The fastest way to waste money on YouTube ads in Australia isn’t picking the wrong format. It’s running a campaign without a clear answer to one question: What is this video meant to do?
Most YouTube ads in this market don’t generate leads because they were never built to. They were built to look good, sit in a quarterly deck, and get a tick at the next review. Targeting is loose. Creative tries to close instead of earning attention. And the budget gets sprayed across audiences that were never going to buy.
Done properly, YouTube advertising is still one of the most underused performance channels available to Australian businesses. Cost per view often sits at a fraction of Search and Display. Targeting is more precise than any traditional TV buy. The entry point is well under what most owners assume.
The catch is that “done properly” is doing a lot of work in that sentence. This is where most campaigns come apart.
YouTube advertising is fundamentally an awareness and demand-generation channel. People go to YouTube to be entertained, taught, or distracted, not to buy. That changes how you should think about creative, success metrics, and where YouTube sits in your funnel.
YouTube ads work when:
They don’t work, at least, not on their own, when:
YouTube is a layer in a video marketing strategy. Not a substitute for one.
Cost per view of YouTube ads in Australia typically sits between $0.04 and $0.20, depending on your audience, format, and competition. For most B2C campaigns we manage, the average lands around $0.08 to $0.12. B2B runs higher, $0.15 to $0.40 isn’t unusual, because the audience pool is smaller and bidding is more competitive.
That’s significantly cheaper than Search clicks, which routinely run between $2 and $15 in competitive Australian categories.
Where most owners get this wrong is by comparing CPV to CPC. They aren’t the same metric. A view doesn’t mean a click. It means someone watched at least 30 seconds of your ad (or all of it, if it’s shorter). CPV tells you the price of attention. Not the price of action.
Realistic monthly spend for an Australian SME starts around $1,500 to $5,000 in media spend. That’s enough to test creative, audiences, and placements without flying blind. Below $1,500, you’re working with too little data to optimise. Above $10,000 a month, you should be running layered campaigns across formats, not a single line.
There are six formats that matter. Most agencies will list all six and call it a strategy. What actually matters is knowing which format does what, and matching it to the job in front of you.
|
Format |
Length |
Best for |
Where it fits |
|---|---|---|---|
|
TrueView in-stream ads |
6 sec to 3 min, skippable after 5 sec |
Building awareness with viewers who self-select in |
Top and middle of the funnel |
|
Non-skippable ads |
Up to 15 seconds |
Forced exposure when the message can’t be cut |
Short, sharp brand reinforcement |
|
Bumper ads |
6 seconds, non-skippable |
Reinforcing a longer ad already seen |
Frequency layer in a sequenced campaign |
|
Discovery ads |
Variable |
Capturing intent when viewers are searching |
Mid-funnel, intent-driven |
|
Masthead |
Up to 30 sec autoplay |
National brand exposure |
Big-budget launches only |
|
Shorts ads |
Up to 60 sec vertical |
Reaching younger audiences and mobile-first behaviour |
Awareness with high frequency |
The difference between skippable and non-skippable YouTube ads matters more than most accounts give it credit for. Skippable ads (TrueView in-stream) only charge you when someone watches 30 seconds or completes the ad. That means if your hook is bad, you’re not paying, but you’re also not reaching anyone. Non-skippable ads guarantee the watch, but at a higher cost and the risk of irritating an audience that didn’t want to be there.
For the best YouTube ad formats for B2B companies, the answer is rarely Masthead or non-skippable. It’s TrueView in-stream sequenced with bumper ads as a frequency layer, and discovery ads catching the intent searches in between. B2B buying cycles are long. You need repetition that doesn’t feel like harassment.
For B2C, particularly retail, hospitality, and service businesses, TrueView paired with Shorts and remarketing usually does the heavy lifting.
This is the part most owners underestimate. The Google ad ecosystem now connects behaviour across Search, Maps, Chrome, YouTube, Gmail, and the Display Network. Which means by the time someone watches your YouTube ad, Google already knows whether they’ve been searching for what you sell.
The targeting options that matter:
Users that Google has identified as actively researching a category. Over 700 segments are available in Australia, from “Wedding Rings” to “ERP Software” to “Personal Loans.” This is usually the strongest cold audience to start with.
You build the audience yourself by entering search terms relevant to your business. If you run a Melbourne family law firm, you can target users who recently searched “divorce lawyer Melbourne” or “child custody NSW.” Then your ad finds them on YouTube. Powerful, and underused.
Broader interest-based categories. Useful for top-of-funnel awareness, less useful for direct response.
Show ads to people who’ve already visited your website, watched your videos, or interacted with your channel. This is where YouTube starts pulling its weight as a conversion channel rather than just an awareness one.
Upload your customer database and target those users (or lookalikes) directly across YouTube.
For local Australian businesses, layering custom intent audiences with location targeting (state, metro, postcode, or radius) is usually the highest-leverage starting point. You’re showing ads to people who are actively searching for what you sell, in the area you actually serve. That’s a much smaller, sharper audience than a typical “video marketing strategy for local Australian businesses” pitch deck would suggest.
A working YouTube campaign launch involves six steps. Each one matters more than agencies tend to admit.
How to optimise YouTube ads for conversions, in practice, is mostly about steps 4 and 6. Bad creative kills good targeting. Bad tracking hides everything else.
Cut through the noise. The levers that actually move results:
Most everything else is detail.
|
Traditional TV |
YouTube ads |
|
|
Production cost |
$50,000 to $1.5 million for a polished spot |
$2,000 to $15,000 for a campaign-ready video |
|
Targeting |
Demographic only (age, gender, region) |
Demographics, intent, behaviour, search history, custom audiences |
|
Minimum media buy |
Often $50,000+ for a metro campaign |
No minimum, scale up or down freely |
|
Measurement |
Reach and frequency estimates |
View-through conversions, brand lift, and full Google Analytics integration |
|
Skippable |
No |
Mostly yes (and that’s a feature, not a bug) |
For Australian SMEs in particular, this comparison is the entire commercial argument. TV used to be the only way to put a video in front of a large audience. It isn’t anymore.
Agencies love showing impressions and view counts because they’re big numbers that look impressive in a report. They aren’t the metrics that should be driving optimisation.
The metrics that matter:
If a YouTube campaign report doesn’t include the last three, ask why.
A short list, in order of how often they occur.
The pattern across all of these: campaigns built for vanity metrics rather than business results.
If you’re already running paid traffic and your Search and Shopping accounts are converting, YouTube is probably the next channel worth testing. If neither is converting yet, fix that first; YouTube isn’t a substitute for foundations that aren’t there.
Either way, the question that should drive the decision isn’t “should we run YouTube ads?” It’s “what role do we need YouTube to play in the funnel, and is it the cheapest channel to play that role?”
For most Australian businesses with a working Search account and a decent video asset, the answer is yes. If you’d like a second pair of eyes on whether yours is ready for that next step, contact us, no pitch, just a read on where you sit.