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Is It Possible to See if Automations and Rules Were Applied to a Segment?

With the help of the Adjustment Logs, you can easily track which automations and rules have recently been applied to your segments and what changes were made.

Answer

Yes, you can see whether and how automations or rules have been applied to your segments. The Adjustment Logs provide an overview of all rules and automations that have been executed recently. This overview shows the date, the relevant country, and the number of adjustments made. By clicking Details, you can access a detailed view for each day, clearly showing all the adjustments performed. Bid adjustments and structural adjustments are displayed separately. If a rule was run but made no changes, you will see the note No adjustments. If adjustments were successfully made, the table shows which campaign was affected and which rule triggered the adjustment. If you are not happy with a change, you can undo it using the "Undo" button.

You can also use the Export logs feature to download all log entries as a file – useful for documentation or for support purposes.

Accessing the Function

You can find the Adjustment Logs in the Management section under Adjustment Logs.

Settings & Options

With the Export logs button, you can easily download the current list of logs. This is useful for archiving, for providing details to support, or for your own documentation.

Limitations & Special Notes

  • The documentation of automations and rules is based on their nightly execution, so there might be a short delay between an adjustment being made and it appearing in the log.
  • In the detail view, bid adjustments and structural changes are displayed separately.
  • The undo function is only available for a short time after execution – older entries cannot be undone and are marked accordingly.

Tips & Best Practices

  • Use the detailed view for each log entry via Details to thoroughly review all adjustments before making further changes.
  • Keep in mind the prioritization of your rules: only the highest-priority matching rule is applied.