1. What Is the Google Display Network and Why Does Creative Design Matter?
The Google Display Network (GDN) is a collection of more than 35 million websites, applications, and Google-owned properties – including YouTube and Gmail – across which Google serves visual ad placements. It is the world’s largest display advertising ecosystem, and it reaches over 90% of global internet users, according to multiple converging data sources including Improvado’s 2026 Display Advertising Guide and SEOteric’s GDN analysis.
Unlike Google Search ads – which appear when a user actively types a query and therefore captures existing demand – Display advertising works differently. It creates demand. It places your brand, product, or service in front of people as they read a news article, watch a YouTube video, check their Gmail, or browse a recipe website. The user is not looking for what you are selling. Your creative design must make them want to look.
This distinction is the single most important context for understanding display ad design. In Search advertising, the ad’s relevance to the query does most of the persuasive work. In Display advertising, the creative does almost all of it. A display ad with weak design, unclear hierarchy, or an invisible CTA is an impression wasted – the user’s eye moves on before the brand registers. A display ad with a bold visual, clear value proposition, and prominent CTA creates an unexpected moment of brand relevance in a non-commercial context. That moment is the objective of every display creative you will ever produce.
INSIGHT | The GDN reaches 90%+ of global internet users across 35 million placements.With CPM rates typically ranging from $0.50 to $5.00 for most industries, according to Improvado’s complete Display Advertising Guide, the Google Display Network provides one of the most cost-efficient brand visibility mechanisms available in digital marketing. Even at the upper end of this range, a thousand impressions delivered to a targeted, in-market audience for $5.00 is exceptional value compared to other awareness channels. The challenge – and the opportunity – is that performance varies enormously based on the quality of the creative. The GDN delivers the reach; your design determines whether it produces brand recall, consideration, or conversion. |
2. The GDN in Numbers: Reach, Performance, and Opportunity
90%+ of Global Internet Users ReachedImprovado / SEOteric 2025–2026 | 35M+ Websites, Apps & PropertiesGoogle / MegaDigital 2026 | 0.57% Avg. GDN Conversion RateAmraAndElma / Display Stats 2025 | 120% More Engagement: Video vs Static DisplayAmraAndElma Display Stats 2025 |
The scale of the Google Display Network is genuinely staggering. Over 90% of global internet users can be reached through its placements. In India specifically, the GDN’s reach across local news publishers, vernacular content platforms, YouTube, and Gmail provides access to an audience that no single social platform can match in breadth.
The performance benchmarks for display advertising reflect its role in the marketing funnel. According to AmraAndElma’s 2025 Display Ad Performance Statistics, the GDN’s average conversion rate is approximately 0.57% – substantially lower than Search advertising’s average of 2 to 4%. This reflects the fundamental nature of display advertising: it is primarily an awareness, consideration, and remarketing channel, not a direct-response channel in the same way that Search is. Comparing GDN conversion rates to Search conversion rates is a category error. The correct comparison is cost per thousand impressions and brand lift, not conversion rate per click.
However, for remarketing campaigns – where display ads are shown to users who have already visited your website – the dynamic changes significantly. Retargeting through display advertising produces substantially higher conversion rates because the audience has already demonstrated interest. This is why display remarketing is often the highest-ROI component of a display advertising programme, and why designing separate creative specifically for remarketing audiences is a foundational best practice.
Metric | GDN Average | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
GDN Reach | 90%+ of internet users | Largest display network globally; 35M+ placements | Improvado / Google 2025–2026 |
Average CTR (all formats) | 0.35% | Varies significantly by size, placement, and industry | Industry consensus / AmraAndElma 2025 |
Medium Rectangle CTR (300×250) | 0.35–0.47% (highest) | 25% higher engagement than other formats | CyberOptik / DropCowboy 2025 |
Leaderboard CTR (728×90) | 0.47% (desktop benchmark) | Above-the-fold placement drives strong brand recall | DropCowboy / Google Ads data 2025 |
Mobile Leaderboard CTR (320×50) | Up to 1.14% when optimised | Highest CTR potential of mobile formats | DropCowboy 2025 |
GDN Conversion Rate (all campaigns) | ~0.57% | Benchmark for awareness/remarketing; lower than Search | AmraAndElma 2025 |
Video Display vs Static Engagement | Video +120% more engagement | Animated/video formats significantly outperform static | AmraAndElma 2025 |
CPM Range | $0.50–$5.00 | Most industries; varies by targeting precision and audience quality | Improvado 2026 |
Brands using AI tools for creative optimisation | Up to +40% ROI | For video and interactive formats specifically | AmraAndElma 2025 |
3. The Two Creative Tracks: Static Uploaded Ads vs Responsive Display Ads
Every Google Display campaign requires a fundamental creative strategy decision: static uploaded image ads, Responsive Display Ads (RDAs), or a combination of both. Understanding the distinction between these two formats – their strengths, their limitations, and the use cases that favour each – is essential before any design work begins.
▸ Static Uploaded Image Ads
Static display ads are fixed-size banner creatives that designers produce manually at specific pixel dimensions and upload directly to Google Ads. Each static ad is a finished, pixel-perfect design – exactly what the designer intended, displayed exactly as designed, in the placement it was created for. The designer has complete creative control over every element: layout, typography, imagery, colour, and CTA treatment.
According to JJSCIT’s 2025 RDA vs Static analysis, static ads still outperform in CTR for remarketing segments, tightly branded campaigns, seasonal promotions, compliance-sensitive industries (finance, healthcare), and premium placement targeting. When brand consistency is a non-negotiable requirement – for example, when a display campaign must coordinate precisely with an offline media campaign – static ads provide the certainty that RDAs cannot.
▸ Responsive Display Ads (RDAs)
Responsive Display Ads are Google’s default and recommended display ad format. Instead of uploading finished banner designs, advertisers upload a collection of individual assets – up to 15 images, 5 logos, 5 short headlines (30 characters each), 1 long headline (90 characters), 5 descriptions (90 characters each), and optionally video – and Google’s machine learning assembles these assets into optimised combinations for each available placement, device, and audience.
According to Channable’s November 2025 best practices guide, RDAs are more likely to perform better than static ads overall, driven by their ability to reach more placements and the algorithmic optimisation of asset combinations. According to JJSCIT’s analysis, RDAs often outperform static ads in reach, CTR, and ROAS for awareness and prospecting campaigns. The tradeoff is creative control: Google’s assembled combinations may not always reflect the designer’s intended visual hierarchy or brand language.
Dimension | Static Uploaded Ads | Responsive Display Ads (RDAs) |
|---|---|---|
Creative control | Complete – pixel-perfect designer output | Reduced – Google AI assembles asset combinations |
Reach and inventory | Limited to uploaded sizes only | Maximised – fits any available placement size |
Production effort | High – unique design per size | Lower – one set of assets covers all sizes |
A/B testing | Manual – separate upload per variant | Automated – Google tests asset combinations |
Brand consistency | Guaranteed – exactly as designed | Variable – AI combinations may deviate from brand guidelines |
Best for remarketing | Excellent – known creatives can be optimised | Good – but static often outperforms in retargeting |
Best for awareness | Good if key sizes covered | Excellent – maximises impression volume |
Algorithm learning speed | Slow – limited variants for AI to learn from | Fast – multiple asset combinations generate more data |
Recommended strategy | Premium placements, remarketing, compliance campaigns | Prospecting, awareness, broad reach, limited design resource |
STRATEGY | Use both formats – they serve complementary functions.The most effective display advertising creative strategy uses both formats. Upload at least one RDA per ad group for maximum reach and algorithmic optimisation, while also maintaining a set of hand-crafted static banner ads in the five priority sizes (see Section 13) for premium placements, retargeting campaigns, and brand-critical executions where exact creative control matters. RDAs expand your reach; static ads protect your brand. According to Directive Consulting’s 2026 analysis, marketers who combine both formats achieve stronger cost efficiency and broader inventory flexibility than those relying on a single-format strategy. |
4. The Top-Performing Google Display Ad Sizes
The Google Display Network supports a wide range of banner sizes across desktop, mobile, and tablet environments. However, not all sizes are created equal. Publisher websites allocate specific ad slots of specific dimensions, and the most widely supported sizes – those that appear across the greatest proportion of GDN publisher inventory – deliver significantly more impressions, placements, and reach than less common sizes.
According to GrowthMindedMarketing’s February 2026 Display Ad Sizes guide, Google’s internal benchmarks show that a handful of sizes make up the majority of available inventory across the network. According to HackMD’s 2025 GDN analysis, the top five performing formats based on industry benchmarks, platform-wide data, and campaign performance patterns are the 300×250, 336×280, 728×90, 300×600, and 320×100 – due to their widespread inventory support and consistently high CTR.
Rank | Ad Size | Name | CTR Performance | Inventory Availability | Primary Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 300 × 250 px | Medium Rectangle | Highest CTR across all formats; 25% above average | Widest availability – both desktop and mobile; appears mid-content and in sidebars | Universal – awareness, consideration, conversion, remarketing; the default starting point for every campaign |
2 | 336 × 280 px | Large Rectangle | Strong in-content CTR; more canvas than 300×250 | High desktop availability; premium in-article placements | In-content advertising; articles; editorial placements where more visual space rewards creative |
3 | 728 × 90 px | Leaderboard | 0.47% CTR benchmark; strong brand recall | Exclusive to desktop; top-of-page above-fold placement | Brand awareness on desktop; premium header placements; headline-driven messaging |
4 | 300 × 600 px | Half Page | Dominates sidebar; high viewability time | Growing availability; premium sidebar inventory | Brand storytelling; product feature showcase; premium sidebar campaigns |
5 | 320 × 100 px | Large Mobile Banner | Up to 1.14% CTR when optimised | High mobile availability; dominant mobile format | Mobile campaigns; the primary mobile format for any performance-focused campaign |
6 | 320 × 50 px | Mobile Leaderboard | Consistent mobile delivery | Universal mobile inventory | Mobile brand recall; the mobile equivalent of the desktop leaderboard |
7 | 970 × 90 px | Large Leaderboard | Above-average CTR on premium sites | Surging adoption on major publishers in 2026 | Premium desktop branding; header takeovers on high-engagement publisher sites |
8 | 160 × 600 px | Wide Skyscraper | Moderate CTR; narrow canvas is a design challenge | Standard sidebar inventory | Sidebar presence; brand visibility while readers scroll content |
9 | 250 × 250 px | Square | Flexible placement; moderate CTR | Sidebar and widget placements | Flexible filler; useful for publishers with square ad slots |
10 | 970 × 250 px | Billboard | High impact; premium placement | Major publishers only | Homepage takeovers; maximum brand impact on high-traffic publisher sites |
TIP | Start with the 300×250 and 320×100 – they cover the majority of GDN inventory.For businesses designing display ads for the first time, or for campaigns with limited creative production budget, the 300×250 Medium Rectangle and the 320×100 Large Mobile Banner together cover the majority of available GDN inventory across both desktop and mobile. According to Directive Consulting, starting with these two sizes for brand awareness and expanding once performance data is gathered is the most efficient entry strategy. Adding the 728×90 Leaderboard and 300×600 Half Page next creates the four-size portfolio that captures the vast majority of premium GDN placement opportunities. |
5. Desktop Ad Sizes: Specifications and Creative Strategy
Desktop display ads appear on publisher websites as they are browsed on laptops and desktop computers. These placements are typically larger than mobile equivalents, offer more creative canvas for detailed messaging, and are viewed in a focused reading context where users are more likely to engage with content. Here are the design strategies for each key desktop format.
▸ 300 × 250 - Medium Rectangle
The most important display ad size in the GDN. According to CyberOptik’s specifications guide, the 300×250 consistently shows the highest CTR across all industries, with an average engagement rate 25% higher than other formats. It appears embedded within article content, in sidebars, at the bottom of pages, and in both desktop and mobile placements. Because it can appear in so many contexts, it requires the most adaptable design: a clean, single-subject composition with a bold headline, clear logo placement, and high-contrast CTA that works whether the ad is surrounded by editorial content or appears alongside competing display creatives.
Design strategy: One dominant visual (product, face, or benefit illustration). Headline in large bold type in the upper or lower zone. Logo in a consistent position (lower left or lower right). CTA button with high contrast. Minimal background clutter. Keep the main message in the central 250×250 pixel zone so it renders well if the ad is ever displayed in the smaller square format.
▸ 728 × 90 - Leaderboard
The Leaderboard owns the top of desktop pages. According to GrowthMindedMarketing, it is often the first banner ad to load at the top of the page above content – in this above-the-fold position, it increases the likelihood of being seen and clicked. According to DropCowboy’s benchmark analysis, the Leaderboard achieves an average CTR of 0.47%, making it one of the strongest desktop performers. Its wide, shallow format is not suited to complex storytelling but excels at brand awareness, tagline communication, and simple offer announcements.
Design strategy: Single horizontal layout. Logo on the left. Primary message in the centre. CTA button on the right. Maximum three elements in the design – any more and the narrow height creates visual noise. Use high-contrast colours to stand out from the editorial content surrounding it at the top of the page.
▸ 300 × 600 - Half Page
Known as the ‘half page’ because it takes up half the vertical height of a typical content page, this format gives advertisers significant visual real estate for brand storytelling, product feature showcases, or multi-element creative layouts. According to GrowthMindedMarketing, Google claims the Half Page banner is one of the fastest-growing ad sizes in terms of impressions and ad spaces. The tall canvas supports a visual hierarchy that mirrors a small poster or editorial advertisement – hero visual at the top, messaging in the centre, CTA at the bottom.
Design strategy: Three-zone layout – hero visual (top 40%), value proposition text (centre 35%), CTA block (bottom 25%). High-quality product or lifestyle photography fills the hero zone. Brand logo in a consistent corner position. The tall format supports more detailed benefit messaging than any other standard display size.
▸ 336 × 280 - Large Rectangle
Slightly larger than the 300×250, the Large Rectangle offers a marginally bigger creative canvas for more detailed product photography or slightly longer messaging. According to Directive Consulting and agrowth.io, it performs strongly in in-content placements – embedded within editorial articles – where the reader is engaged with related content and the slightly larger ad canvas attracts more attention than a standard rectangle.
▸ 970 × 90 - Large Leaderboard
The premium version of the standard Leaderboard, the 970×90 appears on major publisher sites as an expanded header format. According to Directive Consulting, its adoption across major publishers has surged in 2026, giving marketers access to highly engaged audiences through standout placements. Design approach mirrors the standard Leaderboard but benefits from the additional horizontal canvas for slightly more visual richness or extended messaging.
6. Mobile Ad Sizes: Designing for the Small Screen
Mobile display advertising is now the majority of GDN inventory. According to CyberOptik’s specifications guide, over 60% of Google Display Network impressions come from mobile devices. According to DropCowboy’s benchmark analysis, Statista reports that mobile devices account for 54.8% of global web traffic – and this percentage increases significantly for younger demographics, India’s rapidly growing mobile-first audience, and the entertainment and news content categories where much GDN inventory sits.
Designing mobile display ads requires a fundamentally different approach to desktop. The available canvas is tiny – a 320×50 Mobile Leaderboard is approximately the width of a postcard at a fraction of the height. The viewing context is a user on a phone, often in motion, with a thumb-based interaction model. The cognitive load of a mobile display ad must be near zero: instant comprehension, a single clear message, and a CTA that can be tapped without zooming.
▸ 320 × 100 - Large Mobile Banner
The Large Mobile Banner is the highest-performing mobile display format. According to agrowth.io’s size performance guide and DropCowboy’s benchmark data, the Mobile Leaderboard can achieve CTRs as high as 1.14% when properly optimised – making it the highest CTR potential of any standard mobile format. Its double-height compared to the standard 320×50 provides meaningfully more creative space without disrupting the mobile user experience.
Design strategy: Logo on the left, message in the centre or right, CTA button on the far right. Alternatively, a bold visual on the left half with a two-line message and CTA in the right half. Text must be legible at the rendered size without zooming – minimum 14px equivalent. High-contrast background colour separates the ad from the web page content surrounding it.
▸ 320 × 50 - Mobile Leaderboard
The standard mobile banner – widely used across virtually all mobile publisher inventory. According to agrowth.io, this format is the ‘mobile workhorse’ with consistent delivery and exposure across mobile GDN placements. The extremely shallow height requires absolute minimalism: logo, a four to six word message, and a CTA element – nothing more. Any additional complexity renders illegibly at this size.
▸ 250 × 250 and 200 × 200 - Square Formats
Square formats appear in sidebar and widget placements on both desktop and mobile. The 250×250 offers more creative canvas than the 200×200 and is the preferred choice when both sizes are needed. According to CyberOptik, when designing a 300×250, keeping the main message in the central 250×250 zone ensures the design also renders acceptably if served in the smaller square format.
7. Responsive Display Ads: Asset Design for Google's AI
Responsive Display Ads are the default and recommended format for Google Display campaigns, and designing their assets well is a different discipline from designing finished static banners. The designer does not control the final layout – Google’s machine learning assembles the assets. The designer’s job is to create individual asset components so well-composed, so clear, and so versatile that every assembled combination Google produces maintains design quality and brand consistency.
▸ Image Asset Requirements and Best Practices
RDAs accept up to 15 images in three aspect ratios: landscape (1.91:1, minimum 1200×628px), square (1:1, minimum 1200×1200px), and portrait (4:5, minimum 960×1200px). According to Google’s official RDA best practices guide, image quality is critical – blurry, excessively filtered, or colour-inverted images are not eligible for all placements and reduce the ad’s inventory reach. The image should not have logos, text overlays, or CTA buttons laid over it, as these create repetition and illegibility when Google combines the image with separately provided headlines and logos.
- Provide the maximum 15 images: More images give Google's algorithm more combinations to test and more data to learn from. A diverse set of images - product shots, lifestyle photography, close-ups, contextual in-use imagery - ensures the algorithm has options for different placement contexts and audience segments.
- All three aspect ratios are required: Landscape (1.91:1) for desktop placements; square (1:1) for flexible cross-platform placements; portrait (4:5) for mobile Feed-style placements. Missing any ratio limits the ad's eligibility for certain placement types and reduces overall reach.
- Clean images without overlays: According to Google Ads Help, do not overlay a logo on top of an image, as this can be repetitive in certain ad layouts when Google also includes the separately uploaded logo asset. Avoid text overlays for the same reason - the algorithm will combine the image with headlines, and text-on-text creates illegibility at small display sizes.
▸ Headline and Description Asset Best Practices
RDAs accept up to 5 short headlines (30 characters each), 1 long headline (90 characters), and up to 5 descriptions (90 characters each). According to Channable’s best practices guide, include at least 3 to 4 ads per ad group while trying different messages and images. For RDA text assets specifically, write each headline and description to be self-contained – it may be displayed alone, combined with another headline, or paired with any of the uploaded images. No single asset should depend on another asset for context or meaning.
- Short headlines: Should be concise, benefit-led, and standalone. Examples: 'Trusted by 5,000 Businesses', 'Free Design Audit', 'Results in 7 Days'. At 30 characters, every word must earn its place.
- Long headline: The single 90-character long headline is displayed in larger format combinations. It should communicate the core value proposition in one complete sentence: 'Professional graphic design for Indian businesses - delivered in 48 hours.'
- Descriptions: Write each of the five descriptions as if it is the only supporting text the viewer will read. Each should reinforce the headline with a specific benefit, social proof element, or CTA. Avoid repeating the same information across multiple descriptions - Google selects which descriptions to show algorithmically, so each one should add unique value.
▸ Logo Asset Requirements
- 1:1 aspect ratio logo (required): Minimum 1200×1200px, maximum 1:1. This is the primary logo format used in most RDA combinations.
- 4:1 aspect ratio logo (recommended): 1200×300px. This horizontal lockup format is used in wide placement combinations. Both logo variants should be uploaded whenever available.
- Transparent background: Upload logo assets with a transparent background (PNG format) so Google can place them appropriately on any background colour combination.
8. HTML5 and Animated Display Ads: When and How to Use Them
HTML5 animated display ads – banner creatives built using web technologies (HTML, CSS, JavaScript) that include motion, interactive elements, or sequential animation – represent the highest-production-value tier of display ad design. According to AmraAndElma’s statistics, video display ads drive up to 120% more engagement than static display formats. While not all HTML5 ads are video, they share the engagement advantage of motion – they capture attention in peripheral vision and communicate narrative in a way static ads cannot.
▸ When to Use HTML5 Animated Ads
- Brand awareness campaigns at scale: When the goal is maximum brand recall from a large impression volume, the additional engagement of animated creative justifies the higher production effort.
- Product showcase with multiple features: Animation allows sequential revelation of product features, before-and-after transitions, or rotating product views - delivering more information in a single ad unit than any static design can achieve.
- Premium publisher placements: Homepage takeovers, interstitials, and high-visibility rich media placements on premium publisher sites typically require or strongly prefer animated HTML5 creative.
- Remarketing with personalisation: Dynamic HTML5 ads can pull product data from a feed to display the specific product a user viewed on your website, creating a highly personalised remarketing experience.
▸ HTML5 Display Ad Technical Specifications
Specification | Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
File format | ZIP file containing HTML, CSS, JS, assets | Must include an index.html entry point at the root of the ZIP |
Maximum file size | 150 KB (initial load) | Additional assets can load after initial render; keep initial load under 150 KB for fast delivery |
Supported technologies | HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript, SVG, WebGL | External API calls not permitted; all assets must be self-contained within the ZIP |
Click tag | Google click tag required | Enables click tracking; format: var clickTag = ‘http://your-url.com’ |
Animation duration | Maximum 30 seconds total | Animations may loop but individual loop must not exceed 30 seconds |
Fallback image | Required for all HTML5 ads | Static image in the same dimensions serves as fallback for browsers that cannot render HTML5 |
Supported sizes | All standard GDN sizes | Use the same HTML5 creative for multiple sizes by defining responsive breakpoints within the ad |
Polite loading | Required | Initial render must complete before additional assets load; no video autoplay at initial load |
NOTE | Test HTML5 ads across browsers and devices before publishing.HTML5 display ads that render perfectly in Chrome may behave unexpectedly in Safari, Firefox, or older browser versions. Always test your HTML5 ad in multiple browsers, on both desktop and mobile, before uploading to Google Ads. Google’s Creative Preview Tool – accessible from within Google Ads – is the recommended testing environment. Always include a static fallback image at the correct dimensions so that any placement environment that cannot render HTML5 still delivers a brand impression. |
9. The Visual Design Principles of High-Performing Display Ads
The visual design quality of a display ad directly determines whether a user’s eye registers the brand or scrolls past it. Unlike social media ads – where the platform serves the ad in a curated, attention-focused context – display ads compete with the surrounding editorial content for the user’s visual attention. The design must earn that attention against the context in which it appears.
▸ Principle 1: One Clear Visual Hierarchy
Every display ad, regardless of size, should have a single dominant element that anchors the visual hierarchy – the element that draws the eye first and communicates the core brand or product identity before any text is read. This is typically a high-quality product photograph, a compelling lifestyle image, or a bold graphic that is immediately distinctive against the typical visual context of publisher pages.
The visual hierarchy then descends from the hero element to the headline, from the headline to supporting copy or social proof, and finally to the CTA. Every element must have a distinct visual weight that communicates its position in this hierarchy. Elements of equal visual weight create visual ambiguity that prevents the reading sequence from establishing itself.
▸ Principle 2: Simplicity, Not Density
The most common design mistake in display advertising is attempting to communicate too much. A 300×250 pixel banner is not a webpage – it cannot carry paragraphs of copy, multiple product images, a list of features, and a complex CTA simultaneously. According to Profitspring’s 2025 banner design guide, the most effective display ads focus on one main message or picture. Every element added to a display ad reduces the impact of every other element. The constraint of the format is also its creative discipline: identify the single most compelling thing you can say or show, and design the entire ad around that one thing.
▸ Principle 3: Brand Recognition in Under Two Seconds
A user who sees your display ad while reading an article will typically glance at it for one to two seconds. In that window, the ad must establish brand recognition sufficient to produce a recall impression – whether or not the user clicks. This means the logo must be visible and recognisable, the brand colour palette must be applied consistently, and the overall visual impression must be distinct enough to distinguish your brand from competitors in the same category.
Consistent design across all ad sizes in a campaign reinforces this recognition. When a user sees the same brand colour, logo position, and visual style across multiple sizes and placements over time, the cumulative effect is significantly stronger brand recall than the same total impression volume delivered in inconsistently designed ads.
▸ Principle 4: A Visible, Tappable CTA
The CTA is the conversion mechanism of every display ad. According to multiple converging sources, the CTA must be visually prominent – not whispered, not blended into the background, not the same size as the body copy. The CTA button should be the most high-contrast element in the lower portion of the ad, with enough visual separation from surrounding elements that it reads as a distinct, actionable component. For mobile ads where the CTA tap target must be large enough to register a thumb tap, this is especially critical.
10. Colour, Typography, and Branding in Display Ad Creative
▸ Colour Strategy for Display Ads
- Contrast against publisher backgrounds: Publisher websites predominantly use white or light grey backgrounds. A display ad with a white background will literally blend into the page. Use a distinctive background colour - your primary brand colour, a bold accent, or a high-contrast dark background - to create immediate visual separation from the editorial context.
- Brand colour as the primary identifier: The colour palette of your display ads should be recognisably consistent with your brand identity across every size and format. The consistency of colour application is what makes a user who has seen your ad in a sidebar recognise your brand in a mobile banner - even without reading the logo or text.
- High contrast for legibility at all sizes: Display ads are served at many different physical sizes across different devices and screen resolutions. Text legibility depends on contrast - the greater the luminosity difference between text colour and background colour, the more legible the text at small sizes. Apply the WCAG AA minimum contrast standard (4.5:1 ratio for body text) as a baseline for any text element in display ad creative.
- Consistent CTA button colour: The CTA button should use the same colour consistently across all display ad sizes in a campaign, and this colour should be the highest-contrast element in the ad's lower zone. Orange, yellow, and bright green CTAs typically perform well on both light and dark backgrounds because of their high luminosity contrast.
▸ Typography for Display Ads
- Sans-serif for legibility: At small display sizes, serif typefaces lose legibility due to the fine details of their serifs rendering poorly at lower pixel densities. Bold sans-serif fonts - Montserrat Bold, Roboto Bold, Open Sans ExtraBold, or equivalent - maintain legibility across all standard display sizes.
- Minimum 14px effective font size: According to Directive Consulting's technical guide, a minimum font size of around 14px at the rendered size is the legibility threshold for responsive HTML5 ads. For static image ads, text should be evaluated at the smallest size the image will be displayed - typically on a mobile screen - before publication.
- Maximum two typefaces per ad: One for headlines (bold, brand-consistent, high-impact), one for body copy and CTA text (clean, legible, secondary). More than two typefaces creates visual inconsistency that undermines professional presentation.
- No text on complex backgrounds: Any text element placed over a photographic or complex graphical background must have either a semi-transparent background panel, a text shadow, or a solid colour band behind it to ensure legibility. Google's RDA guidelines specifically prohibit text overlaid on images without sufficient contrast - and the same visual principle applies to static ads.
11. Writing Display Ad Copy That Works in Limited Space
Display ad copy operates under severe constraints. A 300×250 ad has space for approximately five to eight words in the image. A 320×50 mobile banner has space for approximately three to five words. The 728×90 Leaderboard has width but almost no height – meaning a single headline and a CTA are the practical limit. Within these constraints, the copy must accomplish everything: establish relevance, communicate a compelling benefit, build enough trust for a click, and deliver a clear call to action.
▸ The Three-Element Copy Formula
- Benefit statement (the why): In 5 to 10 words, state the primary reason this ad is worth the viewer's attention: 'Professional Ad Design That Converts', 'Save 40% on Your First Order', 'Results in 7 Days or Your Money Back'. Benefit-led copy consistently outperforms feature-led copy because it answers the viewer's implicit question - 'what does this do for me?'
- Social proof or credibility signal (the trust): A brief credibility anchor - '5,000+ clients', '4.9 stars', 'Trusted by leading Indian brands', 'As seen in Economic Times' - reduces the perceived risk of clicking, particularly for users who have no prior brand awareness.
- CTA button text (the action): Specific, action-oriented, and low-commitment for cold audiences. 'Get Free Quote', 'See How It Works', 'Explore the Collection', 'Start Free Trial'. The CTA should specify what happens when the user clicks - so the transition from ad to landing page feels expected and frictionless.
▸ Seasonal and Promotional Copy
According to Channable’s best practices guide, including discounts or promotions in display ad copy – and testing seasonal promotions such as ‘Back to School’ or ‘Diwali Offer’ – consistently improves performance by adding urgency and economic motivation to the creative. In the Indian market specifically, festive season promotions (Diwali, Holi, New Year, Navratri) represent high-intent purchasing periods where promotional display creative can produce significantly above-average conversion rates.
12. Remarketing Display Ad Design: A Different Creative Brief
Remarketing display ads – shown to users who have already visited your website, viewed a product, or taken a specific action – require a fundamentally different creative approach to prospecting ads. The audience is warm. They already know the brand. They have expressed specific interest in a product or service. The creative does not need to introduce the brand – it needs to remove the final barrier to conversion.
▸ Prospecting vs Remarketing Creative Differences
Creative Element | Prospecting Display Ads | Remarketing Display Ads |
|---|---|---|
Brand introduction | Prominent – viewer may have no prior awareness | Minimal – viewer already knows the brand; reinforce, not introduce |
Product specificity | General product category or brand offering | Specific product(s) viewed or added to cart |
Copy tone | Awareness and curiosity-generating | Urgency, scarcity, and conversion-focused |
Social proof | Important for cold-audience credibility | Less critical – trust is already established |
CTA commitment | Low – ‘Learn More’, ‘Discover’, ‘Explore’ | High – ‘Complete Your Order’, ‘Claim Your Discount’, ‘Book Now’ |
Offer type | Brand introduction, free resource, awareness | Limited-time discount, cart recovery, exclusive offer |
Creative style | Brand-building, aspirational | Direct response, specific, outcome-focused |
Performance expectation | CTR 0.2–0.6%; awareness and reach metrics | CTR often higher; conversion rate significantly above prospecting baseline |
According to JJSCIT’s RDA vs Static analysis, static display ads still outperform RDAs for remarketing segments – because in retargeting, you know exactly which specific creative has performed historically for warm audiences, and pixel-perfect control over that creative is commercially valuable. Use static uploaded ads in priority sizes for your retargeting campaigns, and reserve RDAs for your prospecting campaigns.
13. The Priority Size Stack: Building Your Display Ad Creative Set
Most businesses cannot – or should not – design display ads in all 20+ standard GDN sizes for every campaign. The priority size stack is the minimum viable set of sizes that covers the majority of available GDN inventory while remaining practical to produce and maintain.
▸ Tier 1: Essential (covers 60–70% of inventory)
- 300 × 250 px (Medium Rectangle): Non-negotiable for any display campaign. The single highest-inventory, highest-CTR format across the GDN. Design this first and design it best.
- 320 × 100 px (Large Mobile Banner): Non-negotiable for mobile reach. With 60%+ of GDN impressions on mobile, a campaign without a mobile-specific creative format is abandoning the majority of available inventory.
▸ Tier 2: High Performance (expands coverage to 80–85% of inventory)
- 728 × 90 px (Leaderboard): Required for premium desktop above-the-fold placements. The defining desktop brand awareness format.
- 300 × 600 px (Half Page): The highest-impact sidebar format. Valuable for brand storytelling campaigns and any campaign targeting premium publisher inventory.
▸ Tier 3: Full Coverage (approaches 95% of inventory)
- 336 × 280 px (Large Rectangle): In-content complement to the 300×250. Valuable for editorial and news publisher placements.
- 320 × 50 px (Mobile Leaderboard): The standard mobile banner format. Complements the 320×100 for maximum mobile inventory coverage.
- 160 × 600 px (Wide Skyscraper): Sidebar presence during content scrolling. Narrow canvas but consistent scroll-alongside visibility.
▸ Tier 4: Premium and Supplementary
- 970 × 90 px (Large Leaderboard): For premium publisher header placements where this format is available.
- 970 × 250 px (Billboard): For homepage takeovers and maximum-impact brand campaigns on major publisher sites.
- 250 × 250 px (Square): For widget and sidebar placements on publishers using square format slots.
DATA | Responsive Display Ads plus four static sizes covers almost all GDN inventory.For most businesses, the most efficient creative strategy is: one fully optimised RDA with maximum assets (for broad reach and algorithmic optimisation) plus four static banner designs in 300×250, 728×90, 300×600, and 320×100 (for premium placements, brand consistency, and remarketing). This combination covers the vast majority of GDN inventory while keeping the creative production scope manageable. Design the four static banners first – the creative discipline of designing within these specific canvases sharpens the thinking that also improves the RDA asset set. |
14. A/B Testing Google Display Ad Creative
Systematic creative testing is as important in display advertising as in any other paid media channel – and the variables available to test are extensive. According to Channable’s best practices guide, creating three to four ads per ad group allows testing of different messaging and imagery, enabling identification of which combination resonates best with the target audience. Google Ads automatically shows better-performing ads within an ad group more often, removing the guesswork from optimisation once sufficient data has accumulated.
▸ High-Value Creative Variables to Test
- Visual approach - product vs lifestyle: Test a clean product image against a contextual lifestyle photograph. For e-commerce, product images drive higher intent; for service businesses, lifestyle images drive higher emotional resonance.
- Headline copy - benefit vs feature vs social proof: Benefit-led headline ('Save 10 Hours a Week') versus feature-led ('New AI-Powered Platform') versus social proof-led ('Trusted by 8,000 Businesses'). These three approaches activate different decision-making pathways and the highest-performing approach varies by industry and audience.
- CTA language: 'Get Free Quote' versus 'Start Free Trial' versus 'Learn More'. CTA specificity versus low-commitment exploratory CTAs. The right CTA depends on audience temperature - cold audiences need lower commitment asks; warm audiences respond to more direct conversion language.
- Background colour: Your primary brand colour versus a high-contrast complementary colour versus white. The background colour interacts with the surrounding publisher content differently across placement contexts, and its effect on CTR can be surprisingly large.
- Size portfolio performance: Once sufficient impression data is available, review CTR and conversion rate by size. Some businesses discover that their 300×600 Half Page consistently outperforms their 300×250 for their specific audience - this insight justifies redirecting creative budget toward the higher-performing format.
▸ Testing Protocol
Run each A/B test with a single variable change per test. Allow tests to accumulate at least 1,000 impressions per variant and run for a minimum of 7 to 14 days before drawing conclusions. Document all test results in a creative performance log. Over time, this log becomes a brand-specific playbook for display creative – identifying the visual approaches, copy formulas, and CTA styles that consistently outperform with the brand’s specific audience.
15. Technical Specifications: The Complete Reference
▸ Static Image Ad Specifications
Specification | Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
Accepted file formats | GIF, JPG, PNG | PNG for text-heavy or transparent elements; JPG for photographs; GIF for simple animation |
Maximum file size | 150 KB | Applies to all uploaded static image ads; optimise with TinyPNG or similar |
Minimum image quality | No blurry, distorted, or heavily watermarked images | Google may disapprove ads with poor image quality |
Colour mode | RGB | CMYK is not supported; convert all files to RGB before upload |
Animation (GIF) | Maximum 30 seconds; 5 fps minimum | Looping permitted; must stop looping after 30 seconds |
Text in image | No formal 20% text rule (removed) | Less text still performs better; avoid button-style text implying non-existent interactivity |
Prohibited overlaid elements | No fake CTA buttons, no fake close buttons, no fake interactive elements | Google disapproves ads simulating interactivity that does not exist |
Logo overlay on image | Avoid for RDA images | For static ads, keep logo in a clearly defined zone; do not obscure the primary subject |
▸ Responsive Display Ad Asset Specifications
Asset Type | Quantity Allowed | Specifications |
|---|---|---|
Landscape images (1.91:1) | Up to 15 total across all image types | Minimum 1200×628 px; maximum 5120×2700 px; under 5 MB |
Square images (1:1) | Up to 15 total across all image types | Minimum 1200×1200 px; maximum 5120×5120 px; under 5 MB |
Portrait images (4:5) | Up to 15 total across all image types | Minimum 960×1200 px; recommended; under 5 MB |
Logos (1:1 square) | Up to 5 total across both logo types | Minimum 128×128 px; recommended 1200×1200 px; transparent background preferred |
Logos (4:1 horizontal) | Up to 5 total across both logo types | Minimum 512×128 px; recommended 1200×300 px; transparent background preferred |
Short headlines | Up to 5 | Maximum 30 characters each; must be standalone-comprehensible |
Long headline | 1 | Maximum 90 characters; complete value proposition sentence |
Descriptions | Up to 5 | Maximum 90 characters each; each must be self-contained |
Business name | 1 | Maximum 25 characters |
Videos (optional) | Up to 5 | YouTube hosted; 15–30 seconds optimal; auto-generated from assets if not provided |
16. Common Display Ad Design Mistakes to Avoid
- Too much copy: Attempting to communicate six messages in a 300×250 ad communicates zero messages clearly. Identify one compelling thing to say and design around that single message. Everything else can live on the landing page.
- White or light backgrounds that blend with publisher pages: Publisher websites are predominantly white and light grey. A display ad with the same background colour becomes invisible against the editorial context. Always use a distinctive background that creates immediate visual separation.
- Logo as the hero element: The logo is a brand recognition signal, not a persuasion mechanism. It belongs in a consistent, visible position in the ad - but it should not be the largest element on the canvas. The product, the benefit statement, or the visual hook should dominate the hierarchy.
- Designing only for the 300×250: The most common creative shortcut is to design the 300×250 and then scale it down or crop it for other sizes. Designs that work at 300×250 are typically too information-dense for 320×50 and too horizontally oriented for 160×600. Each major format deserves a format-specific layout.
- Uploading only one image for RDAs: A single image for a Responsive Display Ad limits the algorithm's ability to test and optimise. Upload the maximum 15 images across all three aspect ratios to give Google's machine learning the creative variety it needs to find the best-performing combination for each audience and placement context.
- Not uploading a custom thumbnail for the first frame: For animated HTML5 or video display ads, the first frame is the visible preview in placements where the animation cannot autoplay. Design the first frame as a compelling static composition in its own right - never rely on the default first frame of a loading animation or a title card.
- Ignoring the fallback image requirement for HTML5 ads: All HTML5 display ads must include a static fallback image in the same dimensions. Missing this causes the ad to fail entirely in any placement environment that cannot render HTML5 - a non-trivial proportion of the available inventory.
- File sizes above 150 KB: An oversized banner ad loads slowly, particularly on mobile connections. Slow-loading ads are often not seen by users who scroll past before the image renders. Compress all image assets before upload and verify the final file size is within the 150 KB limit.
17. Do's and Don'ts of Google Display Ad Design
DO THIS | DO NOT DO THIS |
Start with a 300×250 and a 320×100. These two sizes together cover the majority of GDN inventory across desktop and mobile. Design them at the highest quality before adding further sizes. | Attempt to design 15 different sizes with equal effort. Spreading creative budget thinly across every possible format produces mediocre work in all sizes. Concentrate quality on the highest-inventory formats first. |
Use a Responsive Display Ad with maximum assets (15 images, 5 headlines, 5 descriptions) for every ad group. RDAs maximise reach and let Google’s AI test asset combinations for algorithmic optimisation. | Upload an RDA with only one or two images and the minimum required text assets. A sparse RDA gives the algorithm almost nothing to work with and produces near-static performance. The more assets you provide, the better the algorithmic optimisation. |
Use a distinctly coloured background that creates visual separation from publisher page backgrounds, which are predominantly white. Your ad should immediately stand out as a distinct visual element. | Use a white or light background that blends with publisher pages. An ad that visually merges with the editorial content surrounding it generates no impressions in the attention economy, regardless of how many times it is technically served. |
Design each major format specifically for its canvas. A Leaderboard is a horizontal format requiring a linear layout. A Half Page is a tall vertical format requiring a stacked layout. A Mobile Leaderboard requires extreme minimalism. | Repurpose the 300×250 design by scaling or cropping it for other formats. Format repurposing produces designs that are inappropriate for the target canvas and consistently underperform compared to format-native creative. |
Upload static banners specifically for remarketing campaigns – known high-performing creatives in the key retargeting sizes with specific product imagery, urgency copy, and high-commitment CTAs matched to warm audience temperature. | Use the same generic awareness creative for both prospecting and remarketing. Warm audiences who have already visited your website do not need an introduction to your brand – they need a specific offer, urgency, or product reminder that moves them from consideration to conversion. |
Keep all static image file sizes under 150 KB. Compress images with TinyPNG or similar tools before upload. Fast-loading ads render before users scroll past; slow-loading ads are invisible. | Upload large uncompressed image files above 150 KB. Oversized display ads load slowly on mobile connections, are often not rendered before the user scrolls past, and may be penalised in ad auction quality scores. |
Design the CTA button as the most high-contrast element in the lower section of every ad. Use a specific action verb and benefit statement rather than generic ‘Click Here’ or ‘Learn More’ language. | Use a CTA button that blends with the surrounding design elements. A CTA that lacks visual distinction is a conversion mechanism that does not function. The user’s eye must land on the CTA button with certainty as the final element in the visual reading sequence. |
Test three to four creative variants per ad group – different headlines, different hero visuals, different CTA language. Document results in a growing creative intelligence log specific to your brand’s audience. | Run a single creative per ad group without testing. Untested single-creative campaigns miss the performance improvements that systematic creative iteration consistently delivers. Even a single variant test generates valuable audience insight. |
Include seasonal and promotional copy variants – Diwali, Republic Day, New Year, summer sale – to align display creative with high-intent purchasing periods in the Indian market. | Run the same generic brand awareness copy year-round without promotional or seasonal variation. Promotional periods represent significantly elevated purchase intent, and display creative that does not align with seasonal context misses the uplift available during these peaks. |
Always provide a static fallback image for every HTML5 animated display ad, at the same dimensions as the HTML5 version. This ensures brand delivery in any placement environment that cannot render HTML5. | Deploy HTML5 display ads without fallback images. Environments that cannot render HTML5 will serve a blank space where your ad should appear, generating zero impression value from those placements. |





