Running a display campaign and wondering why your ads generate thousands of impressions but conversions are few and far between? The problem rarely lies in the ad message itself or the budget. Most often, it stems from your ad reaching everyone instead of the right people. In the Google Display Network, which spans over 2 million websites and mobile apps, without precise audience segmentation, your message gets lost in the digital noise.
Audience segmentation isn’t an option for perfectionists—it’s the foundation of every effective display campaign. It allows you to divide the mass of users into smaller groups according to specific criteria and tailor your ad message to them. When you know who’s viewing your ads, you can speak in the language of benefits that resonates with their needs.
Demographic Data as the First Audience Filter
Demographic segmentation is the simplest way to cut off traffic that will never bring you a return on investment. In Google Ads, you have five basic parameters at your disposal: gender, age, parental status, household income level, and geolocation. You add each of them at the ad group level through the Audiences report.
Imagine you run a premium baby stroller store. Targeting ads to all users aged 18 to 65 is a waste of budget. Instead, narrow the group to women and men aged 25 to 44 with parental status “has children” and income level above average. Such a filter automatically excludes people who are most likely not interested in your offer.
Geolocation in display campaigns works somewhat differently than you might think. The system doesn’t only target ads to people physically present in a given location. It also includes users who regularly visit that place or show interest in that area. If you run a furniture showroom in Warsaw, you can set a thirty-kilometer radius from your address and reach not only residents of the capital but also people from surrounding localities.
Audience Interests and Habits
Segmentation by interests allows you to reach people based on their lifestyle, passions, and daily choices. The system analyzes users’ online activity—visited pages, viewed materials, searched phrases—and assigns them to appropriate interest categories.
Let’s say you offer dietary catering for physically active people. Targeting ads solely by demographic data will give you a group of women and men of the right age, but it won’t guarantee that these people care about health and diet. So add segmentation by interests: fitness, healthy lifestyle, sports. You can also narrow the group to enthusiasts of specific disciplines—CrossFit, yoga, long-distance running.
This segmentation method works particularly well in combination with demographic data. Such a multi-layered filter gives you a group of recipients who actively seek information related to your offer, which significantly increases the probability of conversion.
In-Market Segments for Users Ready to Purchase
Targeting by in-market segments is a way to reach people at the final stages of the purchase path. The system identifies users who are actively searching for information about specific products or services and will likely make a purchase decision in the near future.
The difference between interests and in-market segments is fundamental. Interests show general passions—someone is interested in fitness but doesn’t necessarily plan to buy a gym membership now. In-market segments identify a specific purchase intent—the person is comparing gym offers, reading reviews, checking prices. This is a user who will either sign a contract with you or with your competition in a week.
Do you run a beauty salon? Target ads to the “manicure and pedicure services” segment. Do you sell jewelry? The “engagement rings” or “personalized gifts” segments will provide you with recipients who have a specific reason to purchase and are actively comparing options.
Remarketing as Segmentation with Contact History
Remarketing in display campaigns is a way to re-reach users who have already interacted with your brand. They visited your site, added a product to their cart, viewed a specific offer category—each of these actions creates a segment of recipients to whom you can target personalized messages.
The effectiveness of remarketing stems from a simple fact: a person who already knows you will much more easily make a purchase decision than a completely new user. They’ve seen your offer, got to know your brand, often checked product details. Now they need an impulse to return and finalize the transaction.
Building effective remarketing starts with implementing Google Ads tracking code on your website. Next, you create remarketing lists in the Audience Manager section, specifying membership criteria. You can create separate lists for people who viewed specific product categories, spent more than three minutes on the site, or added a product to their cart without completing the purchase.
Each list requires a different communication approach. For users who abandoned their cart, remind them about waiting products and possibly offer free shipping. For people browsing the offer without adding to cart, show reviews from satisfied customers that build trust.
From Theory to Practice
Effective audience segmentation in display campaigns requires continuous testing and optimization. Start with a thorough analysis of current customers. Who buys your products? What is their age, gender, location? What are they interested in? These answers will give you a starting point for building your first audience segments.
Next, launch a reach campaign with several targeting variants. First test basic demographic filters and interests. Collect data for two to three weeks. Analyze which segments generate the best conversion results and the lowest customer acquisition cost.
Remember regular optimization. The effectiveness of audience segments changes over time. Seasonality, market trends, competitor actions—all of this affects how your target group responds to ads. Analyze results at least once every two weeks and don’t be afraid to turn off ineffective segments.
Sign Up for a Consultation
Audience segmentation is the foundation for a successful display campaign, but theory is one thing and practical implementation is a completely different story. Each industry has its specifics, each product requires a different approach, and each audience group responds differently to the same targeting methods.
Sign up for a consultation during which we’ll analyze your current campaign, identify untapped audience segmentation opportunities, and indicate specific steps to increase return on investment in advertising. Don’t wait—start reaching the right audiences today.


















