January 2026 Google Ads Update – AI Strategies Reshape PPC Planning

Introduced
Jan 28, 2026

Impact Rating
Medium

Granular analysis and first look

Google is continuing to push advertisers toward AI-powered campaign management, and Granular’s PPC management experts are watching closely to separate meaningful opportunity from platform-driven automation hype. In a January 28, 2026 Ads & Commerce Blog post, Google summarized three AI strategies marketers should focus on this year: shifting from manual busy work to strategy, using cross-platform data for audience discovery, and treating creative as a core performance lever.

For advertisers, this is less about handing the keys to Google and more about knowing where AI can help scale performance without weakening business-specific control.

Google’s 3 AI Priorities for Advertisers in 2026

Google’s update is centered on how AI can help marketers adapt to changing search behavior, broader customer journeys, and faster creative demands.

Move From Manual Tasks to Higher-Level Strategy

Google points to AI Max for Search as a way to expand campaign reach through features like search term expansion and dynamic text customization, without requiring a full campaign rebuild.

For PPC teams, the opportunity is clear: AI can uncover queries and intent patterns that may be difficult to capture manually. The risk is also clear: expanded reach can quickly become wasted spend if conversion tracking, negatives, budgets, and business goals are not closely monitored.

Granular’s take: AI Max for Search should be tested with clear performance guardrails. Advertisers should review query quality, lead quality, and conversion value before assuming incremental reach is truly incremental growth.

Use Cross-Platform Data for Audience Discovery

Google also highlights Demand Gen as a way to connect social-style discovery with search-driven intent, especially across YouTube. The post specifically calls out Demand Gen’s role in reaching users during high-engagement moments with campaign settings and target CPC bidding.

This reinforces a broader shift: Google wants advertisers thinking beyond Search alone. Audience signals, video engagement, creative assets, and conversion data are becoming more connected across the Google ecosystem.

Granular’s take: Demand Gen can be valuable, but it should not be treated like a direct Search replacement. It needs a different evaluation framework, especially for brands with longer buying cycles or softer upper-funnel interactions.

Treat Creative as a Performance Driver

Google’s third recommendation is to make creative a central part of campaign performance. The company highlights Asset Studio and generative AI tools as ways to produce, refine, and scale ad content more efficiently.

This matters because AI-powered campaigns need strong inputs. Better creative assets can give the system more ways to match messaging to different users, placements, and intent signals.

Granular’s take: Creative scale is helpful, but quality still matters. Advertisers should use AI-assisted creative production to test more angles, not to flood campaigns with generic assets that blur brand voice or weaken offer clarity.

What This Means for PPC Strategy

The biggest takeaway from Google’s update is that AI is becoming more embedded in campaign structure, targeting, bidding, and creative. That does not eliminate the need for PPC strategy. It raises the importance of experienced account management.

Advertisers should prioritize:

  • Clean conversion tracking before expanding automation
  • Strong audience and first-party data inputs
  • Clear budget controls and testing frameworks
  • Regular search term and placement reviews
  • Creative testing tied to actual business goals
  • Lead quality and revenue reporting, not just platform conversions

Google’s AI tools can help find new opportunities, but they still need direction. The better the inputs, the more useful the automation becomes.

Key Takeaways

  • Clean conversion tracking before expanding automation
  • Strong audience and first-party data inputs
  • Clear budget controls and testing frameworks
  • Regular search term and placement reviews
  • Creative testing tied to actual business goals
  • Lead quality and revenue reporting, not just platform conversions

Learn more about past Google updates