Learn how to set up an audience holdout experiment. Marketers use these studies to measure what advertising actually changes. Instead of inferring performance from exposed users alone, an audience holdout experiment compares people who are served ads with a group that is not served the ads. The difference in tracked behavior reveals incremental impact.
The audience holdout tool works only with campaigns on the Canvas (new experience).
Audience holdout experiments rely on data from live campaigns. You can configure an experiment before a campaign starts, but data collection begins only after the campaign goes live. If you have multiple published campaigns with different flights on the Canvas, the experiment launches on the earliest flight start date and stops collecting data on the last end date.
On the next page, review the default holdout size. It's 10%. You can select a different percentage.
illumin recommends a 10% holdout because it balances delivery scale with measurement quality. A 5% holdout might work well for large or high-conversion campaigns. A 20% holdout improves measurement accuracy while removing more users from delivery, which can lower reach and reduce conversions, especially for smaller campaigns. Use larger holdouts only when measurement precision is a higher priority than scale.
Go to the Target campaigns field. The default selection is All campaigns. You can limit the experiment to a specific campaign on the Canvas (new experience). This is useful if you want to measure incrementality for a single tactic, objective, or funnel stage.
You must enable at least one Primary conversion action (e.g. purchase or lead submission). A Site engagement conversion action (e.g. a landing page visit) is optional but recommended.
The page displays conversion trackers already configured on the Journey Settings > Open Web Trackers page. You can't add trackers here because the table pulls data from the Open Web Trackers page. To edit existing trackers or create new ones, click the Edit conversion actions button. This opens the Open Web Trackers page.
If no trackers exist, the section remains blank and the experiment can't launch. Create at least one primary conversion tracker.
When you finish adding the Primary action and the optional Site engagement tracker, go to the right-hand side of the page and review the checklist. The primary conversion action item must be checked. If not, you can't enable the experiment. If you add a site engagement acton, that item must be checked here as well.
When configuration is complete, go to the bottom-right corner of the page and click the Enable experiment button. Confirm your selection in the pop-up window to start the experiment.
To review the status of the experiment, open the campaign, go to the action bar at the bottom of the Canvas, click the flask icon, and then click the gear icon. If the experiment is live and there's available data, click the View results button.
Once live, users can update conversion actions on the Open Web Trackers page.
illumin shows those changes in the audience holdout table and reporting.
There are two main reasons.
First, the experiment data has reached statistical significance.
Second, the experiment can't scale.
Campaigns with clear conversion goals and steady delivery perform best. High-volume or high-conversion campaigns reach statistical confidence faster.
No. Audience holdout experiments only work with Open Web campaigns built on the Canvas (new experience).
The experiment should run long enough to collect meaningful conversion data. Short flights or low-volume campaigns may produce inconclusive results.
Larger holdouts improve confidence but reduce reach and conversions. Smaller holdouts often work better when scale or pacing matters.
If a targeting setting changes, such as geographic scope, the experiment results lose reliability. The exposed and holdout groups no longer remain comparable, so measured lift may reflect targeting changes rather than true incremental impact. For accurate results, targeting settings should remain consistent for the full duration of the experiment.
You exclude campaigns when you want clearer, more controlled measurement. The most common reasons are listed below.
Review audience holdout results
How to interpret confidence and margin of error
How incremental site engagement is calculated