Coming soon: April 6 edition

See what's coming to Display & Video 360 over the next few weeks

The Troubleshooter will soon show rejections related to targeting and creative vendor mismatches with inventory sources

In order to help you troubleshoot and fix issues with your line items and deals, the Troubleshooter will soon show new rejections and reasons for the following:

  • Targeting and inventory sources: You’ll be able to click on the Targeting link in the Troubleshooter and dive into what targeting settings are causing mismatches between your line items and targeted inventory sources.
  • Creatives vendors and inventory sources: You’ll be able to click on the Creatives link in the Troubleshooter and dive into what creative vendor and/or pixels are being rejected by targeted inventory sources.

You’ll see these updates in the Troubleshooter for both deals and open-auction line items.

New user role for clients of agencies and partners coming soon

A new user role called “Partner client” is coming soon to Display & Video 360. This role allows agencies and partners to give their clients access to Display & Video 360 without exposing linked partners or advertisers, billable cost, revenue models, or platform fees. Partner client users can create, run, optimize, and report on campaigns without seeing this sensitive partner information.

Settings to restrict Floodlight-based ad personalization according to geography coming soon

You’ll soon see a setting on both Floodlight groups and specific Floodlight activities that allows you to choose where to disable ad personalization based on geographic location.

Was this helpful?

How can we improve it?

Need more help?

Try these next steps:

true
2024 Privacy Readiness guide

Prepare for a world without third-party cookies and unlock the AI
opportunity by adopting the right durable audience and measurement
solutions.
Start Today

Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu
2418391666521478943
true
Search Help Center
true
true
true
true
true
69621
false
false