Google + YouTube

Google & YouTube Campaign Basics

A practical guide for testing search, YouTube, and landing-page campaigns without confusing impressions, views, clicks, and real fan behavior.

Territory United States of America Time 12–18 min Level Beginner friendly Audience Artists testing Google or YouTube ads
What you should leave with

Leave with a simple campaign note: what you promoted, where traffic went, what metric mattered, and which result was worth repeating.

Start here

What this guide is for

Google and YouTube can create discovery, but the numbers need context. Impressions mean people had a chance to see the ad. Views mean the video was watched under platform rules. Clicks mean someone left the ad. None of those automatically prove a fan was made.

Goal Leave with a simple campaign note: what you promoted, where traffic went, what metric mattered, and which result was worth repeating.
Level Beginner friendly
Best for Artists testing Google or YouTube ads
Territory United States of America
Before you start

Gather these pieces first

Fast page A landing page or video destination tested on mobile with the main action visible quickly.
Campaign type Search, display, YouTube/video, or another campaign type chosen for a specific reason.
Measurement A written definition of success: click, watch time, signup, save, follow, ticket interest, or another action.
Context

Why this matters

Different traffic behaves differently Search, display, and YouTube campaigns reach people in different mindsets. Keeping them separate makes the data easier to read.
Landing pages reveal friction If paid traffic arrives but nobody clicks, listens, signs up, or stays, the issue may be the destination, not just the ad.
Video metrics need context Views, watch time, clicks, and engagement should be read together before deciding whether to increase spend.
Walkthrough

Do this in order

Step 1

Make the destination obvious on mobile

The page should load quickly, explain the artist or song, and show the listen, watch, follow, signup, or ticket action near the top. Remove anything that distracts from that action.

Tip: Paid traffic magnifies confusion. Fix the page before increasing spend.
Step 2

Do not mix campaign types in your notes

Search traffic, display traffic, and YouTube traffic are different tests. Keep dates, budget, creative, audience, keywords, placements, and destination links separated.

Tip: You can compare them later, but do not blur the data during the test.
Step 3

Use search when intent already exists

Search campaigns are strongest when people are already looking for the artist, song, event, lyric, venue, genre, or related phrase. Keep keywords tight at first.

Tip: Broad search terms can spend money quickly without finding listeners.
Step 4

Read YouTube numbers as a set

Review impressions, views, view rate, watch behavior, clicks, engagement, and audience information together. A lot of views with no meaningful next action may still need better creative or targeting.

Tip: A campaign can be useful for awareness, but be honest about what it is doing.
Step 5

Review landing-page performance

Compare which URLs receive traffic, how they perform, and whether people take the intended action. Keep the winning destination and fix or pause the weak one.

Tip: The destination is part of the campaign, not an afterthought.
Step 6

Write down the lesson

After each test, write one sentence: what you tested, what happened, and what you will change next. This prevents repeating the same bad campaign under a new name.

Tip: Simple notes beat vague memory.
Final check

Checklist and red flags

Use this list Do this

  • The page or video destination is fast and clear on mobile.
  • Search, display, and YouTube tests are separated in campaign notes.
  • The campaign has one primary metric and one secondary quality signal.
  • YouTube views are compared with watch behavior, clicks, and engagement.
  • Landing-page performance is reviewed before scaling spend.
  • The result and next action are written down after the test.

Watch for Avoid this

  • Do not mix every traffic source into one campaign and guess what happened.
  • Do not measure music promotion only by impressions.
  • Do not spend heavily before the page and creative have been tested.
  • Do not send paid traffic to a destination that is broken or unavailable in United States of America.
Territory note

United States of America

For United States of America, test ads in the local language where appropriate and confirm that destination links, embeds, streaming services, payment flows, and app availability work for the audience before scaling.

Source links

Official references

Music Coast keeps the walkthrough readable. Use these official references when you need the source documentation, platform rules, or current policy details.