17 Paid Media Examples That Drive Real Results (2026)

Paid media is any advertising you pay to place in front of an audience — search ads, social posts, display banners, video pre-rolls. Unlike organic content you own or press coverage you earn, paid media puts your message where people are already looking, right now.

Global paid advertising hit $602 billion in 2025, but most campaigns never break even. The difference between wasted budget and profitable growth? Knowing what actually works before you spend.

This guide breaks down 17 paid media examples across search, social, display, and video. Each includes the channel, the tactic, and why it works — so you can steal what matters for your business.

What Is Paid Media?

Paid media is advertising space you purchase to promote your product, service, or content. You pay a platform — Google, Meta, LinkedIn, YouTube — to show your message to a targeted audience. Most companies hire a paid search expert or paid social marketer to run these campaigns.

The three types of media work together but serve different roles:

Media Type What It Is Best For
Paid Ads you pay to place (search, social, display) Immediate visibility, targeted reach, scalable results
Owned Content you control (website, blog, email list) Long-term authority, audience you own
Earned Coverage others give you (press, reviews, social shares) Credibility, third-party validation

Paid media works when you need results fast, want to target specific audiences, or need to scale beyond what organic reach allows. Most growth strategies combine all three — paid media drives initial traffic, owned media converts visitors, and earned media builds trust.

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Search Advertising Examples

Search ads appear when someone types a query into Google, Bing, or another search engine. You bid on keywords, write ad copy, and pay when someone clicks. Search advertising captures demand that already exists.

Best for: High-intent traffic. People searching "marketing consultant Boston" or "project management software" are actively looking to buy.

Google Search Ads for High-Intent Keywords

A SaaS company selling accounting software bids on "quickbooks alternative for small business." Their ad appears at the top of search results with the headline "Simpler Accounting for Growing Teams" and a description highlighting their 14-day free trial.

Why it works: The searcher is already looking for a solution. The ad matches their intent exactly, and the free trial removes friction. Average conversion rate for this type of ad: 5-8% when the landing page delivers on the promise.

Google Shopping Ads for E-Commerce

An outdoor gear retailer runs Shopping ads for "waterproof hiking boots." The ad shows product images, prices, and star ratings directly in search results.

Why it works: Visual product display beats text-only ads for e-commerce. Shoppers see exactly what they're buying and compare prices without clicking. Shopping ads convert 30% higher than standard search ads for product queries, according to WordStream.

Google Local Services Ads

A home services company (HVAC repair) runs Local Services Ads showing their Google Guaranteed badge, service area, and customer reviews. They pay per lead, not per click.

Why it works: The Google Guaranteed badge builds immediate trust. Homeowners searching "furnace repair near me" see verified businesses at the top of results. These ads convert at 10-15% because searchers want a fast, trustworthy solution.

Remarketing Display Ads via Google Display Network

An online course provider shows display ads to people who visited their course page but didn't enroll. The ad appears on news sites, blogs, and YouTube with a limited-time discount offer.

Why it works: Remarketing recaptures interest. The visitor already knows the product; the ad reminds them and adds urgency. Remarketing ads cost 2-5x less per click than cold traffic and convert 2-3x higher.

Social Media Paid Examples

Social ads appear in feeds, stories, messages, and video streams across platforms. You target by demographics, interests, behaviors, and custom audiences. Social advertising builds awareness and nurtures consideration through platforms like Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok.

Best for: Visual products, content promotion, audience building, lead generation.

Facebook/Instagram Carousel Ads for E-Commerce

A DTC skincare brand runs carousel ads on Instagram showing five products with a "Shop Now" button on each card. Each card highlights a different skin concern (acne, dryness, aging).

Why it works: Carousel format lets one ad serve multiple customer segments. Someone scrolling past sees their specific problem addressed. Carousel ads generate 30-50% more clicks than single-image ads for e-commerce brands.

Facebook Lead Gen Form Ads

A B2B software company runs a lead gen ad offering a free marketing audit. The form pre-fills with the user's Facebook profile data (name, email, company). No landing page required.

Why it works: Friction kills conversions. Pre-filled forms convert 20-40% higher than click-through landing pages because users don't have to leave Facebook. Trade-off: lead quality can be lower since signing up is so easy.

LinkedIn Sponsored Content for B2B

A marketing agency promotes a case study showing how they helped a SaaS company increase pipeline by 3x. The ad targets "VP Marketing" and "Director of Growth" at Series A-C companies with 50-200 employees.

Why it works: LinkedIn's targeting is unmatched for B2B. You reach decision-makers by job title, company size, industry, and seniority. Sponsored content blends into the feed and drives 2-3x higher engagement than display ads on the same audience.

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LinkedIn InMail Sponsored Messaging

A recruiting platform sends InMail ads to HR directors at companies with 100-500 employees. The message offers a free hiring assessment and links to a booking calendar.

Why it works: InMail goes directly to the inbox and feels more personal than a feed ad. Open rates average 30-50% when the message is relevant and the offer is valuable. Best for high-value offers targeting a narrow audience.

TikTok In-Feed Video Ads

A meal kit delivery service runs 15-second recipe videos in the TikTok feed. The ad looks native — filmed vertically, casual tone, text overlays — and ends with a discount code.

Why it works: TikTok users scroll for entertainment, not ads. Ads that look like organic content (not polished commercials) perform 3-5x better. In-feed video ads convert younger audiences (18-34) who ignore traditional display ads.

TikTok Spark Ads

A fitness app promotes an existing organic post from a creator who's already using their app. The Spark Ad amplifies the creator's authentic review to a broader audience.

Why it works: User-generated content outperforms brand-created ads. The creator's audience trusts their recommendation, and the app reaches new users without creating new creative. Spark Ads convert 20-40% better than standard in-feed ads.

Twitter/X Promoted Tweets for Events

A SaaS company promotes a tweet announcing their product launch webinar. The ad targets followers of competitor accounts and people who recently engaged with tweets about their product category.

Why it works: Event-driven campaigns benefit from real-time promotion. Twitter's interest and follower targeting reaches engaged, relevant audiences. Promoted tweets drive 50-100% more registrations than organic tweets alone.

Display and Programmatic Examples

Display ads are banner, video, or native ads shown on websites, apps, and platforms outside of search or social feeds. Programmatic advertising uses automated bidding to place display ads across millions of sites.

Best for: Brand awareness, retargeting, reaching audiences at scale.

Retargeting Banners via Programmatic Platforms

An online furniture retailer shows banner ads to people who browsed specific product categories (sofas, dining tables) but didn't purchase. The ad features the exact product they viewed plus a 10% discount code.

Why it works: Product-specific retargeting outperforms generic "come back" ads. Seeing the exact sofa they liked reminds them why they were interested. Retargeting banners convert 5-10x higher than prospecting display ads.

Native Ads on Content Sites

A financial services company runs native ads on business news sites. The ad looks like an article headline ("5 Ways to Cut Business Expenses in 2026") and links to a gated guide on their site.

Why it works: Native ads blend into editorial content and avoid banner blindness. Readers engage with headlines that promise useful information. Native ads generate 3-5x higher click-through rates than standard banner ads on the same placements.

Programmatic Video Ads

A B2B SaaS company runs 15-second pre-roll video ads on business and tech publisher sites. The ad explains one core product benefit and ends with a "Start Free Trial" CTA.

Why it works: Video explains complex products better than static banners. Programmatic platforms let you target by topic, behavior, and context — the ad runs on articles about marketing automation, reaching readers already interested in the category.

Video Advertising Examples

Video ads appear before, during, or alongside video content on YouTube, streaming platforms, and social feeds. Formats include skippable pre-roll, non-skippable mid-roll, and in-feed video.

Best for: Explaining complex products, building brand awareness, storytelling.

YouTube Pre-Roll Ads (Skippable)

A project management software company runs 30-second skippable ads before YouTube videos about productivity and remote work. The first 5 seconds hook the viewer ("Tired of tools that don't talk to each other?"), then explains the product.

Why it works: You only pay when someone watches 30 seconds or clicks. The 5-second hook determines success — if it's relevant to what they're watching, they'll keep watching. Pre-roll ads on YouTube average 15-30% view-through rates when targeted well.

YouTube Mid-Roll Ads (Non-Skippable)

A consumer electronics brand runs 15-second non-skippable ads during popular tech review channels. The ad demonstrates one standout product feature.

Why it works: Non-skippable guarantees the message is seen. Mid-roll ads (during a video, not before) have higher completion rates because viewers are already invested in the content. Best for short, punchy messages.

Connected TV (CTV) Ads

A DTC brand runs 30-second ads on streaming platforms (Hulu, Roku, smart TV apps) targeting households by income, location, and viewing behavior.

Why it works: CTV combines the reach of traditional TV with digital targeting. You reach cord-cutters who don't see traditional commercials. CTV ads drive 20-40% higher brand recall than standard digital video ads, according to eMarketer.

When to Use Paid Media vs. Organic

Paid media and organic content serve different goals. Most businesses need both, but the mix depends on budget, timeline, and audience.

Scenario Paid Media Organic Content
Need results this week/month ✅ Yes — ads drive traffic immediately ❌ No — SEO and content take 3-6 months
Building long-term authority ❌ No — traffic stops when budget stops ✅ Yes — compounds over time
Launching a new product ✅ Yes — paid drives awareness fast ⚠️ Limited — no search volume yet
Tight budget (<$5K/month) ⚠️ Risky — hard to test and optimize ✅ Yes — costs time, not cash

Bottom line: Use paid media when you need speed, control, and precise targeting. Use organic when you're building authority, own your audience, or have more time than budget.

Most successful growth strategies layer both. Paid media drives initial awareness and captures high-intent searches. Organic content nurtures interest over time and builds an audience you own. For guidance on building a balanced team, see our guide on marketing team structure.

How to Measure Paid Media Performance

Paid media succeeds or fails on metrics, not opinions. Track these six KPIs to know if your campaigns are working.

Click-Through Rate (CTR): Percentage of people who see your ad and click. Benchmarks vary by platform:

Low CTR means your targeting or creative isn't relevant. High CTR with low conversions means your landing page doesn't match the ad promise.

Cost Per Click (CPC): How much you pay each time someone clicks. Varies by industry and competition:

CPC tells you if you're overpaying. If your CPC is 2x the industry average, your targeting is too broad or your ad quality score is low.

Conversion Rate: Percentage of clicks that turn into a desired action (purchase, signup, lead). Benchmarks:

Conversion rate separates traffic quality from traffic volume. High traffic with low conversions means you're attracting the wrong audience or your offer isn't compelling.

Cost Per Acquisition (CPA): How much you spend to acquire one customer or lead. Calculate by dividing total ad spend by conversions.

Example: $10,000 ad spend ÷ 50 customers = $200 CPA. If your customer lifetime value (LTV) is $800, you're profitable. If LTV is $150, you're losing money on every customer.

Return on Ad Spend (ROAS): Revenue generated per dollar spent on ads. Calculate as (revenue from ads ÷ ad spend).

Example: $50,000 revenue ÷ $10,000 ad spend = 5:1 ROAS. A 3:1 ROAS is break-even for most businesses after accounting for product costs. 5:1+ is strong performance.

Impression Share (Search Ads): Percentage of available impressions your ads captured. If your impression share is 30%, your ads showed for 30% of relevant searches. Low impression share means you're missing traffic — either your budget is too low or your bids aren't competitive.

Track these metrics weekly. Paid media campaigns shift fast — what works this month may not work next month. Adjust targeting, creative, and bids based on data, not gut feeling.

FAQ
17 Paid Media Examples That Drive Real Results
LinkedIn and Google Search dominate B2B paid media. LinkedIn wins for account-based targeting (specific companies, job titles, and industries) and awareness campaigns. Google Search wins for capturing high-intent demand — prospects searching "CRM for real estate" or "HR software for startups" are ready to buy. Most B2B companies run both.
Start with $3,000-$5,000/month per channel to gather meaningful data. Anything less and you won't have enough traffic to test and optimize. B2B companies with longer sales cycles budget 10-20% of revenue for marketing, with 30-50% of that going to paid media. E-commerce and DTC brands often spend 15-30% of revenue on paid ads.
A 3:1 ROAS (3 dollars in revenue for every 1 dollar spent) is break-even for most businesses after factoring in product costs and overhead. A 5:1+ ROAS is strong performance. E-commerce brands with low margins need higher ROAS (6-8:1) to stay profitable. SaaS companies with high lifetime value can sustain lower ROAS (2-3:1) if they retain customers.
You can run paid media in-house if you have someone with 2+ years of platform experience. Google Ads, Facebook Ads Manager, and LinkedIn Campaign Manager are learnable, but the cost of mistakes is high — wasted budget, poor targeting, low-quality leads. Most companies under $5M revenue hire a paid search expert or paid social marketer fractionally (10-20 hours/week) instead of a full-time hire or agency retainer.
Paid media drives traffic immediately — you'll see clicks and impressions within hours of launching. Conversions take 2-4 weeks to stabilize as the platform's algorithm learns your audience. Profitable performance takes 2-3 months of testing creative, targeting, and landing pages. Budget 90 days to know if a paid channel will work for your business.
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