Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real.
Find resources that bring your message – and your business – to life.
By Vicky Sidler | Published 8 May 2025 at 12:00 GMT
Picture Google’s ad empire as an enormous Jenga tower: search ads up top, display auctions in the middle, and dashboards at the base. Now imagine the U.S. Department of Justice walking over and saying, “We’d like you to pull out two center blocks—carefully.”
That, in essence, is the DOJ’s new push for Google to divest its ad‑tech businesses—specifically the systems that sell, place and measure most display ads online. Regulators argue Google owns too many pieces of the stack, squeezing rivals and nudging prices. Google disagrees, but if the DOJ prevails, the digital‑ad landscape could shift like a rotating billboard.
Although exact assets remain redacted, industry watchers point to:
Google Ad Manager (formerly DoubleClick for Publishers): the ad server that publishers use to auction space.
AdX (Ad Exchange): the marketplace matching advertisers’ bids to those publisher impressions.
Together, these tools give Google a front‑row seat on both sides of the transaction—like owning the auction house and the paddle. The DOJ wants that house broken up.
If a divestiture means more marketplaces compete for inventory, cost‑per‑click could dip—or spike—depending on how demand reshuffles. Short term, uncertainty often bumps prices; long term, added competition can lower them.
Separate platforms may use slightly different data sets or bidding rules. Expect a learning curve while algorithms settle, similar to the early days of GA4.
A spun‑off AdX could open up partnerships or ad formats Google previously sidelined. More doors, yes—but also more dashboards.
As a StoryBrand Certified Guide and Duct Tape Marketing Consultant, I recommend a safety harness of three moves:
Benchmark now: capture current CPM, CPC and ROAS for your top ten campaigns. If prices shift later, you’ll recognize a good (or bad) deal quickly.
Diversify light but wide: test Bing, Reddit or programmatic direct buys, so Google’s auction isn’t your single oxygen tank.
Own the relationship: keep building first‑party email lists; they remain the cheapest retargeting pool whatever happens to external ad exchanges.
Lean marketing is about option‑value: small experiments today protect margins tomorrow.
Whether the DOJ wins or Google reaches a settlement, one lesson stands: dependence on a single platform always carries structural risk. Small businesses nimble enough to rebuild their marketing tower—block by block—will stay upright no matter how regulators rearrange the pieces.
Enough with the bland, forgettable, soulless AI Content – we design StoryBrand marketing that feels human and actually connects.
Cleared with clarity (and coffee)