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For example, if a customer searched for a specific color or motif of cloth and clicked on a specific picture in Google Shopping, it might be a good idea to preselect this variant on the landing page, without the customer having to select the right variant again.
4.
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Typically your Google Shopping campaigns will be optimized based on target ROAS.
While this is a good start, the ROAS typically only considers the generated revenue.
In addition, other aspects could be used to influence the ROAS optimization:
Achieved Margin: not only the margin of the advertised products but the real margin generated
Customer Acquisition: the expected lifetime value of acquired customers (to which degree are products good at acquiring new customers versus getting existing customers again through a repetitively paid channel? And how much does the first product(s) this new customer buys indicate their future purchase potential?)
Promotion: strategic products which you want to promote
Zombie: products (products that have had no clicks recently in Google Shopping are likely to be demoted and simply circling them through another campaign can have a positive effect on their promotions) (as recommended by Google Best Practice: Targeting Low Volume SKUs)
%Sales Availability: Current variants availability according to their sales contribution (a product like a running shoe might be in stock only in sizes 10% of your customer's order, while this makes the product out-of-stock for most customers it would still be considered as active and in-stock by your systems and bring paid traffic)
Out: while Google Shopping avoids to some extent bidding on non-performing products, it is relevant to explicitly exclude segments of your products that are not possible to promote in a profitable way
Segmenting your products in different campaigns based on these performance factors allows you to set different target ROAS for each campaign and then go beyond the limitation of the simple ROAS optimization which only considers your revenue and nothing else.
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Concrete steps:
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5. Correct your Conversion Value
While segmenting your products in several performance campaigns (see point 4) is a good start, it is also interesting to modify the Conversion Value which is used by Google Ads to define your ROAS.
Indeed, while the definition of the cost is quite clear, the definition of the conversion value is not that simple and cost and conversion value are the only two components of the ROAS (e.g.: selling a product for 500.- for which you get only 1% margin is not the same value for your business as selling a product for 300.- on which you get 10%).
Therefore, returns and cancellations are often not considered, but they should be.
We can correct the conversion value if the order was canceled, or returned, or if another event reduced the revenue value for you.
We can use another metric than the revenue, like for example the margin, as the definition of the conversion value.
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Concrete steps:
Define a corrected value for a conversion based on the effective ERP margin or revenue (canceled value should be 0.- , returned article should lower the value accordingly, etc.)
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Corrected value for a conversion based on the effective ERP margin or revenue (canceled value should be 0.- , returned article should lower the value accordingly, etc.)
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Target your Google Ads with Audiences
Boxalino offers 3 out of the box Google Ads Audiences which you can use for your campaign and we can add many others upon request:
Customers who bought during the last year but not during the last month
25% percentile (top quartile) of customers with the best customer lifetime value (CLV) to promote
25% percentile (bottom quartile) of customers with the worst customer lifetime value to demote
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Check out the business impact of this measure for Lehner-Versand without solution! (article from our partner DEPT with whom we collaborated on this project) |
5. Create Google Shopping Performance Campaigns
Typically your Google Shopping campaigns will be optimized based on target ROAS.
While this is a good start, the ROAS typically only considers the generated revenue.
In addition, other aspects could be used to influence the ROAS optimization:
Achieved Margin: not only the margin of the advertised products but the real margin generated
Customer Acquisition: the expected lifetime value of acquired customers (to which degree are products good at acquiring new customers versus getting existing customers again through a repetitively paid channel? And how much does the first product(s) this new customer buys indicate their future purchase potential?)
Promotion: strategic products which you want to promote
Zombie: products (products that have had no clicks recently in Google Shopping are likely to be demoted and simply circling them through another campaign can have a positive effect on their promotions) (as recommended by Google Best Practice: Targeting Low Volume SKUs)
%Sales Availability: Current variants availability according to their sales contribution (a product like a running shoe might be in stock only in sizes 10% of your customer's order, while this makes the product out-of-stock for most customers it would still be considered as active and in-stock by your systems and bring paid traffic)
Out: while Google Shopping avoids to some extent bidding on non-performing products, it is relevant to explicitly exclude segments of your products that are not possible to promote in a profitable way
Segmenting your products in different campaigns based on these performance factors allows you to set different target ROAS for each campaign and then go beyond the limitation of the simple ROAS optimization which only considers your revenue and nothing else.
Tip |
---|
Concrete steps:
|
6. Correct your Conversion Value
While segmenting your products in several performance campaigns (see point 4) is a good start, it is also interesting to modify the Conversion Value which is used by Google Ads to define your ROAS.
Indeed, while the definition of the cost is quite clear, the definition of the conversion value is not that simple and cost and conversion value are the only two components of the ROAS (e.g.: selling a product for 500.- for which you get only 1% margin is not the same value for your business as selling a product for 300.- on which you get 10%).
Therefore, returns and cancellations are often not considered, but they should be.
We can correct the conversion value if the order was canceled, or returned, or if another event reduced the revenue value for you.
Tip |
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Tip |
Concrete steps:
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6. Extend your Conversion Value
We can add additional values when a new customer is acquired and an even higher value when the new customer is expected to have a high future customer lifetime value based on the first product(s) bought.
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Additionally we can use another metric then the revenue, like for example the margin of the transaction, as the definition of the conversion value. This gives you the following advantages:
More accurate bids for optimizing the profit.
Margin labels per product are a good start but will not work if the customers buys another item then he clicked in the Ads.
Profit tracking is the natural progression of revenue and ROAS tracking.
By optimizing directly the profit you don't need to guess what changes in ROAS/Revenue will lead to increased profitability.
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Concrete steps:
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7. Extend your Conversion Value
We can add additional values when a new customer is acquired and an even higher value when the new customer is expected to have a high future customer lifetime value e.g. based on the first product(s) bought. There are two ways to adjust the conversion value. Either directly modify it when sending the Google Ads event or adjust it by uploading the extended value with the order identifier at a later point.
Use Case:
Additional value for new customers based on their predicted CLV.
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Online Concrete steps:
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Offline Concrete steps:
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7. Target your Google Ads with Audiences
Boxalino offers 3 out of the box Google Ads Audiences which you can use for your campaign and we can add many others upon request:
...
Customers who bought during the last year but not during the last month
...
25% percentile (top quartile) of customers with the best customer lifetime value (CLV) to promote
...
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8. Extend your Search Ads Keywords
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