soft engagement, belong in reporting but should not influence bidding. Getting this distinction right is more consequential for budget efficiency than any adjustment to bid strategy.

Journey-aware bidding, currently in beta for Search campaigns on Target CPA, addresses the delayed-conversion problem that compounds this issue for B2B accounts. 

Instead of optimizing only toward front-end actions, the system learns from the full lead-to-sale funnel — form submissions through closed deals — using intermediate stages as learning signals without counting them as biddable conversions. 

The feature requires first-party CRM data, connected via Offline Conversion Import or Enhanced Conversions for Leads, to function. Without that pipeline data, there’s nothing for the system to learn beyond the form fills it was already optimizing toward. 

For accounts not yet in the beta, extending your conversion window to 90 days and evaluating performance over 60- to 90-day periods is the right workaround.

First-party data as budget guidance

Customer Match is the most direct way to tell automation what valuable traffic looks like. Google enforces a 540-day maximum membership duration for Customer Match lists, effective April 2025. Any record not refreshed within that window expires, which shrinks your list over time without regular uploads or a continuous CRM sync.

The most effective use of Customer Match for budget allocation is to exclude before expanding. 

Apply your existing customer list as an exclusion on acquisition campaigns so the acquisition budget reaches new customers rather than people who are already buying from you. 

Run retention separately, with its own budget, targets, and messaging. Mixing both in the same campaign with identical conversion goals produces a blended signal. Smart Bidding typically settles on the segment that converts most cheaply, which is rarely the most valuable one.

Note that using Customer Match for targeting and bid adjustments requires at least 90 days of account history and $50,000 in lifetime spend. Exclusions are available to all compliant accounts regardless of spend history.

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Scaling in 2026

For always-on daily budget campaigns, the 10-20% weekly increase guidance still applies. For campaigns using ad scheduling, work in monthly targets and divide by 30.4 rather than scaling daily limits.

Smart Bidding Exploration is now in open beta for Performance Max, with Shopping expansion announced at GML 2026. On Search campaigns, it generates, on average, 27% more unique converting users by pursuing queries the account wasn’t previously winning, temporarily relaxing efficiency targets to test new conversion sources. Short-term CPA or ROAS fluctuations during the exploration phase are expected. Evaluate on a 60-day window before drawing conclusions.

Demand-led pacing, announced at GML 2026 and rolling out for Search and Shopping campaigns, dynamically shifts daily spend toward periods of predicted higher consumer demand within your existing budget parameters. It’s a complement to daily budget management, not a replacement. Monitor your account for rollout availability.

For B2B accounts, scale on 60- to 90-day evaluation windows, not 30-day ones. Short windows systematically undervalue campaigns with long sales cycles by cutting spend before the attribution data has time to accumulate.

Google Ads to automatically classify conversion-based customer lists

17 June 2026 at 18:28

Google is removing a layer of advertiser control over Customer Match audience classification, automatically assigning customer types to conversion-based lists starting in August 2026.

Advertisers will no longer be able to leave eligible lists unclassified.

What’s changing. Beginning in August 2026, Google Ads will automatically assign conversion-based customer lists to one of several customer types, including:

  • Existing customers
  • New customers
  • Other customer segments

Google is encouraging advertisers to review and update their audience classifications in Audience Manager before the change takes effect.

Why Google is making the change. The move appears aimed at improving audience consistency across Google’s growing suite of customer acquisition and retention tools.

By standardizing customer lifecycle classifications, Google can more accurately distinguish between prospecting and retention audiences, helping automated bidding and targeting systems make better optimization decisions.

Why we care. For advertisers using customer acquisition goals, new customer bidding, or retention-focused strategies, the accuracy of customer classifications could have a direct impact on campaign performance.

Misclassified audiences could affect how Google’s systems evaluate and optimize users throughout the customer lifecycle.

What advertisers should do. Advertisers using Customer Match lists derived from conversion data should use audience manager to audit their audiences before August.

Key questions include:

  • Are customer lists currently categorized correctly?
  • Which lists represent existing customers versus acquisition audiences?
  • Will automatic classification align with internal customer definitions?

Reviewing audience settings now may help avoid unexpected changes once Google’s classifications become mandatory.

The bottom line. Google is taking a more active role in audience management, automatically assigning customer lifecycle labels to conversion-based customer lists and further standardizing the signals that power its automated advertising systems.

First spotted. This update was spotted by Google Ads expert Bia Camargo, who shared seeing the alert on LinkedIn.

Google Ads shifts Demand Gen billing to CPM for some Discover campaigns

16 June 2026 at 18:31

Google is changing how it charges for certain Demand Gen campaigns on Discover, signaling a closer link between billing models and campaign optimization goals.

What happened. Google Ads has notified advertisers that Demand Gen campaigns using view-through conversion (VTC) optimization on Discover will move from cost-per-click (CPC) billing to cost-per-thousand impressions (CPM) beginning July 15th.

The change affects a limited number of advertisers and applies only to campaigns with VTC optimization enabled. Advertisers not using VTC optimization will see no change.

The transition will happen automatically, with no action required from advertisers.

Why we care. The change could alter how advertisers evaluate efficiency within Demand Gen campaigns. Campaigns optimized for view-through conversions may see differences in spend pacing, impression volume, and reporting metrics once billing transitions from clicks to impressions.

Advertisers focused primarily on click-driven performance may want to reassess whether VTC optimization remains the right fit for their objectives.

Why Google is making the change. According to Google, the update is designed to better align billing with campaign objectives.

View-through conversions measure actions taken after a user sees an ad but does not click it. Because impressions play a central role in generating those conversions, Google argues that CPM billing more accurately reflects the value being delivered.

The company also says the change will allow its systems to optimize more effectively for view-through conversion goals.

Opt-out option. Advertisers who do not want to transition to CPM billing can opt out by disabling view-through conversion optimization in campaign settings.Doing so will prevent the billing change from taking effect for those campaigns.

The bottom line. Google is tying payment more closely to the behavior its Demand Gen campaigns are designed to optimize for. For advertisers using view-through conversions, impressions—not clicks—will soon become the basis for both optimization and billing on Discover.

First spotted. The update was shared by Adsquire founder, Anthony Higman, who shared the comms he received on X.

Google expands Smart Bidding Exploration, adds Promotion Mode

15 June 2026 at 16:00

Google is rolling out a series of Smart Bidding and budgeting updates designed to help advertisers uncover new demand, capitalize on seasonal opportunities and maintain more predictable campaign performance.

What’s new. The updates include an expansion of Smart Bidding Exploration, a new Promotion Mode beta and changes to bidding target optimization for budget-constrained campaigns.

Driving discovery. Smart Bidding Exploration now allows advertisers to set a return on ad spend (ROAS) tolerance that enables campaigns to pursue additional conversion opportunities from search queries they may not currently be capturing.

Google says campaigns using the feature see, on average, an 18% increase in unique converting search query categories and a 19% increase in conversions.

The company is expanding the capability to Performance Max campaigns without product feeds and opening a beta for Shopping ads across both Performance Max and Standard Shopping campaigns.

Peak period bidding. Promotion Mode allows advertisers to temporarily adjust ROAS targets and allocate additional daily budget during high-demand periods such as seasonal events, product launches and flash sales.

What else is changing. Beginning Aug. 17, Google will update bidding target optimization for campaigns limited by budget, with the goal of delivering more consistent performance that better aligns with advertisers’ CPA and ROAS targets.

Starting July 6, advertisers will begin receiving notifications in Google Ads if campaign adjustments may be needed.

Why we care. These updates give Google’s AI bidding systems more freedom to find incremental conversions beyond existing keyword and audience patterns, potentially unlocking new demand that campaigns might otherwise miss.

The new Promotion Mode is particularly relevant for retailers and seasonal advertisers, as it allows temporary adjustments to ROAS targets and budgets during peak demand periods without requiring major campaign restructuring. Meanwhile, the bidding optimization changes aim to make performance more predictable for campaigns that are constrained by budget.

The bottom line. Google’s latest bidding updates are designed to help advertisers find new conversion opportunities, respond more aggressively during peak demand periods and maintain steadier performance as campaigns scale.

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