Is Your Brand Campaign Ready for AI Max?

▼ Summary
– AI Max is Google’s latest paid search automation, but it requires strong conversion tracking, sufficient volume, and reliable signals to work effectively.
– Google claims AI Max is necessary for AI Overview eligibility, but exact match keywords are not eligible, and Performance Max already provides the same access.
– Independent tests show mixed results for AI Max, including a 35% lower ROAS across 600 accounts and 99% of impressions delivering zero conversions in one test.
– AI Max can attribute existing brand traffic to itself, making it difficult to determine if conversions are genuinely incremental or just repackaged.
– Brand controls in AI Max are unreliable, with competitor terms slipping through and relevance hovering around 50% in some campaigns.
Not so long ago, broad match was hailed as the inevitable future of paid search. Today, that mantle has passed to AI Max. Over recent months, I’ve consistently heard recommendations to enable AI Max on brand campaigns, even those already performing exactly as intended. The core issue? Many accounts still lack the foundational elements AI Max requires to function effectively. Conversion tracking is unreliable, offline conversion imports are missing, and generic campaigns remain hamstrung by budget or structural constraints.
AI Max depends on robust conversion signals, sufficient volume, and enough variation for the system to learn properly. In many accounts, brand campaigns provide the bulk of that signal. However, deploying AI Max on brand means injecting additional automation into your most predictable and efficient traffic source.
The Promise and Limitations of AI Max
AI Max expands search targeting beyond your existing keyword list, using keywords, landing pages, and site content as signals rather than strict targeting parameters. Like dynamic search ads (DSA), it can match to queries you never explicitly targeted, but it goes further by reaching beyond the intent boundaries defined by your keyword set.
Google has positioned AI Max as the next evolution in Search automation, with DSA, automatically created assets, and campaign-level broad match settings scheduled to transition into AI Max this September. The platform includes controls such as brand exclusions, URL exclusions, text guidelines, and location targeting. In accounts with strong conversion tracking, sufficient search volume, and reliable performance signals, AI Max may uncover incremental growth opportunities. Many accounts, however, haven’t reached that stage yet.
Why AI Surface Eligibility Isn’t a Reason to Rush
Much of the recent interest in AI Max stems from Google’s push toward AI-powered search experiences. AI Overviews now reach 2.5 billion monthly users, according to Google, with ads appearing in 25.6% of those results, per Semrush data. As Google expands these experiences, advertisers are understandably focused on maintaining visibility.
That concern is valid, but the problem is that AI Max is often presented as the solution before advertisers address the measurement, conversion, and account structure issues that determine whether automation can succeed. Google Ads representatives typically pitch AI Max for brand campaigns by claiming it’s necessary for eligibility in AI Mode and AI Overviews on brand searches. This isn’t accurate.
Ginny Marvin, Google Ads liaison, confirmed that three campaign types are eligible to serve in AI Overviews: broad match with Smart Bidding, Performance Max (PMax), and AI Max for Search. However, exact match keywords aren’t eligible to serve in AI Overviews at all, even when identical broad match keywords exist in the same account.
Here’s the eligibility picture: Exact match offers the highest query control but no AI Overview eligibility, making it best for defensive brand use. Phrase match provides medium control and no eligibility, suited for controlled intent expansion. Broad match has lower control but is eligible, ideal for generic scaling. PMax has low control and is eligible, best for cross-network automation. AI Max offers the lowest control and is eligible, best for mature accounts with strong signals.
PMax and AI Max do broadly the same job regarding AI surface eligibility. If you run PMax brand campaigns, you’re already covered. Adding AI Max won’t unlock anything new; it’ll only add another automation layer to an already-eligible setup. So, when reps position AI Max on brand as the answer to AI surface eligibility, advertisers should stop and ask why this feature takes priority over fixing the account’s foundation.
Test Data Doesn’t Support Google’s AI Max Claims
During its beta phase, Google claimed advertisers activating AI Max would see 14% more conversions, with those using exact and phrase match keywords likely seeing a 27% increase. Google also indicated that enabling the full AI Max feature suite yields 7% more conversions on average. Independent testing has produced more mixed results.
Across 600 accounts, Smarter Ecommerce found that AI Max delivered a 35% lower return on ad spend (ROAS) than traditional match types. AI Max accounted for just 0.57% of total ad spend in those accounts, indicating advertisers kept budgets minimal. After a four-month test, Xavier Mantica found AI Max had the most expensive conversions: $100.37 per conversion, compared to $43.97 for phrase match and $52.69 for exact match. Ezra Sackett tested 30,000 search terms with AI Max, only to find that 99% of impressions delivered zero conversions.
After a 23-test analysis of 16 advertisers, Andy Goodwin noted improved Quality Score and ROAS when using the AI Max full feature suite. However, he tested mature advertisers and used text customization in only 50% of tests and URL optimization in just 44%, suggesting caution about enabling every feature. None of this data is brand-specific. AI Max may deliver value in the right context, but an exact match defensive brand campaign that already performs well isn’t the ideal place to test a new automation product that depends heavily on signal quality.
AI Max Attribution Gets Murky on Brand
According to Adalysis, AI Max doesn’t always find genuinely new search terms. In some cases, it simply takes credit for queries that exact and phrase campaigns were already winning. Because AI Max treats keywords as signals rather than targeting parameters, impressions previously attributed to your exact match keyword can end up attributed to AI Max instead.
This reporting issue can be significant for brand campaigns. Brand traffic is already the highest converting traffic in most accounts. Flip on AI Max, and suddenly you see an uplift. But it’s difficult to tell if it’s incremental or if preexisting branded performance simply appears in a different automation bucket.
Brand Controls Don’t Work Consistently
Google’s pitch leans heavily on brand controls. AI Max offers inclusions, exclusions, and guardrails that supposedly keep the match type tightly focused. In practice, these controls don’t always work well. Adalysis notes that competitor terms occasionally slip through and brand terms sometimes match to non-brand queries. DAC reports overlap between brand and non-brand terms as well as unintended language matching. LBBOnline finds relevance hovering around 50% in some campaigns. Brand controls could improve over time, but the available evidence doesn’t support treating AI Max as a low-risk switch for tightly controlled defensive brand campaigns.
What to Consider Before Testing AI Max on Brand
Before expanding automation into a defensive brand campaign, ask these questions.
- Are the conversion signals trustworthy? Have you separated macro and micro conversions? Do offline imports work correctly? Does lead quality feed back into the platform, or does Google still optimize equally toward every form fill? If the signal quality underneath the account is poor, AI Max will amplify it instead of fixing it.
- Have you already explored generic growth? In many accounts I audit, budget, weak landing page alignment, poor structure, and outdated query management limit generic campaigns. This is where you usually find incremental growth, not inside an already dominant brand campaign.
- Does the account give automation enough useful learning data? AI Max isn’t magic. It reflects the quality of the signals underneath it. If most meaningful conversion volume comes from brand, turning AI Max on in a brand campaign may reinforce existing dependency on branded traffic rather than helping the account grow beyond it.
- Are brand + modifier searches already structured properly? “Brand + reviews,” “Brand + pricing,” “Brand + near me,” and product intent variations often deserve their own campaign strategy entirely. AI Max shouldn’t become a substitute for good account architecture.
- Do you have a strategic reason to expand the brand campaign? If so, test carefully using experiments. That’s a business decision, not a checkbox recommendation from a rep who hasn’t looked deeply enough at the account to understand where the real opportunities are.
AI Max Only Works as Well as the Signals Feeding It
AI Max may grow into something genuinely useful over time. Remember, PMax went through a similar evolution and is in a much stronger place now than it was early on. But automation only works as well as the signals feeding it. Right now, the issue is that the foundations underneath the automation still aren’t strong enough. Better conversion frameworks, measurement, account structure, and feedback loops make automation smarter. If brand remains the best-performing campaign in the account, the bigger question is why the rest of the account hasn’t caught up yet. Above all else, don’t confuse Google’s automation priorities with your account priorities.
(Source: Search Engine Land)




