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What Should My Google Ads Creative Strategy Look Like in a Video-First World?

by asplichal | Feb 23, 2026 | Google Ads

We are officially living in a video-first world.

YouTube dominates streaming. Shorts are everywhere. Performance Max heavily favors video assets. And if you don’t upload video into Google Ads, Google will often generate one for you (and let’s be honest — those auto-generated videos rarely convert well).

But here’s the big question:

What should your Google Ads creative strategy actually look like in this new environment?

Because just since the world is video-first doesn’t mean your strategy should be branding-first.

It still needs to be conversion-first.

In Make Each Click Count, I emphasize that every advertising dollar must be accountable. Video is just a format. Strategy is what drives profitability. So let’s break down how to approach creative in a way that aligns with performance, intent, and ultimately revenue.

 

Start with Buyer Intent — Not Video Ideas

One of the biggest mistakes ecommerce brands make is starting with a creative concept instead of starting with buyer intent.

They say:

  • “Let’s create something that goes viral.”
  • “Let’s tell our story.”
  • “Let’s do something cinematic.”

That’s fine — if you’re Nike.

But most ecommerce brands need profitable sales, not film festival submissions.

Your creative strategy should match where the buyer is in the funnel.

 

Bottom of Funnel (High Intent)

These are users actively searching:

  • “Buy waterproof hiking boots”
  • “Best price protein powder”
  • “Noise cancelling headphones under $200”

For these users, your video creative should:

  • Show the product immediately
  • Highlight clear benefits
  • Address objections
  • Include a direct call to action

No long brand intro. No slow build.

Hook them in the first 3–5 seconds:

“Still dealing with sore feet after long hikes? These boots fix that.”

Fast. Clear. Benefit-driven.

High-intent traffic wants reassurance, not entertainment.

 

Mid-Funnel (Consideration)

These users are researching:

  • “Best running shoes for flat feet”
  • “Product X vs Product Y”
  • Review-style searches

Here your video should:

  • Educate
  • Compare
  • Demonstrate
  • Build trust

This is where testimonial videos, comparison breakdowns, and FAQ-style content perform extremely well.

Longer YouTube ads can work here — as long as they provide value.

 

Top of Funnel (Awareness)

Top-of-funnel video can absolutely work — but only if your backend is strong.

If you don’t have:

  • Proper tracking
  • Retargeting sequences
  • Strong conversion rates
  • Healthy margins

Then you’re likely funding YouTube entertainment instead of driving profitable growth.

Video awareness campaigns must connect to a measurable path to conversion. Otherwise, you’re just chasing views.

 

Your Hook Matters More Than Your Production Budget

Let me share something I’ve seen repeatedly.

An $800 iPhone video with a strong hook can outperform a $25,000 agency-produced commercial.

Why?

Because attention is the currency.

Your first five seconds determine everything.

Weak opening:

“At XYZ Company, we pride ourselves…”

Strong opening:

“Stop wasting money on supplements that don’t work.”

The algorithm rewards watch time. Watch time starts with a hook.

Focus your energy on:

  • Calling out your audience directly
  • Identifying a pain point
  • Making a bold claim
  • Disrupting expectations

You don’t need Hollywood production. You need clarity and relevance.

 

Create Variations — Not Just One “Perfect” Video

With Google’s AI-driven campaigns like Performance Max, creative diversity is critical.

Instead of building one polished video and hoping it performs, create variations:

  • Multiple hooks
  • Different benefit angles
  • Various calls to action
  • Short versions (6 seconds)
  • Medium versions (15 seconds)
  • Longer explainer versions (30+ seconds)

Let the data determine the winner.

In Make Each Click Count, I stress testing and optimization. Creative is no different. Treat video as a performance variable, not a one-time production project.

 

Video Doesn’t Close the Sale — Your Landing Page Does

Here’s something too many marketers overlook:

Your ad gets the click.
Your landing page gets the conversion.

If your video promises:

“Lose 10 pounds without giving up carbs…”

And your landing page says:

“Welcome to our homepage.”

You’ve broken the message match.

Your creative strategy must connect directly to a conversion-focused landing page with:

  • A matching headline
  • Reinforced benefits
  • Clear social proof
  • Objection handling
  • A strong, obvious call to action

The tighter the alignment between ad and landing page, the higher your conversion rate.

Creative and landing experience must function as one system.

 

Video Is Extremely Powerful for Retargeting

If there’s one place where video shines, it’s retargeting.

Why?

Because the prospect already knows you.

Retargeting video can:

  • Address abandoned carts
  • Showcase testimonials
  • Answer common objections
  • Create urgency
  • Highlight limited-time offers

For example:

“Still thinking about the XYZ Blender? Here’s why 4,382 customers love it.”

That’s personalized. That’s relevant. That converts.

Retargeting video is often where you’ll see some of your strongest return on ad spend.

 

Think Omnichannel Consistency

Your Google video ads should not live in isolation.

The strongest ecommerce brands build consistency across:

  • YouTube
  • Google Search
  • Google Shopping
  • Display
  • Even Amazon and Bing where applicable

If a prospect sees:

  • Your YouTube video
  • Then your Shopping ad
  • Then a retargeting display ad

That repetition builds trust.

Trust drives conversions.

Video becomes one component of a larger ecosystem — not a standalone tactic.

 

Measure Profit — Not Just Engagement

In a video-first world, it’s easy to get distracted by:

  • Views
  • Watch time
  • Click-through rate
  • Engagement

Those metrics matter — but they are not the end goal.

The metrics that matter are:

  • Cost per acquisition
  • Return on ad spend
  • Conversion rate
  • Lifetime value
  • Profit margin

Video campaigns must be held accountable to the same performance standards as search campaigns.

If video generates engagement but not profitable sales, adjust:

  • The hook
  • The targeting
  • The offer
  • The landing page

Creative strategy is iterative. The data should guide your next move.

 

Final Thoughts

Yes — we are in a video-first world.

But we are still in a profit-first business environment.

Your Google Ads creative strategy should:

  • Align with buyer intent
  • Lead with a strong hook
  • Use multiple variations
  • Connect to conversion-focused landing pages
  • Support retargeting efforts
  • Be measured by profitability

Video is powerful. But without strategy, it’s just expensive content.

When you combine smart creative with disciplined measurement, that’s when you truly make each click count.

And that’s what sustainable ecommerce growth is all about.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. Do I need high-production video to succeed with Google Ads?

No. High production quality is not required to succeed with Google Ads video campaigns. In fact, authentic, direct-response style videos often outperform expensive agency-produced commercials.

What matters most is:

  • A strong hook in the first 3–5 seconds
  • Clear communication of benefits
  • Addressing objections
  • A compelling call to action

Relevance and clarity consistently outperform flashy production when profitability is the goal.

  1. What types of video ads work best for ecommerce on Google?

The best-performing video ads typically align with buyer intent. For ecommerce brands, high-performing formats include:

  • Product demonstration videos
  • Problem–solution videos
  • Customer testimonials
  • Comparison videos
  • FAQ-style explainer videos
  • Retargeting videos addressing objections

Bottom-of-funnel, benefit-driven videos often generate the strongest return on ad spend.

  1. How long should my Google Ads video be?

There is no one-size-fits-all answer, but testing multiple lengths is critical.

A strong starting point is:

  • 6-second bumper ads for awareness
  • 15-second ads for direct response
  • 30-second or longer videos for education and mid-funnel consideration

More important than length is the strength of your hook. If you don’t capture attention immediately, viewers won’t stick around — regardless of duration.

  1. Should I use video in Performance Max campaigns?

Yes. If you do not upload video assets into Performance Max, Google may automatically generate a video for you using stock imagery and static assets.

It’s far better to:

  • Create your own branded video assets
  • Test multiple creative angles
  • Provide various hooks and calls to action

This gives you greater control over messaging and performance.

  1. How important is the landing page when running video ads?

Extremely important.

Your video generates interest. Your landing page closes the sale.

For best results:

  • Ensure the headline matches the promise in the video
  • Reinforce the same benefits
  • Include testimonials and social proof
  • Provide a clear and simple call to action

A strong message match between video and landing page significantly improves conversion rates.

  1. When should I use video for retargeting?

Video is particularly effective in retargeting campaigns because the audience is already familiar with your brand.

Retargeting videos can:

  • Address abandoned carts
  • Highlight customer reviews
  • Overcome common objections
  • Promote limited-time offers
  • Reinforce urgency

These campaigns often produce some of the highest returns when properly structured and measured.

  1. What metrics should I focus on when evaluating video ad performance?

While views and engagement metrics are useful indicators, they should not be the primary measure of success.

Instead, focus on:

  • Cost per acquisition (CPA)
  • Return on ad spend (ROAS)
  • Conversion rate
  • Customer lifetime value (LTV)
  • Overall profitability

In a video-first world, the goal is still the same: profitable customer acquisition. Every creative decision should ultimately be evaluated based on revenue and profit — not vanity metrics.

 

Need Help with Google Ads? If you’re ready to take your online store’s performance to the next level with Google Shopping Ads but need a helping hand, consider reaching out. I’m Andy Splichal, author of Make Each Click Count and host of the Make Each Click Count podcast. Whether it’s about creating high-performing Shopping Ads or mastering your overall Google Ads strategy, I’m here to help. Let’s make those clicks count!  

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Andy Splichal is the founder and managing partner of True Online Presence, author of the Make Each Click Count book series, host of the Make Each Click Count podcast, founder of Make Each Click Count University and certified online marketing strategist with twenty plus years of experience helping companies increase their online presence and profitable revenues.

He was named to Best of Los Angeles Awards’ Most Fascinating 100 List in both 2020 and 2021. To find more information on Andy Splichal, visit trueonlinepresence.com or read The Full Story on his website or his blog, blog.trueonlinepresence.com.

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