What Is Paid Media? Channels, Costs & Strategy Guide
Paid media is any marketing channel where you pay for ad placement to reach your audience. Unlike organic or earned channels, paid media guarantees immediate visibility — you control when, where, and to whom your message appears. Google Ads, Facebook ads, LinkedIn sponsored posts, and display advertising all fall under paid media.
Most marketing teams use a mix of paid, earned, and owned media. But paid is the only channel that delivers results on day one. No waiting for SEO to kick in. No hoping journalists cover your launch. You buy the reach you need, measure what works, and scale the winners.
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Paid media is advertising where you pay a platform to show your content to a specific audience. You're buying attention — whether that's a search result, a social feed slot, or a banner on a third-party site. Payment happens through models like cost-per-click (CPC), cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM), or cost-per-acquisition (CPA).
The core payment models:
- Cost per click (CPC): You pay each time someone clicks your ad. Common for search and social ads.
- Cost per thousand impressions (CPM): You pay for every 1,000 times your ad displays, regardless of clicks. Common for brand awareness campaigns.
- Cost per acquisition (CPA): You pay only when someone completes a specific action — sign-up, purchase, download. Common for performance campaigns with conversion tracking.
Paid media gives you control over targeting (who sees your ad), timing (when it runs), and budget (how much you spend). Organic channels can't promise that. A blog post might rank in six months. A viral tweet might never happen. Paid media is the one channel where spending more reliably gets you more.
Paid Media Channels (By Platform Type)
Paid media includes search ads, social ads, display ads, video ads, native ads, and sponsored content. Each platform type targets different audience behaviors and goals.
| Platform Type | Examples | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Search ads | Google Ads, Microsoft Advertising | High-intent buyers actively searching for solutions |
| Social ads | Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, X (Twitter) | Targeting by demographics, interests, job titles; visual storytelling |
| Display ads | Google Display Network, programmatic ad networks | Brand awareness, retargeting site visitors |
| Video ads | YouTube, TikTok, Facebook/Instagram video | Engagement, product demos, brand storytelling |
Search ads work when your audience knows what they need and is searching for it. B2B SaaS companies buying "project management software" keywords. E-commerce brands bidding on "running shoes for flat feet."
Social ads work when you need to reach people who aren't actively searching but fit a profile. Targeting CFOs at Series B startups. Reaching parents of toddlers who've visited parenting blogs.
Display and video ads work for awareness and retargeting. You can't close a $50K deal with a banner ad, but you can stay in front of prospects who visited your pricing page and didn't convert.
Need help choosing the right mix? Understanding SEO vs PPC helps clarify when to prioritize paid search versus organic channels in your marketing team structure.
Paid vs. Earned vs. Owned Media
Paid media is one of three core marketing channels. Each works differently and serves different goals.
| Paid Media | Earned Media | |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | You pay for placement | Others talk about you (PR, reviews, social mentions) |
| Examples | Google Ads, Facebook ads, sponsored posts | Press coverage, organic social shares, backlinks, customer reviews |
| Speed | Immediate — launch today, see results today | Slow — earned over time through relationships and quality |
| Control | High — you control targeting, budget, message | Low — you can pitch but can't control if/how you're covered |
Most effective strategies use all three. Owned media (your blog) builds long-term SEO and audience. Earned media (a Forbes feature) builds credibility. Paid media fills gaps, accelerates growth, and gives you control when you need results this quarter.
The key difference: paid media guarantees reach. Earned and owned depend on variables you can't fully control.
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Paid media costs range from $0.50 to $100+ per click depending on platform, industry, and competition. Most companies should budget $5,000-$15,000/month minimum to gather meaningful performance data across channels.
Google Ads (Search): $1-$50+ per click depending on keyword. Highly competitive B2B keywords like "marketing automation software" can cost $30-$100 per click. Less competitive long-tail keywords might be $2-$5. Budget at least $3,000-$5,000/month to gather meaningful data.
Meta Ads (Facebook/Instagram): $0.50-$10 per click, $5-$30 per thousand impressions (CPM). E-commerce and DTC brands often see lower CPCs ($0.70-$2). B2B typically pays more ($3-$8). Budget $2,000-$5,000/month minimum for testing.
LinkedIn Ads: $5-$15 per click — the most expensive social platform, but best for reaching specific B2B job titles. CPMs run $30-$80. Budget $5,000-$10,000/month if targeting decision-makers at enterprise companies.
YouTube Ads: $0.10-$0.30 per view (user watches 30 seconds or full video if shorter). CPMs around $10-$30. Good for product demos and brand awareness. Budget $2,000-$5,000/month.
Display Ads: $0.50-$5 CPM, depending on targeting and site quality. Retargeting (showing ads to people who visited your site) typically costs more but converts better. Budget $1,500-$3,000/month for retargeting campaigns.
What affects cost:
- Industry competition — legal, insurance, and SaaS keywords cost more than local services
- Target audience — senior executives cost more to reach than general consumers
- Ad quality — higher click-through rates lower your cost per click on most platforms
- Seasonality — Q4 is more expensive; summer often cheaper
For a growth-stage company testing paid media, plan to spend $10,000-$20,000/month across 2-3 channels to get statistically significant results. Less than that and you're guessing.
Calculate what your full marketing team should cost including paid media expertise based on your company stage and goals.
Building a Paid Media Strategy
A paid media strategy starts with goals, audience, and channel selection — in that order. Most failed campaigns skip straight to tactics without this foundation.
1. Define your goal and success metrics
Revenue goal? Lead volume? Brand awareness? Pick one primary goal per campaign. Then define what success looks like in numbers: $50 cost per lead, 3X return on ad spend, 10,000 impressions per day. If you can't measure it, don't run the campaign.
2. Identify your target audience with precision
"Everyone" is not an audience. Get specific: job titles, company size, income, interests, behaviors, pain points. The tighter your targeting, the better your message and the lower your wasted spend. B2B SaaS selling to marketing leaders should target VP/Director Marketing at 50-500 employee companies, not "all marketers."
3. Select 1-2 channels based on where your audience lives
Don't try to be everywhere at once. If you're B2B, start with LinkedIn or Google Search. If you're DTC, start with Meta or TikTok. Match the platform to your audience behavior and buying journey. High-ticket B2B buyers research on LinkedIn and Google. Impulse e-commerce buyers scroll Instagram and TikTok.
4. Allocate budget for testing, then scaling
Split your budget: 70% to your best-performing campaigns, 30% to testing new audiences, creatives, and offers. In month one, everything is a test. By month three, you should know what works and shift budget accordingly. Most companies underspend on testing and overspend on campaigns that stopped working months ago.
5. Measure, optimize, kill what doesn't work
Check performance weekly. If a campaign isn't hitting your target cost-per-lead or ROAS after 3-4 weeks and $3,000+ spend, kill it. Too many teams let underperforming campaigns run for months because "we already invested in the creative." The spend is gone either way — don't throw good money after bad.
Understanding demand generation vs lead generation helps clarify whether your paid media strategy should focus on awareness or conversion campaigns.
When to Hire a Paid Media Expert
You need a paid media specialist when ad spend exceeds $10,000/month, performance has plateaued, or you're launching a new channel without in-house expertise.
You need specialist help if:
- You're spending $10,000+/month and performance has plateaued
- You're launching a new channel and don't know what "good" looks like
- Your campaigns work but you don't know why — can't explain what's driving results
- You've tried running ads yourself and burned $5,000+ with little to show for it
- You need to scale fast and can't afford 6 months of trial-and-error learning
In-house vs. agency vs. fractional specialist:
Hiring full-time makes sense when you're spending $50,000+/month across multiple channels and need daily optimization. That's a $90,000-$130,000/year hire.
Agencies work for companies that need a full-service team (strategy, creative, media buying) and have $20,000+/month budgets. But you're one of many clients, and junior staff often run your account after the pitch.
Fractional specialists give you senior expertise without the full-time cost. You get someone who's managed $500K-$5M in ad spend, working 10-20 hours/week on your account. Typical cost: $5,000-$12,000/month.
MarketerHire matches companies with vetted paid search experts in 48 hours — top 5% of applicants, month-to-month flexibility, 2-week trial. For social-focused campaigns, hire a paid social marketer with platform-specific expertise. Learn more about how to hire a PPC expert or hiring a paid social expert.
Most companies try DIY, burn $10,000-$20,000 learning what doesn't work, then hire someone. Skipping straight to an expert saves the tuition cost.
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