E-commerce Blog | BlueTuskr

Commerce Chronicles - Meta, TikTok, Google: Where Are Brands Investing Their Ad Dollars?

Written by Andrew Maff | Dec 1, 2025 12:00:02 PM

The world of e-commerce ads is evolving at hyperspeed. Between privacy changes, rising advertising costs, and new ad platforms emerging every quarter, operators are under more pressure than ever to make every dollar of ad spend accountable.

Every e-commerce business faces the same equation: higher customer acquisition costs, shorter attention spans, and fiercer competition for the same scroll. Precedence Research, “The global digital ad spending market size accounted for USD 650.00 billion in 2025 and is expected to exceed around USD 1,483 billion by 2034, growing at a CAGR of 9.47% from 2025 to 2034.”

But knowing where to invest, and how to align creative, ad placements, and marketing strategy is the real edge.

So, BlueTuskr asked seasoned marketers five key questions:

  • Which paid-ad platforms do you invest in?

  • Which delivers the best ROI and customer acquisition cost balance?

  • What role does creativity play in ad performance?

  • Where’s the biggest growth opportunity?

  • What’s your biggest advertising challenge right now?

Here’s what the data and battle-tested operators revealed about how top e-commerce brands are building profitable, scalable marketing efforts across multiple platforms.

E-commerce Ads: Where Top Brands Are Spending

When asked where operators were spending their ad dollar, this is what they had to say: 

  • 100% of respondents invest in Google Ads (Search + Shopping Ads)

  • With only 50% of those also using Meta Ads Manager (Facebook + Instagram), TikTok, YouTube Video Ads, and LinkedIn campaigns.

Those percentages mirror the macro landscape: A forecast from Advanced Television indicates that in 2025, Google, Meta Platforms, and Amazon took 55.8% of the U.S. ad market.

Andrew Maff, Founder of BlueTuskr, described his omnichannel mix: “We’re on Meta, TikTok, Google (Search and Shopping), YouTube, and LinkedIn.”

On the other hand, Shane Barker, CEO of TraceFuse, takes a more focused route: “Google (Search and Shopping).”

Two approaches, one truth: effective advertising is more about channel purpose than channel mix. Both can thrive if each understands where they’re reaching the buyer in their journey and optimizing to that.

BlueTuskr Insight…

There’s no single “right” media mix, only the right alignment between your business model, margin, and audience behavior.

Brands that go all-in on one platform, like Google Ads, often win through precision. However, this approach mainly works for e-commerce businesses with clear demand, strong SEO alignment, and scalable shopping ads or search campaigns.

Conversely, brands that take an omnichannel approach (running Meta Ads Manager, TikTok, YouTube, and Google in tandem) are playing a different game. They trade precision for depth, building familiarity across multiple touchpoints in the customer journey.

In short, focus creates mastery quicker, but diversity breeds resilience long-term. Both survive, but only those who know why they’re running each ad campaign thrive.

Customer Acquisition Cost vs. Return: The Real ROI Divide

  • 50% of respondents said Google Ads drives their best ROI.

  • 50% pointed to Meta Ads Manager.

And it makes sense, here are a few facts…

Google Search Ads convert at an average of 6.96% AKA out of every 100 people who click a Google Search Ad, roughly 7 make a purchase or complete the intended action (like signing up or adding to cart).

 

Second, while Meta Ads average around 9.2% across industries, which sounds great and better than Google, however… but that number can be misleading without context, because “conversion” on Meta can include softer goals like leads, form fills, or app installs. Not always purchases.

 

But Meta impressions cost roughly 30- 40% less than Google’s search inventory. This means that to reach (keyword reach) the same number of people, Meta generally costs significantly less in CPM (cost per thousand impressions) or CPC (cost per click) than Google Search does.

 

So how do we all piece this together? What does this all mean? 

 

Let us explain…

These stats highlight one of the biggest strategic truths in e-commerce advertising: Google is intent-rich; Meta is attention-rich.

On Google, people are actively searching for what they want. This is “hot” traffic; they have intent and are closer to buying. That’s why even though clicks cost more, they convert at a steady, high rate. 

On Meta, people are passively scrolling. You’re interrupting their feed with content. But because Meta Ads are cheaper, you can generate huge awareness and engagement at scale, even if not everyone converts right away.

BlueTuskr Insight…

When we say, “Your ad spend should mirror your customer acquisition strategy, not compete with it,” We mean: Don’t spend money on channels that fight each other.

If you’re running Meta and Google separately (without connecting the dots between discovery and conversion), you’re paying twice for the same customer.

But if your marketing strategy sequences them properly (Meta builds awareness, Google captures intent), you’re maximizing ad spend efficiency, lowering customer acquisition cost, and building a cohesive customer journey that feels natural, not forced.

Paid Media Opportunities on the Horizon 

When asked about the biggest advertising opportunity, the responses split evenly:

  •  50% chose short-form video (TikTok, Reels, YouTube Shorts).

  •  50% cited Amazon DSP and streaming ads.

It’s a perfect reflection of where e-commerce ads are headed: the diversification of attention.

On one end, you have fast, vertical, dopamine-charged content where customers discover products. On the other hand, you have cinematic storytelling through streaming and connected TV, where customers decide what brands deserve their trust (and their dollars).

The real insight here isn’t just which channels are growing… It’s why they’re growing.

As Shane Barker pointed out in his survey response, “Short-form video platforms offer major growth potential. As formats evolve (AR, interactive, shoppable video), there’s still plenty of white space for experimentation and big wins for early movers.”

And Andrew Maff added, “Amazon’s DSP keeps growing. Letting every brand run ads through streaming channels could be amazing.”

Both are right, because they represent two halves of a modern e-commerce playbook: one that captures attention velocity and one that compounds trust equity.

BlueTuskr Insight…

Short-form drives curiosity. Streaming drives commitment. The smartest e-commerce brands choreograph both to guide the customer journey, from the first swipe of intrigue to the final tap of intent. Don’t think in “channels,” think in chapters:

  1. Short-form video marketing (TikTok, Reels) = emotional spark.

  2. Shopping ads and search campaigns = rational validation.

  3. Streaming + DSP = long-term brand reinforcement.

When your ad spend reflects how customers actually move, from scroll to search to stream,  you’re not just buying impressions; you’re earning memory.

Creative Power: The Heart of Marketing Efforts

When asked what drives ad performance, 100% of respondents pointed to creative as the single biggest factor. As Shane Barker explained, “Without compelling video or relatable influencer content, even the best targeting and offers can fall flat.”

Andrew Maff echoed that sentiment, noting that algorithms now reward resonance over reach: “If the creative doesn’t catch someone’s eye and resonate, they won’t take an action.”

In 2026, success in e-commerce advertising won’t come from better targeting; it’ll come from better storytelling. Authentic UGC, video ads, and influencer content don’t just drive clicks; they drive trust, relevance, and repeat engagement.

BlueTuskr Insight…

The reason creative now outweighs targeting comes down to algorithmic evolution and human psychology. Platforms like Meta and TikTok no longer reward who you target; they reward how people respond. Engagement signals (watch time, comments, saves, replays) feed the algorithm faster than demographics ever could.

That means creative isn’t just content; it’s data fuel. A high-performing video ad or authentic UGC post doesn’t just convert; it teaches the platform who your ideal customer is. The stronger your creative resonance, the cheaper your impressions and the faster your campaigns self-optimize.

In short, the brands that treat creative as an input to machine learning, not an afterthought to media buying, will dominate ad performance in 2026.

 

Biggest Advertising Pains: A Fragmented Customer Journey

When asked about their biggest pain point, 100% of respondents cited attribution.

It’s the universal headache in e-commerce advertising, not because the tools are bad, but because the way people shop has fundamentally changed.

As Andrew Maff put it: “When paid advertising is done right, you’re on multiple platforms. And when you’re on multiple platforms, attribution can become a struggle. Tools help, but none can paint the full picture because the buyer journey is so fluid.”

In the past, you could follow a clean funnel from click to cart to purchase. Now, it’s more like a constellation of micro-interactions happening across multiple devices and platforms. According to Think with Google, “8 in 10 online purchase journeys involve multiple touchpoints, making the path to purchase more complex than ever”. McKinsey reports that over 70% of consumers switch between channels during a single purchase journey.

This creates a paradox for marketers: as the customer journey expands, data clarity contracts. Every ad platform (Google, Meta, TikTok) claims credit for the same conversion, using its own tracking logic. That means your dashboards aren’t showing a single reality; they’re showing three competing stories.

So, what’s the fix? Not better tools, better frameworks..

BlueTuskr Insight…

Perfection in attribution is a myth. Use blended metrics, MER, LTV-to-CAC, incremental sales from new customers, instead of obsessing over cost per click. Judge performance at the business level, not just inside dashboards. 

Doing so reframes paid media from “expense” to long-term value creation.

BlueTuskr’s Take: Paid Media as a System

The most successful e-commerce ads don’t just chase conversions; they engineer compounding feedback loops between creative, data, and customer experience.

  1. Architect by journey, not channel: Your marketing strategy should move people from spark, proof, purchase. TikTok and Meta spark awareness; Google Ads and Shopping Ads convert; lifecycle email nurtures existing customers.

  2. Operate with creative velocity: Launch new ad types, test ad formats, and iterate video content weekly to maintain higher engagement and protect average order value.

  3. Measure blended truth: Your marketing spend should reflect full-funnel efficiency, not vanity metrics. Optimize locally; evaluate globally.

What’s Next…

If you want to scale profitably, don’t just “run paid ads.” Run an ad ecosystem designed to increase sales, reduce CAC, and build advocacy from existing customers. Tune into The E-Comm Show for deep dives on creative systems, cross-channel attribution, and ad strategies that actually drive real customers and repeat sales.

When you’re ready to turn your ad spend into a self-funding growth engine, BlueTuskr can help, from social media ads and video marketing to Google Shopping, Meta Ads Manager, and conversion-focused product pages.