YouTube Advertising Complete Ebook

YouTube Advertising Complete Ebook

Table of Contents for YouTube advertising complete ebook  

Introduction...................................................................................3

Intro to YouTube Ads.....................................................................5

Types of YouTube Ads....................................................................7

Setting Your Advertising Budget ..................................................14

How to Define Your Target Audience...........................................17

Adjust Your Targeting ..................................................................23

Launching your First Campaign ....................................................28

Resources.....................................................................................34


 

Introduction 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 

Targeted, engaging and optimized videos are powerful vehicles

for spreading your marketing message and reaching a new 

audience. And the reality is, most people would rather watch an 

engaging video than read a lengthy article or blog post.

In fact, the YouTube platform has over 2 billion users—who, 

combined, consume over 1-billion hours of video every single day!

That’s more than Netflix and Facebook videos combined. 

But of course, YouTube isn’t the only video platform available, 

though it currently is the largest. As of 2021, YouTube reaches 

more 18 to 49-year-olds than any American cable network. 

There’s no question, it’s a powerful tool for branding and 

marketing, and since your audience is likely already on video 

platforms, it’s an easy way to maximize conversion rates, or 

simply reach an entirely new following.  

you learn about YouTube Advertising in this blog


   

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 4

YouTube has also become a frequently used search engine for 

many people, even those who generally say they’re not 

comfortable with modern tech. 

In this special report, we’ll take a close look at how you can create 

high converting video ads on the YouTube platform so that you 

can maximize exposure quickly and easily.

Let’s begin!

     

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 5

Intro to YouTube Ads

In 2017, YouTube revamped its AdWords, allowing advertisers to 

reach more viewers on YouTube, especially on mobile devices, 

where almost 50% of all YouTube views occur. 

YouTube also announced the ability for advertisers to target 

viewers based on their Google search history—in addition to the 

viewing behaviors it was already targeting.

     

 

 

This means that you can now target viewers who recently 

searched for a specific product or service, and you can then create 

different ads for different types of viewers.

If a viewer sees a video-based ad that’s closely related to 

something they were just searching for, they’re more likely to 

watch the entire clip, or even click through to your website for 

more information. 

    

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 6

Targeted ads allow you to maximize your marketing dollars and 

reach deep into your niche, connecting with your audience in a 

matter of minutes.

YouTube ads are a little different from other types of ads (like 

Facebook or Google) though. With some of the other platforms, 

you’re required to pay upfront for your ads. 

With YouTube, however, you only pay for a view if the user 

watches more than 30 seconds of your ad, or takes an action 

(such as clicking through to your website).

 

 

With Google or Facebook ads, you’d pay no matter how much of 

your ad was seen. With YouTube, you pay only when your ad has 

triggered a positive response! 

   

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 7

Types of YouTube Ads

Before you begin advertising on the YouTube platform, it’s 

important that you understand the different options available.

Currently, there are seven different types of YouTube ads:

TrueView Instream Ads: These are the most common of all

YouTube ads, the main advertising format. 

 

8 out of 10 viewers prefer this sort of ad over the other types. This 

is mostly because this format gives you the most control over 

which advertisements they see. 

You may see this as a negative, as viewers can choose to skip your 

ads, but think of it this way: you’re paying only for those viewers 

who are interested in what you’re offering them.

         

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 8

These ads can be as short as 12 seconds and as long as 6 minutes. 

A six-minute ad is a fairly long one, so you should probably aim for 

somewhere in the middle. 

There are two basic types of TrueView Ads: skippable and nonskippable. 

Let’s look at those in more detail.

Non-skippable Instream Ads: These are a type of TrueView ad 

that do exactly what the title says. The viewer cannot skip over 

these ads, but must watch all the way through to get to the 

content they’re searching for. 

 

Non-skippable ads can play at the beginning or end of the chosen 

video, or can be placed somewhere in the middle. Ads that pop up 

in the middle of a video can be annoying, but you’re more likely to 

keep the viewer’s attention because they’re waiting for the rest of 

the chosen content to display.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 9

The important thing to remember is that the ad must be watched 

all the way through, which means you pay every time the ad 

plays. This would be a good choice for a business with a large

marketing budget because you’re not going to be targeting your 

viewers quite as narrowly as you would with a skippable ad. With 

a non-skippable ad, you’ll pay every time it pops up.

Note: YouTube recently announced that they had to be under 20 

seconds long (rather than the 30 seconds they previously 

allowed). 

 

There’s also a special subset of Non-skippable Ad: the Bumper Ad.

This is a Non-skippable ad that plays at the beginning of a video 

and must be under 6 seconds long. You are charged for these in 

the same way you are charged for other Non-skippable ads.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 10

Skippable Instream Ads: Again, this is just what it sounds like. 

After viewing five seconds of your TrueView ad, the user can opt 

to skip it and get straight back to their chosen content. 

You aren’t charged unless they watch at least 30 seconds of your 

ad (or if they take action such as clicking on a link in your ad). 

Skippable ads can be played at the beginning of a video, during 

the video, or afterwards. We recommend placing your ads at the 

beginning or middle of the video because it’s way too easy to just 

skip an ad at the end by clicking on the next video in the series.

Sponsored Card Ads: These ads display content relevant to the 

YouTube video being watched, such as products used in the video 

itself. Viewers will see a teaser for the card for a few seconds, or 

they can click an icon at the top right corner of their screen to 

browse through the cards associated with their video. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 11

These ads are available on both desktop and mobile versions of 

YouTube. Sponsored cards are a very unobtrusive YouTube ad.

Overlay Ads: These are available for desktop or laptop computers. 

An overlay ad is a transparent ad that appears in the lower 20% of 

the video. That’s 480 x 70 pixels and viewers can exit the ad at any 

time they wish. 

Overlay ads are not as popular because are prone to with false 

clicks, and because some viewers find them annoying.

Display Ads: These appear to the right of the video just above the 

video suggestion list. They can be 300 x 250 or 300 x 60 pixels in 

size and can run across all areas of YouTube except for the 

homepage. 

If a viewer is interested in what you’re advertising and sees one of 

your display ads, you should get a click.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 12

Midroll Ads: These ads play full screen and appear in videos that 

are more than 15 minutes long. They play just like television 

commercials, interrupting the video periodically to show an 

advertisement. 

Viewers must watch the ad before the video continues playing so 

you’ll be paying whenever the ad runs and not when the viewer 

watches a certain amount of the ad. 

These ads can appear on desktop, laptop, and mobile devices. 

Advertisers can insert ad breaks at natural pauses in a longer 

video for a more streamlined viewing experience. 

Most people are used to seeing commercials when watching a 

video, so this type of ad isn’t as annoying as some of the other 

types. Since these are non-skippable, you are charged on a CPM 

basis – that’s Cost-Per-Mille, where “mille” stands for a thousand 

views.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 13

Rather than charging you per click, YouTube will charge you a fee 

for every thousand views.

    

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 14

Setting Your Advertising 

Budget

YouTube advertising cost ranges (on average) from $0.10 to $0.30 

per view or impression, however the overall cost for each ad 

campaign can vary based on a variety of factors, such as:

• Your advertising goals.

• The type of YouTube ad you’re running.

• Advertising audience targeting preferences.

• Your daily budget.

And of course, the cost to create the video itself.

As of 2021, the average business sets a $10 daily budget for its 

YouTube advertising campaigns. The key is to set a reasonable 

budget and be realistic about your advertising goals.

         

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 15

YouTube is a great way to maximize traffic and increase 

awareness for your business, but it’s important that you set a 

clear objective right from the start.

Also keep in mind that since YouTube requires that you pay only 

for the ads that are viewed, you’ll be able to effectively determine 

your overall advertising costs based on how many views you’re 

aiming to reach.

You’ll also want to closely monitor your results. You can easily 

gauge the effectiveness of your ads by tapping into the available 

metrics that will give you important engagement-based data, such 

as likes, shares, comments, watch-time, and what Google calls 

“brand lift”.

Brand lift is “a measurement of the direct impact your YouTube 

ads are having on perceptions and behaviors throughout the 

consumer journey.”

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 16

So, begin by creating a cost outline that includes all your upfront 

costs, such as video creation, script writing, etc. 

Then, choose the right type of ad for your business and set a 

reasonable campaign goal.

Tip: If you are looking to decrease advertising costs, you might 

want to consider working with a YouTube advertising partner 

where they take care of the video production process for you. 

Resource: https://www.youtube.com/ads/resources/creativedirectory/

 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 17

How to Define Your Target 

Audience

Reaching new audiences is easy with YouTube ads, but it all starts 

by defining your target audience.

You’ll need to brainstorm and figure out which types of people 

would be interested in your product or service. That will be based 

on things like age, location, socio-economic status, educational 

level, interests, etc.

 

 

Don’t be vague, either. “Men” or “Women” just won’t work. Think 

more along the lines of “30-something career women with 2 

children who are interested in starting a home-based business.” 

The key is to narrow down your search as far as possible.

 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 18

Market research, and being able to define your target audience in 

a nutshell is important in understanding the customer and how 

they are going to make purchase decisions. 

Targeting a specific audience will also help your ad campaigns 

reach the right people—those who will relate to your company’s 

message and will be interested in your products or services.

Let’s say your company is marketing a new educational toy. Your 

target audiences might be children who are X-years old, parents, 

grandparents, teachers, and maybe educational specialists. 

 

Now you only need to target those people with your ads to find 

 

some potential clients! You can insert your ad into anything from 

a children’s video to an educational show for parents—whatever 

you believe is not only relevant, but likely to trigger a positive 

response. 

 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 19

That way, you’d get the exposure to different audiences for the 

same basic ad. Of course, you’d want to tweak the ad to appeal to 

different ages and demographics.

Remember that your target audience isn’t the same as your target 

market. 

 

Both are centered around dividing customers into different 

groups to help you make informed business decisions. 

A target market, however, is a specific group of consumers at 

whom your company’s products and services are aimed. 

A target audience defines that that group using demographics, 

interests, and buying history. 

To put it another way, you can define your target market by 

finding your target audience. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 20

For example, if your target market is “young men aged 20-35,” 

your target audience might be “young men aged 20-35 living in 

New York City.”

You can then divide your audience into groups or further define 

them using categories like the following:

Purchase Intention: a group of people looking for a specific 

product or service who are looking for more information before 

they purchase. 

Examples would be consumers in the market for a laptop, 

automobile, television, or an item of clothing. This sort of 

information is important so you can see how to better direct your 

messages to your audience.

Interests: a group of people who are interested in the same thing, 

like hiking or knitting or basketball.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 21

Knowing this information helps you to connect with your 

audience in a relatable way and figure out buyer behaviors and 

motivation. 

For example, customers interested in baseball memorabilia would 

most likely be interested during baseball season, when they can 

show off their purchases during the games. 

Another example: if you discover that a large group of your 

audience is interested in eating out, you could figure out a way to 

work that into your ads and attract even more attention.

 

Subcultures: groups of people who identify with a shared 

experience, like a certain music scene or entertainment genre. 

People define themselves by these subcultures and you can use 

those to better understand who you’re reaching out to. 

 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 22

For example, if you think of how a certain subculture relates to 

your business—especially if you have a large potential audience—

then you’re reaching your subculture. 

Think of how Netflix markets to its different subcultures (people 

who like comedy, science-fiction, horror, and anime) using social 

media accounts directed at those groups.

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 23

Adjust Your Targeting

Defining your target audience involves a good bit of research. 

That goes into figuring out exactly who you want to reach and 

how you can reach them in a way that stands out from your 

competitors. 

Here’s how to find your audience so you can adjust your targeting 

to reach those people:

1: Use Google Analytics to learn more about your customers. 

Google Analytics is great for finding demographic details about 

your audience and their interests. This is critical information that 

will help you locate a target audience. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 24

With Google Analytics, you can see website insights and how 

that’s broken into different sections, like age, gender, and 

location. 

These sections are clearly labeled on your dashboard and shown 

in colorful graphs that are easy to interpret. This tool can be a 

fantastic asset that will give you great insight into who’s visiting 

your website and how your product or services fit into their lives.

2: Create a reader persona to target your blog content. 

 

The good thing about a reader persona is that it should be nearly 

identical to your buyer persona. 

You need to remember who you’re writing for and give them 

useful content to read. This will build your reputation among your 

consumers and make them trust you to recommend products and 

services for them. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 25

The main difference between a reader persona and a buyer 

persona is that the reader persona usually focuses on whatever 

problems that reader might have in their life. Figure out how to 

write content that solves their problems with one or more blog 

posts. 

3: Check out social media analytics. 

You need to figure out when your audience is most engaged with 

your social media channels. 

Is it when you post funny photos or memes, or when you post a 

poll? 

The answers to your questions can give you clues into the content 

your audience is interested in. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 26

Every social media platform is different, with a different audience. 

So looking at the analytics across all your platforms is very 

important. 

For example, Facebook tends to attract an older audience than 

Twitter does, but Twitter uses short posts while Facebook allows 

longer posts and even videos. Instagram is visually based, so 

graphically interesting content would be great for that platform. 

If you keep those things in mind, you can plan your strategy 

better. 

   

 

Analytics can tell you who’s looking at your profile, what’s 

working, and what’s not working about your content. In order to 

gain followers from your target market, you must post content 

your audience is interested in.

4: Use Facebook insights. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 27

This is a great tool if you have a Facebook account. Facebook gives 

every one of your Pages free insights like who your followers are 

and where they’re from. 

These insights work very similarly to Google Analytics, giving you 

crucial information you’ll need to determine your target audience. 

On your insights dashboard, access the People tab to see location 

demographics like which city your followers live in. That can give 

you some interests that might attract your followers. 

         

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 28

Launching your First 

Campaign

You’ve put in the hours, done your homework, and planned 

everything out perfectly. You’ve perfected your script, 

storyboarded your ad, found the right talent, shot the ad and 

edited it. 

 

The result can be a blockbuster video ad!

But with all that time and effort invested, you can’t just embed 

your ad in a random video and hope it reaches the right audience.

Great content is almost certain to become sticky sooner or later, 

but it’s important for you to be proactive about getting the 

attention of prospective clients and educating those unfamiliar 

with your brand.

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 29

Running a series of YouTube ads is one way to make sure more of 

your target audience is going to find that video you’ve worked so 

hard to produce. 

Advertising on YouTube is different from running a pay-per-click 

ad or a paid social campaign. YouTube has certain specific 

constraints, but it also has lots of options. You need some basic 

knowledge before you start your next video project so you can 

make the most of your ad possibilities.

 

A TrueView ad can include people, dialogue, and music that’s 

been retrieved with permission (or is considered royalty-free). 

You don’t want to run a standard promotional commercial 

though. Since your ads can be skipped, you’ll want to give your 

audience a real reason to keep watching. “Product plugs” 

generally don’t grab the views that you’ll want. 

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 30

Instead, tell some sort of story with your video ad. People love 

seeing case studies of others who’ve faced a struggle that they 

can empathize with. This sort of ad is harder to skip and it will 

make your brand more memorable.

The TrueView ads also provide you with lots of information you 

can use to determine how they’re performing. 

You can see data on completed views, partial views, click-through

rates on your calls-to-action, whether your video drives channel 

subscriptions, any views sourced from a user sharing your 

content, and views on the brand’s other content that can be 

connected to a user who’s viewed your ad. 

 

These actions can help you understand the value of your video ad 

dollars—and where to focus your budget to increase your results.

Non-skippable pre-roll ads can give you some of the same 

features as TrueView ads do. You can include people, dialogue,

 

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 31

audio, and other elements that represent your brand—providing 

you can do it in 15 to 20 seconds. 

Because these ads are non-skippable, your best option is to 

include a call-to-action so you can optimize the viewer’s attention. 

In other words, encourage your viewers to click on your ad and 

receive something useful in return. 

To set up your campaign, first go to your Google AdWords 

dashboard. 

The red “+ Campaign” button on the left-hand tab has a dropdown menu where you should choose “Video.” 

Enter a name for your campaign. Make sure you have also 

checked the “Video” type from that drop-down menu as well. 

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 32

Then select “In-Stream or video discovery ads” to make sure your 

videos will be in TrueView format. 

Set your budget per day and your delivery style. The latter will be 

either standard, where your ads will show evenly over a period of 

time, or accelerated, which shows the ads as quickly as possible. 

Now, decide where you want your ads to appear.

With “YouTube 

 

Search,” your ads will appear in search results and on the 

YouTube home page, channel pages, and video pages. 

With “YouTube Videos,” your ads will appear as in-display or instream videos. 

With this option, you can also choose to show your ads on Google 

partner sites, apps, and the Display Network. 

You should try some ads in both YouTube Search and YouTube 

Videos so you can see the difference each ad makes.

 

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 33

Define the location where you want the ads shown. You can also 

exclude certain locations if you want. 

Your YouTube ad is now ready for publication—and ready to net 

you some potential clients!

And finally, don’t be afraid to experiment with different ads to see 

what your particular audiences enjoy more, and remember to 

track your results whenever you test a new ad.

To your success!

 

YouTube Advertising: Special Report 34

Resources 

Here are links to a few resources that I believe will help you: 

YouTube Ads:

>> https://www.youtube.com/ads/

Setting Up Your First Campaign: 

>> https://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/how-to-set-upyoutube-ads-campaign/

YouTube Advertising Guide: 

>> https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/youtube-videoadvertising-guide

YouTube Ads for Beginners: 

>> https://www.oberlo.ca/blog/youtube-ads-beginners-launchfirst-campaign 


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