Google App Campaigns is a black box. You throw in some text, images, videos, and a budget, and Google's machine learning does the rest. For years, I hated this lack of control. Then I learned to love it.
My education began when I was managing UA for a puzzle game. Our Meta campaigns were crushing it, but we'd hit a ceiling. A colleague suggested we get serious about Google. I was skeptical—UAC felt like shouting into a void. But we committed, learned the system, and within six months, Google became our largest and most profitable channel.
This guide is everything I learned on that journey.
Understanding Google App Campaigns
Google App Campaigns (formerly Universal App Campaigns or UAC) is Google's automated campaign type for driving app installs and in-app actions. It runs across Google's entire inventory:
- Google Search: App install ads in search results
- Google Play: Ads in the Play Store
- YouTube: In-stream and discovery ads
- Display Network: Banner ads across millions of sites
- Discover: Native content feed ads
- Gmail: Promotions tab ads
- AdMob: In-app ads within other apps
Unlike Meta where you can control targeting precisely, Google's algorithm makes all placement and audience decisions. Your job is to provide quality inputs and let the machine optimize.
Campaign Types and Objectives
Google offers three main optimization goals for app campaigns:
App Installs (tCPI)
Optimizes for maximum install volume at your target cost-per-install. Best for:
- Early-stage apps building user bases
- Apps with strong organic monetization
- Broad appeal apps where volume matters
In-App Actions (tCPA)
Optimizes for users who complete specific events after install. Best for:
- Apps with defined conversion funnels
- When you need quality over quantity
- Subscription and e-commerce apps
In-App Action Value (tROAS)
Optimizes for revenue, seeking users who will spend the most. Best for:
- Mature apps with purchase history
- Gaming apps with IAP revenue
- Apps where LTV varies dramatically
The Campaign Maturity Ladder
Most apps should progress through these goals: Start with tCPI to build volume and data. Move to tCPA once you have 10+ daily conversion events. Graduate to tROAS when you have substantial purchase data. Each stage requires the previous stage's data.
Asset Strategy: Feeding the Machine
Google's algorithm creates ads by combining your assets. More quality assets = better performance. Here's what you need:
Text Assets
- Headlines: 2-5 headlines, up to 30 characters each
- Descriptions: 1-5 descriptions, up to 90 characters each
Best practices:
- Lead with benefits, not features
- Include your app's unique value proposition
- Test different angles (urgency, social proof, curiosity)
- Keep some headlines short for smaller placements
Image Assets
- Minimum: 1 landscape (1200×628), 1 portrait (300×250)
- Recommended: 20 images across all sizes
- Sizes: 320×50, 320×100, 300×250, 320×480, 1200×628
Image tips:
- Show the app in action, not just icons
- Test screenshots vs lifestyle imagery
- Include clear CTAs in images
- Avoid too much text (20% rule applies)
Video Assets
Video is crucial for YouTube and high-impact placements:
- Minimum: 1 video
- Recommended: 5-10 videos
- Orientations: Landscape (16:9), Portrait (9:16), Square (1:1)
- Lengths: 10-30 seconds for best performance
The Portrait Video Gap
Most advertisers neglect portrait (9:16) video, but it's essential for YouTube Shorts—one of Google's fastest-growing placements. Don't leave this inventory on the table.
HTML5 Playable Assets
For gaming apps, playable demos can dramatically improve conversion:
- Interactive mini-games that showcase core gameplay
- 15-60 second experiences
- Higher production cost but often highest performance
Bidding Strategy Deep Dive
Your bid tells Google how much you're willing to pay—and influences which users you reach.
Setting Target Bids
Start conservative, then adjust based on performance:
- Calculate your maximum allowable CPI/CPA based on LTV
- Set initial target at 80% of maximum
- Let the campaign run for 2-3 weeks
- Adjust based on actual performance and volume needs
The Bid-Volume Trade-off
Higher bids = more volume but higher costs. Lower bids = better efficiency but less scale. Find your sweet spot:
- Volume Phase: Bid higher to acquire data and train the algorithm
- Efficiency Phase: Lower bids to optimize margins
- Scale Phase: Find the bid that maximizes profitable volume
Geo-Specific Bidding
Unlike Meta, Google doesn't let you bid differently by country within a campaign. Solution: Create separate campaigns for different geo tiers:
- Tier 1: US, UK, CA, AU—higher bids, higher LTV
- Tier 2: Western Europe, Japan, Korea—moderate bids
- Tier 3: LATAM, SEA, Eastern Europe—lower bids
- Tier 4: ROW—lowest bids or exclude
Learning Phase and Optimization
Google's algorithm needs time to learn. Here's how to navigate it:
The Learning Phase
New campaigns enter a learning phase where performance is volatile:
- Duration: Typically 2-4 weeks
- Required: 10-15 conversions per day minimum
- Behavior: CPIs/CPAs may exceed targets initially
What Triggers Learning Reset
- Bid changes greater than 20%
- Budget changes greater than 30%
- Changing optimization goal
- Adding/removing significant assets
Optimization Levers
Once stable, your optimization options are:
- Asset refresh: Replace underperforming assets
- Bid adjustment: Small incremental changes (10-15%)
- Budget scaling: Gradual increases (20% max)
- New campaigns: Test different goals or geos
The Asset Performance Report
Google grades each asset as Low, Good, or Best. Ruthlessly replace Low performers and study what makes Best performers work. This report is your primary optimization tool.
Advanced Strategies
Campaign Segmentation
Don't put all eggs in one campaign. Segment by:
- Geography: Separate tiers for different bid levels
- Objective: Install campaigns vs action campaigns
- Creative theme: Test different messaging approaches
- Language: Localized assets for non-English markets
Pre-Registration Campaigns
For new game launches, Google offers pre-registration campaigns:
- Build anticipation before launch
- Users get notified when the app releases
- Lower cost than post-launch acquisition
- Creates launch momentum
Custom Store Listings
Create custom Play Store pages for different audiences:
- Different screenshots for different user segments
- Localized descriptions and imagery
- Link specific campaigns to specific store listings
- Improve post-click conversion rates
Measurement and Attribution
Google Ads Conversion Tracking
Google's native conversion tracking is required for campaign optimization but has limitations:
- Only sees Google-driven conversions
- Can conflict with MMP data
- Uses its own attribution model
MMP Integration
Your MMP (AppsFlyer, Adjust, etc.) should be your source of truth. Integrate properly:
- Link Google Ads to your MMP
- Pass conversion events to Google for optimization
- Use MMP for cross-channel attribution
- Reconcile data differences monthly
View-Through Attribution
Google counts engaged-view conversions (users who watched 10+ seconds of a video). This can inflate numbers compared to click-only attribution. Understand and account for this difference.
Common Google App Campaign Mistakes
- Too few assets: 3 headlines and 2 images starves the algorithm
- Impatience: Killing campaigns before learning completes
- Over-optimization: Constant changes prevent learning
- Ignoring video: Missing YouTube inventory opportunity
- Generic creative: Stock photos and bland copy
- Wrong objective: Using tCPI when you should use tCPA
- Budget constraints: Daily budget too low for proper learning
Google vs. Meta: When to Use Each
Both platforms have strengths. Here's how to think about allocation:
Google Strengths
- Massive Android reach (especially emerging markets)
- Intent-driven placements (Search, Play Store)
- Often lower CPIs, especially for casual games
- YouTube's engaged video audience
Meta Strengths
- Stronger iOS performance (especially post-ATT)
- Better creative control and testing
- Superior user quality signals
- More granular optimization options
Allocation Framework
A common starting point:
- Android: 50-60% Google, 40-50% Meta
- iOS: 30-40% Google, 60-70% Meta
Adjust based on your specific performance data.
That puzzle game I mentioned? We eventually reached a 60/40 Google/Meta split on Android and generated 40% of our total revenue from Google-acquired users. The black box works when you feed it right.
Optimize Across Channels
ClicksFlyer gives you unified visibility into Google App Campaigns alongside Meta, TikTok, and other channels. Compare performance, identify trends, and allocate budget where it performs best.