About orders

An order is a primary component of your ad campaign and comprises high-level information to help you get your campaign up and running. #orders

Orders are one of the main building blocks of creating an an ad campaign in Ad Manager. Along with line items, they represent the details of an agreement between you and a buyer of your ad inventory.

Orders contain high level information about an ad campaign, such as who is buying your ad inventory (the advertiser or buyers involved) and people at your organization responsible for the ad campaign. Later, you can add line items to orders. In line items, you configure specifics about how ad creatives are intended to show on your website or app.

In this article, you can familiarize yourself with order settings. You can start a new order in Ad Manager and follow along. When you're familiar with orders, you can get familiar with line items in About line items.

Name

The name of an order should be something descriptive about the campaign and its line items. Order names must be unique across your Ad Manager network.

If you or your organization doesn't have a naming convention, it might be a good idea to develop one. A good naming convention allows you to see what the campaign is about. Some naming conventions for orders include the buyer or advertiser. A good naming convention later allows you to more easily filter for line items or use universal search to find line items and more.

Advertiser

An advertiser is the organization that wants to show an ad creative on your website or app. They're your main negotiating partner for the campaign. This field can also be used for ad networks. 

Trafficker

The primary person within your organization who's responsible for uploading creatives and managing the day-to-day details of the line items in the order. This person may oversee or work side-by-side with a team of other traffickers to manage the order and its line items. As such, you also have the opportunity to add multiple secondary traffickers.

Labels

Labels are used to group objects for a variety of purposes. They can prevent ads from advertisers who sell similar products serving on the same page, for instance, or assist you in managing certain types of creatives. Labels added to orders are inherited by line items—it's a convenient way to make sure all line items in an order have a desired label. However, you can later modify labels in line items. 

Learn more about labels in About labels.

Teams 

Only available in Google Ad Manager 360.
 
Teams are a way to restrict user access to certain items, such as advertisers, agencies, proposals, orders, ad units, and more. They also restrict access to certain parts of the Ad Manager, like suggested ad units. Teams allow you to control which groups of users at your organization have access to the order. Users are associated with teams, and if you add a given team to an order, anyone on that team has access to the order and its line items.
 
Learn more in About teams.

Advanced settings

A number of optional advanced setting can be configured to help you manage your ad campaign.

Advertiser contacts 

Advertiser contacts are people associated with the advertiser. Contacts are created by an Ad Manager administrator or someone with similar permissions. They serve as a way for you to know who to contact if there are questions. The Ad Manager administrator also has the ability to authorize the contact to view orders and line items they're associated with. Learn more about orders.

Agency

Advertisers often use ad agencies to represent them. These agencies could be the people who deliver the ad creative to you or other types of ad agencies that manage aspects of the campaign.

Agency contacts

Similar to advertiser contacts, agency contacts are people associated with the agency and also created by an Ad Manager administrator or someone with similar permissions. If the Ad Manager administrator has set their profile as such, they may also has the ability to view orders and line items they're associated with. Learn more about orders.

Secondary traffickers

Like the primary trafficker, these are others at your organization responsible for managing the day-to-day details of the line items in the order. 

Salesperson

Your organization may have a dedicated or part-time salesperson, or a team of salespeople, responsible for finding leads or closing advertising revenue opportunities. If so, you can add this salesperson to the order. In many larger organizations, attribution of sales of an ad campaign is recorded in the order. This allows your organization to more easily manage compensation for salespeople.

Secondary salespeople

You can add multiple, supporting salespeople to an order. These people, like the lead salesperson, may have helped find leads, closed advertising revenue opportunities, or provided other support to your sales process.

Secondary salespeople is not supported for programmatic deals.

PO number

Many organizations have a purchase order (PO) number that they associate with an order. This PO number is associated with a buyer or advertiser and often used for accounting or billing purposes. This field is free-form text.

Notes

Additional ideas, instructions, or any other information. The "Notes" field is free-form text. Anyone who has access to the order has access to this field.

Custom fields

Ad Manager administrator or someone with similar permissions can create custom fields for your network. These custom fields can capture information that Ad Manager doesn't capture information that isn't available in Ad Manager by default. This information is then visible to other users and can be reported upon later.

When you're working with an order, you may be instructed to add a custom field and enter its details. Talk to your manager or Ad Manager administrator if you're not sure you should use custom fields.

Order summary

The order summary appears at the top of an existing order and provides order and line item details.

ID

The order ID is generated by Ad Manager upon creation. Order ID is useful to ensure you and others are referring to the same campaign. Order ID can also be used in universal search to find orders that require your attention.

Time

Represents the duration of all the line items in the order. The start date is the earliest date of any line item, while the end date is the latest date of any of the line items included in the order.

Total projected value

Total projected value gives you a view in the entire potential revenue of an ad campaign. The value is the sum of the total values in all line items that are in the same currency as the order. "Total projected value" also includes archived line items.

Mid-flight changes

A line item's total value is always a projected value of current line item settings. Previous delivery is not taken into account. Total value is simply recalculated based on new values.

Total booked impressions

The sum of all impressions booked in line items of an order.

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