During the December 2025 website review meeting, Sam (Flynn Audio) flagged that a YouTube retargeting ad was appearing unprofessional. Derek had spotted the ad on his phone while at the shop and sent Sam a screenshot. The ad showed a cockpit interior panning back and forth with plain, unformatted text overlaid — described as looking like "Microsoft WordPad, non-rich text" — which made the ad look low-effort and potentially damaging to brand perception.
The retargeting ad is served via Google Ads and targets users who have previously visited the Flynn Audio website (cookie-based IP capture). Because retargeting placements can span multiple surfaces — display networks, websites, and YouTube — the same creative asset was being served across all of them without platform-specific optimization.
The image used in the retargeting ad was originally sized and optimized for phone/mobile dimensions. When YouTube rendered it in its own layout, the image was stretched or squished to fit, and the text overlay appeared poorly formatted as a result. This is a common issue when a single creative asset is used across placements with different aspect ratio requirements.
"It looks like it took one of our images that was uploaded for phone dimension size and YouTube just kind of took it and squished it."
— Karly Oykhman, 2025-12-08 meeting
Karly committed to coordinating with the ads team to produce YouTube-optimized creative assets for the retargeting placement. Key requirements:
When running retargeting campaigns across multiple placements (display, YouTube, social), each surface requires its own creative variant sized to platform specifications. Uploading a single mobile-optimized image and allowing the ad network to auto-adapt it frequently produces distorted or low-quality results. Best practice is to produce at minimum a mobile (9:16 or 1:1) and a YouTube/desktop (16:9) variant for any retargeting creative set.