Google is simplifying its Smart Bidding strategy labels to make it obvious whether you're chasing volume or hitting a specific cost target. Here's what changes for your campaigns.
Google Ads just made its bidding strategy names clearer. Starting this month, the platform is going back to simpler, more familiar labels: Target CPA and Target ROAS. These replace the wordy, confusing names advertisers have been dealing with for the past few years.
The goal is simple: make it obvious whether your campaign is optimizing for a specific performance target or just chasing as many conversions as possible. That distinction matters because it changes how Google's algorithm behaves and what results you can expect.
When you're running ads for a manufacturing shop, contracting business, or online store, you need to know exactly what your bidding strategy is doing. Are you trying to keep acquisition costs under a fixed cap? Or are you willing to spend whatever it takes to get more volume?
The old names made that murky. 'Maximize conversions with a Target CPA' sounds like it's doing one thing when you first read it. The new name Target CPA cuts straight to the point: you're aiming for a specific cost per conversion.
This is a labeling change, not a product overhaul. Your existing campaigns will get the new names automatically. The underlying bidding logic stays the same. You don't need to rebuild anything or change your strategy.
If you're auditing your Google Ads account or reviewing strategy with your team, the new names will just make the conversation shorter. No more explaining what 'Maximize conversions with a Target CPA' really means. It's Target CPA. Done.
Most small and mid-sized businesses should use either Target CPA or Target ROAS. They give you predictability and tie bidding directly to a number that matters to your bottom line.
Target CPA aims to hit a specific cost per acquisition you set, while Maximize Conversions just tries to get as many conversions as possible without a cost cap. Pick Target CPA if you have a fixed budget or need predictable cost-per-lead; pick Maximize Conversions if you just want volume and can afford variable costs.
No. Google is only changing the names and how strategies are grouped in the interface. The bidding technology and your campaign results stay the same. This is a clarity update, not a product change.
Google is rolling out the new names automatically. You don't need to do anything. When you open your account, existing campaigns will show the updated strategy names.
Use Target ROAS (return on ad spend) if you sell products and track revenue per dollar spent. Use Target CPA if you're tracking leads or signups and have a fixed cost-per-lead budget. ROAS is common for ecommerce; CPA is common for lead gen and B2B.