Google Demand Gen Campaigns: Sparking Intent Before It Exists

Picture this: You’re at a cocktail party. The old-school search marketer is the person who waits until you’re standing at the bar, credit card in hand, ready to order a drink. Efficient, sure, but they’re missing all the mingling, the subtle glances, the “I might be thirsty later” crowd. Enter Google’s Demand Gen campaigns — the charming guest who works the room, gets people talking, and has half the party thinking about martinis before they even realize they’re parched.

Welcome to the new playbook, where intent isn’t just something you harvest — it’s something you spark.

So, What’s Actually New Here?

Let’s cut through the confetti: Demand Gen is Google’s answer to the modern marketer’s existential crisis — “How do I reach people before they know they need me, without looking desperate?” It’s the evolution (read: rebrand) of Discovery Ads, but with more muscle, more AI, and a lot more places to show up. We’re talking YouTube (including Shorts), Gmail, Discover — all the digital watering holes where people are scrolling, not searching.

The Google Ads Demand Gen playbook

Instead of waiting for someone to type “best running shoes for bad knees,” Demand Gen lets you plant the seed while they’re watching a marathon recap on YouTube, skimming their Gmail promos, or doomscrolling through Discover. It’s not about catching intent — it’s about creating it. Think of it as the difference between being a lifeguard (reactive) and a swim instructor (proactive). One saves you when you’re drowning; the other gets you in the pool in the first place.

Why Should You Care? Because the Funnel Is Now a Ball Pit

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: The classic funnel is dead. Or, at best, it’s been replaced by a ball pit — chaotic, colorful, and full of unpredictable bounces. Consumers don’t move neatly from awareness to consideration to purchase. They zigzag, double back, and sometimes buy because a cat video reminded them of their childhood.

Demand Gen is built for this reality. It’s designed to reach people who aren’t searching yet, but could be nudged into your orbit with the right creative, at the right moment, in the right feed. It’s social advertising, Google-style — but with the added bonus of Google’s data, reach, and AI-powered targeting.

And let’s be honest: If you’re still pouring all your budget into bottom-funnel search, you’re basically fishing in a pond that’s already been picked clean. Demand Gen is your ticket to the open ocean — more risk, more reward, and yes, more sharks. But also, a lot more fish.

The Playbook, Minus the Fluff

Here’s how the grown-ups are running Demand Gen (and how you should, too):

Jon’s Take: Don’t Fall for the Shiny Object Syndrome

Look, I love a new toy as much as the next CMO. But Demand Gen isn’t a magic bullet. It’s a tool — and like any tool, it’s only as good as the strategy behind it. If you treat it like search, you’ll be disappointed. If you treat it like TV, you’ll overspend. The winners will be the marketers who blend art and science: sharp creative, ruthless audience discipline, and a willingness to experiment (and kill what doesn’t work).

And let’s not kid ourselves: Google is pushing Demand Gen because the old search goldmine is getting crowded, and social platforms have been eating their lunch on upper-funnel spend. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t play. It means you should play smarter.

Here’s my advice:

Final Word: The Best Marketers Don’t Wait for Thirst

In a world where everyone’s fighting for the last drop of intent, Demand Gen is your chance to fill the glass before anyone else even realizes they’re thirsty. It’s not about being everywhere — it’s about being memorable where it counts.

The Google Ads Demand Gen playbook

So go ahead, crash the party. Just make sure you’re the guest everyone remembers — not the one who showed up with a stack of business cards and left before dessert.

And if you’re still measuring success by how many people clicked your ad in the last five minutes? Well, maybe it’s time to find a new party.