What it is
Feed ads on Google's turf.
Image, video and carousel ads in the places people scroll rather than search, priced on clicks or impressions. Audiences come from Google's intent signals, your own lists and lookalike segments seeded from them.
Services
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Demand Gen puts social-style image and video ads into Google's feeds: YouTube, Shorts, Discover and Gmail. Social creative, Google's intent data. The mistake is treating it like Search with pictures.
Part of Google Ads management at Aesthetic.
Google's answer to social
Demand Gen replaced Discovery ads: image, video and carousel creative served into YouTube feeds, Shorts, Discover and Gmail. It borrows the look of paid social and the audience data of Google, and it inherits the rules of both.
What it is
Image, video and carousel ads in the places people scroll rather than search, priced on clicks or impressions. Audiences come from Google's intent signals, your own lists and lookalike segments seeded from them.
When it works
Products and offers that photograph or demo well, backed by customer data worth cloning. It fills the gap between video reach and Search capture: the audience knows the category, and the feed makes the introduction.
When it's the wrong tool
Nothing visual to show, no audience data to seed from, or an expectation that feed clicks convert like keyword clicks. A scroll interrupted is not a question asked, and the budget has to respect the difference.
What the scroll swallows
Demand Gen sits between social and search, and gets judged unfairly by both rulebooks. The waste starts when feed traffic is asked to behave like keyword traffic.
It's taken me a long time to finally come across an agency that actually made a difference for my business. Since working with them, the quality and quantity of our leads have been exceptional, and our cost per lead has dropped more than triple! After just a few months, we were seeing results I honestly didn't think were possible. For the first time, I feel confident knowing exactly where my marketing dollars are going.
Unedited, exclamation mark included. Read the rest on Google.
Free ROAS calculator
ROAS without margin is a vanity number. This calculator works out what your ads return after the cost of what you sell, for Google, Meta or any paid channel.
What you pay the ad platform each month.
The revenue those ads brought in.
The share of each sale you keep after the cost of the product or service.
Your ROAS
3.0x
Profitable. Every ad dollar makes money after costs.
Return needed to break even
2.2x
Profit left each month
$1,050
Kept per $1 spent on ads
$0.35
The budget you're thinking about.
What one click costs on average. Google's Keyword Planner shows this for your industry.
Out of every 100 people who click, how many buy.
What a typical customer spends in one go.
The share of each sale you keep after the cost of the product or service.
Projected ROAS
3.0x
Profitable. Every ad dollar makes money after costs.
Clicks per month
1,500
Sales per month
60
Projected revenue
$9,000
Cost per sale
$50
Return needed to break even
2.2x
Profit left each month
$1,050
Revenue divided by ad spend. A 3x ROAS means every dollar of ads brought back three dollars of revenue. It says nothing about profit until margin enters the picture.
One divided by your gross margin. At a 45% margin you need 2.2x just to cover the cost of goods and the ads. Anything below this line is a loss wearing a revenue costume.
What's left after paying for the products and the ads. Revenue is money moved; this is money kept, and it's the number your bidding targets should answer to.
The calculator runs in your browser. Your numbers aren't stored or sent anywhere.
Demand Gen replaced them. Same feed placements, Discover, Gmail and YouTube, plus Shorts, with more formats, better bidding controls and lookalike segments Discovery never had.
If the account is still running Discovery-era thinking, the controls have moved on and the settings deserve a fresh look.
Complement, not replace. The creative style overlaps, but the headspace differs: Google's feeds sit closer to looking things up, Meta's sit closer to killing time, and both have buyers.
The practical move is running the same creative in both and letting cost per outcome decide the budget split.
Feed-native creative: vertical video, real photography, captions that work on mute, and a first frame that stops a thumb. Anything that reads as an ad gets scrolled past, and you still pay for the impression.
The bar is whatever sits above and below your ad in the feed, because that's the real competition.
Images alone can run, and good ones perform in Discover and Gmail. Video opens up the YouTube side of the inventory, especially Shorts, where the growth in attention actually is.
Start with your strongest images plus one vertical video, and let the auction report tell you where to invest next.
Discover is the personalised feed in the Google app and on the mobile homepage: stories and topics Google predicts someone will care about. People browse it like a newsstand, not a search box.
That's the mindset your creative inherits: curious, not committed, and worth a well-made introduction.
Channel controls let you choose where Demand Gen serves, so YouTube, Discover and Gmail can be split and judged separately. What you don't get is per-video placement control.
When the job needs that level of precision, it's a dedicated YouTube campaign instead.
You seed them with a list, customers, converters, high-value enquiries, and Google finds people whose behaviour rhymes with the seed. Seed quality decides everything: clone a list of bad leads and you'll scale bad leads.
Segment size trades reach against precision, so the tightest setting earns the first dollars.
Yes, and lead gen is where the feeds quietly shine, provided lead quality flows back into the account. Optimised on form fills alone, the algorithm chases whoever fills forms fastest.
Optimised on qualified leads, it goes and finds more of those instead. The difference is the feedback loop, not the channel.
Because a search click asked for you and a feed click was curious. Different temperature, different job. Feed traffic warms up before it converts, often through a later search or a return visit.
Judge it on qualified actions and what those audiences do next, and pair it with remarketing so the curiosity gets a second touch.
Performance Max is one automated campaign across every Google surface, where Google picks the placements. Demand Gen is a channel you art-direct: you choose the feeds, the formats and the audience logic.
They coexist well. Performance Max for goal-led coverage, Demand Gen for deliberate pushes into the feeds.
It's a natural home for it. The feeds are where your visitors already spend time, and sequenced creative beats one repeated banner for bringing them back.
Windows, caps and the audience tiers worth building are covered on the remarketing page.
Enough to buy real conversion signal in the channels you pick, held steady for the learning period rather than judged on day three. A test that can't reach significance was a donation.
Anchor the target to your breakeven from the calculator on this page, then size the test to prove or kill it.
By the stage it serves: attention held, qualified actions taken, and what those audiences do downstream in remarketing and Search. Same-session conversion alone will always undervalue it.
Set the success metrics before launch, or the dashboard will pick flattering ones for you.
Know the whole toolbox
Each one bids on a different moment in the buying journey, and the budget split between them matters more than any single campaign. Read how each works before Google sells you all eight.
New to the platform? Start with Google Ads management, where the eight fit together.
From the Learning Centre
What's working in paid right now, written from inside live accounts rather than around them.
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Meta's New Frequency Control Is Live. Here's The Truth No One Wants To Say.
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15 February 2026 Read article Paid advertising
The Andromeda Era: What Meta's Update Means for Your Ads
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15 February 2026 Read articleReady when you are
A free 30-minute call with the strategist who'd run your account. Bring your feed creative and your lead numbers, and leave knowing whether Demand Gen deserves a slice of the budget or just looked shiny.