Traffic Quality vs Invalid Traffic Volume: What Really Drives Campaign Performance?
Every brand’s marketing program runs on one principle – more visits amount to more leads. While Google and META highly influence users’ journey but not all that stands true. The journey is simple but equally prone to the complexities of digital advertising ecosystem. This shifts the real question from how many visits your campaigns generate to where those visits are coming from or if they are leading to any conversions? We saw this firsthand while working with one of the USA’s leading aggregator players. For them, deeper validation of their campaign traffic was the turning point. When they looked closer at where their visits were actually coming from, the picture changed entirely. Irrelevant, low-quality sources were quietly eating into their budget and polluting their campaign data, making it nearly impossible to measure what was truly working. So, they made a call: blacklist the bad sources. Clean the data. And rebuild on a foundation they could actually trust. In this blog, we break down exactly how that played out: Sources that pollute Google and Meta campaigns and their impact How blacklisting changed the game The measurable impact of defending against fraudulent traffic Key takeaways for marketers Conclusion Source-Level Fraud in Google and META Campaigns We did a thorough analysis of the brand’s campaigns running on Google and META and here’s what we found – From META, brand received the highest Invalid Traffic (IVT) of 28.51%. From Google, brand got 8.15% IVT from various fraudulent sources. The difference in invalid traffic across platforms clearly shows that not every traffic source delivers the same quality of users. A campaign may generate high traffic numbers, but that does not always mean the visits are genuine or valuable. In some cases, a large portion of traffic can come from fraudulent or low-quality sources that never convert into real customers. For Google campaigns, the IVT percentage may appear lower compared to other platforms, but the advertising costs on these walled gardens are significantly higher. This means that even a small percentage of invalid traffic can result in substantial budget wastage and reduced campaign efficiency. To understand this better, let’s look at the major sources contributing to IVT and the direct impact they have on marketing campaigns – VPN/ Proxy Fraud: Traffic routed through VPNs or proxy networks to disguise real user identity and location. Impact: Bypasses geo-targeting and fraud filters, making fake traffic appear legitimate. Geo Fraud: Traffic coming from the geographies that were never a target at the first place. Impact: Creates a false sense of campaign success in priority markets. Behavior Fraud: Bots or automated scripts designed to mimic real user actions like fake clicks, scrolling, session duration. Impact: Inflates engagement metrics while delivering zero real intent. Device Repetition: Repeated interactions from the same device or a controlled pool of devices also called device farms. Impact: Indicates click farms or emulator-driven traffic, skewing user-level data. Pop-Under Traffic: Ads triggered in hidden or background windows without active user intent. Impact: Generates low-quality visits that look like traffic but don’t convert meaningfully. mFilterIt’s Solution: How Blacklisting Changed the Game for Leading Aggregator mFilterIt transformed campaign performance by shifting the focus from traffic volume to traffic authenticity. Through our ad fraud detection solution, brands attained real-time traffic validation and source-level analysis, identifying and blocking fraudulent or low-quality sources before they impact campaign outcomes. This enables brands to take precise actions like blacklisting, ensuring that only genuine users move through the funnel. Here’s how it changed the game – IVT Dropped by 42% in META Campaigns What began at 38% dropped down to 22% in just three months, a major 42% reduction in IVT. This was not a one-time correction; it indicates a consistent, ongoing improvement driven by focused campaign optimization. As deeper traffic validation was done and low-quality sources were identified, the system was able to filter out fraudulent sources such as geo-masking and repeated device activity. Over time, this led to cleaner inputs, better targeting decisions, and more reliable performance signals. The continuous decline also indicates that optimization efforts didn’t just remove existing fraud but actively prevented its recurrence. IVT Dropped by 8.4% in Google Performance Max Campaign Below graph highlights reduction of IVT in Google performance max campaigns by 8.4%. Invalid traffic dropped from 15.84% in September to 14.51% in November—a noticeable improvement over a short period. In Performance Max campaigns, even a single percentage point reduction matters because these campaigns operate at scale and involve higher media spends. So, while the IVT reduction is 8.4%, the real impact goes beyond that number. Less wasted spend on invalid traffic means more budget is directed toward. Campaign Performance Over Time: The Impact of Traffic Quality Optimization Once the blacklisting began, the campaign showed progress in terms of traffic quality in both Google and META campaigns. Let’s see what each denotes – Performance Improvement in META Campaigns This table highlights how campaign performance evolved over a five-month period, Initially, when all traffic sources were allowed to run freely during August, the campaign delivered 1,753 clicks and 101 conversions, resulting in a conversion rate of 5.76%. While costs were moderate, performance was held back by poor traffic quality. As shown in the image below, the conversion rate significantly improves post blacklisting. Moving into September 2025, there’s an interesting shift. Although costs increased by 23.5%, the conversion rate improved to 6.31%. This suggests that cleaning up low-quality traffic sources (likely via blacklisting or filtering) began to pay off. Even with higher spend, the campaign became more efficient because the traffic quality improved. By October 2025, performance stabilizes. Costs remain nearly flat (+0.5%), but the conversion rate climbs further to 6.64%. This indicates that earlier optimizations are holding strong, and the campaign is now reaching a more relevant audience consistently. In November, the conversion rate jumped to 7.36%. The upward trend in conversion rate from 5.76% to 7.36%; is significant. It reflects a clear improvement in traffic quality and campaign efficiency, not just increased spend or scale. Performance Improvement in Google Campaigns The data highlights a clear turning point in campaign performance before and after blacklisting was implemented. In August, the campaign struggled with high cost per conversion (519) and a low conversion rate (0.48%), indicating inefficient spend driven by poor traffic quality. The campaign improved once blacklisting was brought in action as reflected in conversion rates. Post-implementation, starting September, performance improved significantly. Cost per conversion dropped sharply from 137 in September to as low as 67 by early November while conversion rates increased from 0.48% to 2.07%. This reflects the direct impact of filtering out low-quality and fraudulent traffic, allowing the campaign to focus on more relevant users. Overall, the trend demonstrates how
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