Google has released a fresh wave of updates to its Demand Gen campaigns, expanding the toolbox for performance marketers testing this campaign type. This drop includes goodies for smarter acquisition, enhanced cross-platform connectivity, and new AI capabilities that aim to improve both efficiency and scale.
Here’s a breakdown of what’s new and what it means for advertisers.
New-Customer-Only Mode stands out as particularly valuable. For performance marketers focused on first-touch acquisition, being able to filter out repeat users from early-stage campaigns adds clarity and precision. Especially when paired with offline conversion tracking, this unlocks better control over lead quality.
Collectively, these updates boost Demand Gen’s potential as a mid-to-upper funnel acquisition engine, bringing together smarter bidding, app connectivity, and creative automation. While traditionally seen as more of a reach tool, Demand Gen is increasingly capable of driving efficient, high-quality growth across channels.
One of the biggest hurdles with Demand Gen is attribution. Like YouTube, much of its impact is distributed across devices, sessions, and conversion paths. That makes it harder to quantify value using platform attribution alone.
Best Practices:
Demand Gen lives in the middle of the funnel, which means a lot of its value won’t show up in last-click reports. But that doesn’t mean it’s not working.
Yes, but with qualifiers.
These updates push Demand Gen in the right direction. However, its effectiveness still depends heavily on how well offline conversion tracking is set up. Without OCT, it’s easy to over-index on low-quality traffic or vanity metrics. Like with any smart campaign, advertisers will need to keep a close eye on manual levers, creative segmentation, and audience inputs to ensure optimal outcomes.
If Demand Gen is to perform at the level we’d like, there are a few critical features still on our wishlist:
Google’s Q4 Demand Gen updates are a clear signal that the product is maturing into a more performance-friendly format. While attribution and creative controls still lag behind Meta’s stack, the improvements to bidding, app linking, and customer acquisition targeting make this a much more compelling channel to test.
For brands looking to diversify spend and capture early-stage demand, especially in B2B and high-consideration categories, now is a good time to revisit Demand Gen.