Most visitors don’t convert the first time they land on your site. That’s not a problem, it’s normal. The problem is when you let them leave and never follow up.
Remarketing puts your business back in front of people who already showed interest, across Google Display, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram. It’s usually the cheapest cost-per-conversion in the entire account because you’re not starting from scratch. You’re finishing what the first click started.
Most remarketing campaigns we audit share the same problems:
No audience segmentation. Every visitor gets the same ad whether they bounced in three seconds or spent ten minutes on the pricing page. There’s no distinction between a warm lead and someone who clicked the wrong link, which means you’re paying to show identical ads to people at completely different stages of the decision. Remarketing without segmentation is just expensive brand awareness..
If your remarketing is set-and-forget, half-built, or nonexistent, you’re leaving the cheapest conversions in your account on the table.
Drop your info and we’ll take a look. If there’s a problem, we’ll tell you what it is. If there isn’t, we’ll tell you that too.
You’ve already paid to get someone to your website, and they didn’t convert. That’s normal for anything that costs real money. Remarketing is what decides whether that first visit was worth the spend. It’s the only channel in the account that starts with an audience that already knows who you are, which is why remarketing has the lowest cost per conversion in almost every account we manage. The real work is segmenting that audience properly and showing each segment an ad that fits where they dropped off, instead of the same generic banner everyone else is running. Here’s how we build it:
Before we write a single ad, we build the audience strategy. We segment by behavior (which pages they visited), intent (how deep they went), and recency (how long ago they visited). A visitor who bounced from your homepage gets a different message than someone who spent five minutes on your pricing page. That's not optional. That's the whole point of remarketing.
We don’t run remarketing on one platform and call it done. Campaigns get coordinated across Google Display, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram so a visitor who left your site sees you in the places they actually spend time, not just the one channel that’s easiest to set up. The familiarity that builds is what closes the gap between the first visit and the conversion.
We build remarketing campaigns with multiple ad formats; responsive display, static banners, video, and carousel, and rotate messaging to match the audience segment. This keeps the ads feeling fresh instead of repetitive and gives us data on what creative actually drives conversions.
There's a line between staying top-of-mind and becoming annoying. We set frequency caps by platform to control how often someone sees your ads. We also manage impression pacing so your budget isn't blown on the same person seeing the same ad 20 times in a day.
Third-party cookies are going away. We build remarketing strategies around first-party data. Your customer lists, your CRM data, and your site behavior, so your campaigns don't fall apart when browsers finish phasing out tracking cookies. We also implement server-side tracking and Conversions API where applicable.
We don't just report on total remarketing performance. We break it down by audience segment so you can see which groups convert, which need different messaging, and which should be excluded. This is how you actually optimize remarketing. Not by adjusting bids on a single campaign, but by refining who sees what.
Custom audiences built by behavior, intent, and funnel stage.
Campaigns across Google's network with targeting, exclusions, and placement management.
Pre-roll, in-feed, and bumper ads targeted to your segmented audiences.
Meta campaigns with audience syncing, custom audiences, and Conversions API setup.
Creative briefs, messaging direction, and specs for all placements across platforms.
Platform-specific caps and converter exclusion lists.
Unified strategy across Google, YouTube, and Meta with performance-based budget allocation.
Performance broken down by audience, platform, and creative.
Remarketing (also called retargeting) is a form of digital advertising that targets people who have already visited your website or interacted with your business online. Instead of showing ads to a cold audience, remarketing focuses on people who already know you exist. They just haven’t converted yet.
When someone visits your site, a small piece of code (a pixel or tag) adds them to a remarketing audience. From there, you can show them targeted ads as they browse other websites, scroll social media, or watch videos on YouTube. The goal is simple: stay top-of-mind and give them a reason to come back.
Remarketing works because the hardest part of advertising is getting someone’s attention in the first place. Once they’ve visited your site, they’ve already cleared that hurdle. Remarketing skips the awareness phase and goes straight to consideration and conversion, which is why it consistently delivers some of the lowest cost-per-conversion numbers in any ad account.
The terms “remarketing” and “retargeting” are often used interchangeably. Technically, remarketing originally referred to email-based follow-ups (like abandoned cart emails), while retargeting referred to ad-based follow-ups. In practice, most people, including Google, use “remarketing” to cover both. We use whichever term the platform uses: Google calls it remarketing, Meta calls it retargeting.
Our management fees for remarketing depend on the scope. How many platforms, how many audience segments, and how much creative is involved. Ad spend is separate and goes directly to the platforms. Remarketing typically requires less ad spend than prospecting campaigns because the audiences are smaller and more qualified. We’ll give you a clear quote before anything starts.
Functionally, they’re the same thing. Showing ads to people who’ve already interacted with your business. Historically, “remarketing” referred to email-based follow-ups and “retargeting” referred to display ads, but that distinction has blurred. Google uses “remarketing” and Meta uses “retargeting.” We use both terms depending on the platform.
We run remarketing across Google Display Network, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram. We can also set up remarketing on LinkedIn, TikTok, and other platforms depending on where your audience spends time. Most businesses get the best results from a combination of Google and Meta.
It depends on your sales cycle. For e-commerce, 7–30 days is usually the sweet spot. For B2B or high-consideration services, 30–90 days makes more sense. We set different durations for different audience segments and adjust based on performance data. The key is not remarketing too long to people who clearly aren’t interested.
We do not do creative. We handle creative strategy, direction, and specs. What formats to use, what sizes, what the messaging should say for each audience segment. For the actual design and video production, we work with your team or recommend a creative partner. The strategic direction always comes from us because we know what performs on each platform and for each audience type.
Yes, but it’s not the end of remarketing. Third-party cookies are being phased out, which affects some Google Display targeting. But first-party data (your own site visitors, customer lists) still works. Meta’s Conversions API bypasses browser-level restrictions. We build remarketing strategies around first-party data and server-side tracking so your campaigns stay effective regardless of what browsers do.
We measure by audience segment, not just campaign totals. We track conversions, cost-per-conversion, view-through conversions, and engagement metrics broken down by audience (e.g., cart abandoners vs. homepage bouncers). We also track frequency to make sure we’re not over-serving ads. The goal is to know exactly which segments are converting and which need adjustments.