The “Search vs Display” decision doesn’t have a single, universal answer. The Search Network is excellent at capturing existing demand and purchase intent, while the Display Network builds reach, brand awareness, and nurtures future demand. The best results usually come from a smart combination of both — with clear goals, proper KPIs, and a well-thought-out budget split.
📝 What you’ll learn from this article:Search ads appear when a user types a specific query into Google. This is a moment of high intent: someone is looking for a solution, comparing options, or close to making a decision. With keyword targeting, exclusions, and ad extensions, you have great control over who sees your offer and in what context. In practice, Search works best when quick contact with a “ready-to-act” user matters — generating leads, selling products, scheduling visits, or quote requests.
The biggest advantages of Search are predictability and the ability to precisely optimize for results (CPA, ROAS). When budgets are limited, Search campaigns are often the first choice — they capture existing demand and monetize it without long nurturing. The downside? In highly competitive industries, CPCs can be high, and scale is limited by the available non-brand search volume.
Display ads reach users outside of search results — on partner websites, apps, Gmail, and YouTube (as part of video strategies). The intent here is often “dormant”: the user isn’t actively searching but might be a relevant prospect based on signals (interests, demographics, behavior, remarketing lists). As a result, Display effectively builds brand awareness, fuels the top of the funnel, and maintains engagement after the first visit.
Clicks and CPMs are usually lower than in Search, allowing you to scale reach quickly. However, without precise targeting and good creatives, Display can generate low-quality traffic. The key to success is matching the message to the funnel stage: “warm up” cold audiences with value (problem → solution), and close returning users with remarketing, focusing on specifics (benefit, offer, social proof).
In Search, the user initiates contact — they have a question and expect an answer. In Display, you initiate contact — interrupting attention and earning it through creative work. Hence, the formats differ (text vs visual/video), as does context (search results vs browsing content) and success metrics. Search typically focuses on conversions, CPA, and impression share; Display emphasizes reach, frequency, engagement, assisted conversions, and remarketing results.
The key takeaway: these campaigns shouldn’t be judged by the same metrics. A high CTR in Display doesn’t mean better sales performance, just as a low CTR in Search doesn’t mean inefficiency if conversions are cheaper. In GA4, separate segments (new vs returning users, cold traffic vs remarketing) and evaluate impact along the funnel — not just by last click.
Search wins when your product or service has clear keyword intent and you want to turn queries into leads or sales quickly. It’s a good choice for limited budgets: focus on the most profitable non-brand and brand keywords, ensuring query quality through match types and exclusions. Search is particularly effective for service providers, B2B, local businesses, and e-commerce with clearly defined products that users actively search for.
If you’re just starting, begin with “high-intent” keywords (e.g., “AC repair Kraków price,” “who can perform SEO audit”) and only later expand to educational terms. This approach ensures your budget targets queries more likely to end in action, not just a click.
Display has the upper hand when you’re building awareness, launching a new product or category, and the market doesn’t yet generate many searches. It’s ideal for remarketing (reminding users about abandoned carts, unfinished forms, or new arrivals), for “visual” categories (fashion, interiors, beauty, travel), and wherever creative visuals can “sell” context before search intent arises.
It’s also great for building remarketing lists for later use in Search and Performance Max campaigns. Just remember to control frequency, exclude irrelevant placements/topics, and test ad formats (static, responsive, short-form video) to avoid inflating reach without quality.
The most predictable results come from strategies that blend both worlds: Display builds reach and engagement, while Search captures intent when it appears. A classic setup: Display campaigns target cold audiences (interests + lookalikes + topics) and remarketing, while Search targets transactional and brand queries. When the user later clicks a search ad, they already recognize your brand — CTR rises, and CPA drops.
As for budget split? For performance-oriented campaigns, 70/30 (Search/Display) is common. In markets where you must first build demand or have strong video creative, 60/40 makes sense, while brand-focused campaigns can go 30/70 — provided Search and remarketing still handle the bottom of the funnel. Adjust proportions after 2–4 weeks of A/B testing, reviewing acquisition costs and assisted conversion shares.
Evaluating Search and Display requires two layers of analysis. First — direct performance: how many conversions and at what cost each campaign delivers in last-click or data-driven attribution. Search usually performs better here, as it captures intent and shorter paths to conversion. Second — indirect impact: assisted conversions, brand query growth, returning visitors, and CPA reduction in Search after adding Display reach. This “surround effect” only appears in path reports and pre/post comparisons, not in single KPIs.
In GA4, separate Search and Display reports but combine them in shared Looker Studio dashboards. For Search, focus on sales metrics: conversions, cost per conversion, ROAS, impression share, lost IS (budget/rank). For Display, include upper- and mid-funnel metrics: reach, unique users, frequency, engagement (time on site, scroll depth), micro-conversion rate, and — crucially — assisted conversion share. The minimum evaluation window for Display is 2–4 weeks, as the effect compounds over time.
In practice, use three views: 1) Direct — CPA/ROAS from last-click or DDA attribution, 2) Assist — campaign participation in multi-channel paths, 3) Brand uplift — change in brand search queries and CTR/CPA in brand campaigns after Display starts. If Display doesn’t bring assists, improve Search metrics, or raise brand interest, narrow targeting, improve creatives, or reallocate budget. If Display reduces Search CPA and boosts brand share, the synergy works — even if Display’s own last-click looks weaker.
Search captures intent — fast, predictable, and often the first choice when budgets are limited. Display builds reach — fuels the top and middle of the funnel, supports remarketing, and lowers closure costs in other channels. Instead of asking “which is better?”, plan an ecosystem: Display warms up, Search closes, and remarketing lists and smart KPIs connect them. The right mix depends on your goals, industry, and stage of growth, but one rule stays true: capture intent, build demand — and measure the whole journey, not just one click.

Content Marketing Specialist