These types of campaign goals are available for house ad campaigns and direct-sold campaigns:
- Max cost per install (Android beta)
- Mediated ads (recommended for backfill)
- Number of impressions
- Number of clicks
- Percentage of impressions
1. Max cost per install (Android beta)
Max cost per install campaigns allow you to set the maximum amount it will cost in potential ad revenue to acquire a new user for your app. This goal type is for house ad campaigns only.
For each impression, AdMob calculates the estimated cost (i.e. the revenue missed out by serving a campaign ad). If the estimated cost is less than the max cost per install that you set, a campaign ad is served. If the estimated cost is more than the max cost per install that you set, a campaign is not served.
Learn more about the max cost per install campaign goal type.
2. Mediated ads (recommended for backfill)
Your ads compete in the mediation chain using an eCPM that can be optimised for backfill. You can choose how your ads will be ordered in the mediation chain using either:
- Google optimised for backfill: Use your house ads as backfill when paid ads would have negligible value.
- Manual eCPM: The eCPM value that you set during campaign creation is used to place the campaign in competition against other CPM-based ad sources, including the AdMob network, campaigns that use eCPM floors and third-party ad networks. If your paid ads are below this eCPM value, your campaign will serve instead of your paid network ads.
Note: Though the manual eCPM is shown as a monetary value, mediated house ads are always free of charge.
Mediated ads campaigns aren’t required to have a set end date, though you can set one if desired.
3. Number of impressions
These campaigns have defined start and end dates and specific impression goals. AdMob will speed up or slow down the delivery of ads to meet the impression goal.
Impression goals are typically used for brand campaigns. Advertisers usually want to make sure that their campaign is seen a certain number of times.
4. Number of clicks
These campaigns have defined start and end dates and specific click goals. These campaigns are performance-based.
For example, you would use a click goal campaign when you want to make sure that you send a certain number of views to your app's page in an app store.
5. Percentage of impressions
These campaigns can also be referred to as sponsorship campaigns. Your campaign will be given first priority for the specified percentage of impressions. These campaigns have defined start and end dates but no specific impression goals. They have the highest priority, so that they can use the specified share of the app's advertising inventory.
Example
If the campaign targets multiple ad units, the campaign will serve ads for the specified percentage of impressions across each ad unit (e.g. a campaign with a '10% of impressions' goal will serve ads to 10% of impressions for each ad unit targeted by the campaign).
A campaign with a 100% of impressions goal will be given first priority to serve ads for all impressions. This doesn’t mean, however, that a campaign's ads are served for all impressions. There are instances where paid ads are served instead:
- If the ad creative fails the Google Ads review process.
- If the campaign targeting doesn’t match the ad query (e.g. query originates from the United States, but the campaign targets Japan).
- If the campaign has a frequency cap that’s already been met.
- If the ad creative size doesn't match the ad unit format size (e.g. banner size significantly smaller than the ad creative).
- If the query comes from a child-directed app or child-directed traffic.