How do you control placements in Google Display Network?

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Automatic display placements can put your brand on thousands of sites in a single week. Most will never appear in your daily reports unless you go looking. The ones that do appear are often the sites you wish you had blocked on day one.

Display network placement control is not optional for businesses that care about brand safety. You choose which inventory your ads can use, which categories to exclude, and which specific sites to allow or block. Here is how to control placements in display network campaigns without giving up reach entirely.

How do you control display network placements?

Display placement control works on three layers: content category filters, placement targeting mode, and ongoing blocklists built from reporting data. Each layer catches problems the others miss.

Content category filters block broad risk groups like adult content, violence, and downloadable piracy. Placement mode decides whether your ads run everywhere the network allows or only on sites you hand pick. Blocklists remove individual domains and apps after you review performance reports.

1. Set expanded sensitive category exclusions

Start with the strictest content sensitivity settings your brand can justify. Standard filters miss edge cases that expanded blocking catches. Family brands, health services, and financial businesses usually need the highest tier.

2. Choose managed placements for high-risk campaigns

Managed placements limit delivery to sites and apps you approve in advance. Reach shrinks, but control increases. Use this mode when reputation matters more than maximum impressions, or when you are testing a new offer.

3. Review placement reports weekly at launch

Pull site, app, and category reports for the first two weeks of any display campaign. Exclude domains with high spend and zero on-site engagement. Add repeat offenders to a shared account-level blocklist so other campaigns inherit the protection.

4. Separate remarketing from prospecting controls

Remarketing campaigns target people who already visited your site. Prospecting campaigns reach strangers. Prospecting needs tighter placement rules because unknown inventory carries more risk. Do not copy loose prospecting settings onto cold audience campaigns.

Common display placement mistakes

Leaving automatic placements on without review is the most common error. Another is excluding only obvious adult sites while ignoring made-for-advertising domains that look harmless in a screenshot. A third is never updating blocklists after the first month.

Display control is maintenance, not a one-time checkbox. Schedule monthly placement audits and compare ad clicks with landing page behavior to spot waste early.

For categories worth blocking, read unsafe content and harmful ad placements. For cutting specific domains, see excluding irrelevant websites and apps. Video campaigns need a separate approach covered in the next chapter on video ad placement control.

Frequently asked questions

Should I turn off all automatic display placements?

What is the difference between topic targeting and placement control?

Can display ads run inside mobile apps?

How do landing pages fit into display placement strategy?

Do account-level exclusions apply to all campaigns?

How does display placement control relate to ad fraud?