Post by account_disabled on Dec 21, 2023 3:59:55 GMT
It's a sleepy Monday morning, I'm sipping coffee, working my way through fresh emails. I'm just turning on advertising accounts, I want to prepare... ((ty-dy-dy ty-dy-dy)) my phone is ringing from a client. Click. " Good day , ..." “Good morning, we have bad banners on the internet! At the event with jackets, we are shown a sleeping bag with some strange picture ! Could you please check?!" Damn, I checked the newly deployed banners several times. It is not possible for the old action to run and at all, I didn't shoot the sleeping bag with the jackets! “Okay, I'll check it out. Do you have a screenshot please or the website where the banner appeared?” Ugh, we have a screenshot, that's the better option.
Even before the client sends B2B Email List me the screenshot, I open the AdWords & Sklik opera duo, where I check the banners. I'm traversing the content network, looking at the remarketing reports, and I don't see an error. Okay, I'll rub my eyes one more time, drink more coffee, and aaah, more Adform! But no campaign was active in it. Does the client still have campaigns elsewhere? It doesn't have. How about a ghost or a strangely lost banner traveling through binary space? He is sometimes seen, but leaves no traces. I'm from... image Meanwhile, a colleague tells me a sci-fi story about saved cookies, when the RTB system from time to time failed to crack newly uploaded banners instead of the original ones. A similar phenomenon was occurring.
That's right. Desperation deepens, I want to ask a colleague to check my banners. In the end, I talk myself out of it, banner control will probably be my middle name in a little while. And here it is! I receive an email from the client, with the promised screenshot. But what I just saw, I have never seen before. A true banner-ghost ! image Stray banner Just like Sherlock, I recognize the icon in the upper right corner. Hmmm, AdWords - it's definitely a remarketing banner where the text sits on top of the text ad, but what about the image Watson? I'm calling Google. I found out from the phone call that this is a relatively new functionality that is in the testing phase. It is an automatic image extension for text ads. In the AdWords help, I also found this scary line: Thanks to automatic image augmentation, Google's algorithm matches the displayed text ads with an illustrative image from the industry in question.
Even before the client sends B2B Email List me the screenshot, I open the AdWords & Sklik opera duo, where I check the banners. I'm traversing the content network, looking at the remarketing reports, and I don't see an error. Okay, I'll rub my eyes one more time, drink more coffee, and aaah, more Adform! But no campaign was active in it. Does the client still have campaigns elsewhere? It doesn't have. How about a ghost or a strangely lost banner traveling through binary space? He is sometimes seen, but leaves no traces. I'm from... image Meanwhile, a colleague tells me a sci-fi story about saved cookies, when the RTB system from time to time failed to crack newly uploaded banners instead of the original ones. A similar phenomenon was occurring.
That's right. Desperation deepens, I want to ask a colleague to check my banners. In the end, I talk myself out of it, banner control will probably be my middle name in a little while. And here it is! I receive an email from the client, with the promised screenshot. But what I just saw, I have never seen before. A true banner-ghost ! image Stray banner Just like Sherlock, I recognize the icon in the upper right corner. Hmmm, AdWords - it's definitely a remarketing banner where the text sits on top of the text ad, but what about the image Watson? I'm calling Google. I found out from the phone call that this is a relatively new functionality that is in the testing phase. It is an automatic image extension for text ads. In the AdWords help, I also found this scary line: Thanks to automatic image augmentation, Google's algorithm matches the displayed text ads with an illustrative image from the industry in question.