Visibility into proprietary revenue data SKU level
Increased impression share
30% increase in CTR
Successful A/B test across product titles between descriptors
About 4AllPromos
4AllPromos is an online provider of expert promotional products for business and groups, featuring tote bags, drinkware, pens, and apparel.
SKU-level reporting through Marin has quickly become a core part of our Shopping optimization strategy, allowing us to leverage call conversion tracking at the product level for the first time. Our new campaign targeting top performing SKUs consistently provides the highest ROAS of all of our efforts in this channel. Without the insights provided by SKU-level reports, creating and optimizing this campaign was a practical impossibility.
Scott
Director of Paid Ads
Working with a Timeworn Strategy
4AllPromos leveraged Google PLA and Shopping ads for years. During this time, the 4AllPromos team enlisted the advice and expertise of multiple third parties. They recently came to the realization—if they wanted to continue improving on their marketing program goal of being seen by more shoppers in the market for promotional products, they needed a fresh strategic approach.
Solution—a Focus on Products, Structure, and Data
Marin Software’s review of 4AllPromos’ shopping program focused on three key tenets: the quality of the product feed, the campaign taxonomy, and SKU-level data for future segmentation. The review resulted in several successful outcomes.
Shopping Campaign Restructure
Marin consultants suggested building out a more robust system of campaigns and product groups to maximize effectiveness of the 4AllPromos product feed. The recommendations included making use of priority settings across multiple campaigns, segmenting new product groups by category and SKU-level performance, using custom labels, and setting up a catch-all campaign. In short, Marin advised 4AllPromos to break out the single campaign into a manageable set of campaigns that could be optimized in conjunction to achieve positive results.
SKU-Level Revenue and Segmentation
By implementing SKU-level revenue tracking, Marin was able to surface products in 4AllPromos campaigns that were being triggered by non-relevant search queries and costing them a material amount of spend. Prior to Marin, this insight was out of reach due to a publisher reporting limitation. But, since Marin Software offers SKU-level call conversion reporting, identifying these products and then eliminating wasteful spend was quick and efficient. Also, SKU-level revenue data provides 4AllPromos visibility into the top performing products, allowing for seamless segmentation to create new product groups and bids based on SKU performance.
The granular level of performance and conversion data afforded by SKU-level reporting transformed what could have been a huge project into a manageable task for a single person to execute. The ease of the structural campaign changes provided more time for the real needle mover—continuing to champion the winner while pruning (or, extinguishing) the losers.
Product Feed Testing
4AllPromos leveraged SmartFeed to optimize their product feed and gain insight into how the product’s title impacted performance. One illustrative example comes from an “A/B test” using different titles in a single product group. Smartfeed was able to find winning titles that yielded CTR approximately 40-45% higher than the test titles. These learnings were then extrapolated to the rest of 4AllPromos product groups.
Results
Visibility into proprietary revenue data at most granular SKU level
Increased impression share
30% increase in CTR
Successful A/B test across product titles between descriptors
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Marketing Data Pipelines: Turning Data Into Insights
Wrangling and making sense of all your marketing data is hard. For longer than a decade, we’ve been helping companies solve some pretty complex marketing data challenges – and we’ve compiled some of the knowledge we’ve gained over the years into a handy guide. The tl;dr? It’s complicated, but with the right tools, namely a marketing data pipeline (MDP), it doesn’t have to be hard! In this guide we break it all down to help you make sense of it, including breaking down:
What an MDP is
The stages of MDP maturity
Some of the key challenges with building an MDP
How to tell if you need an MDP
How to get started
And so much more!
Check out the report to learn all about corralling your marketing data today!
We all know that Performance Max campaigns on Google Ads offer significant opportunities for growth. However, even the most experienced marketers can stumble into common pitfalls. We’re only human, after all.
I’m going to assume you know the basics, like having lots of asset variations, using audience signals, etc. For a refresher on those, check out our post on PMAX best practices. Let’s dissect some of the trickier mistakes you may not even know you’re making with your PMAX campaigns.
Mistake #1: branded search conversions inflating your data
If someone is Googling your brand name, they’re probably trying to go directly to your site. If PMAX ads are running on these terms, you’re paying for traffic that you otherwise would be getting for free. Of course, defending your position at the top of your branded SERP is important. Your competitors could be bidding aggressively on your brand terms in hopes of convincing searchers that they are the better choice. To defend your brand’s presence in the SERP, make a separate traditional search and/or shopping campaign optimized toward an impression share goal and bid on branded keywords. Then, exclude brand traffic from PMAX.
You can check the impact of brand terms on your PMAX campaign in Google Ads by going to Insights > Consumer spotlight > Search term insights. This report tells you the number of conversions and asset groups associated with each search category. If brand is one of your top search categories, you’ve got a problem.
Solution: Exclude branded traffic from your PMAX campaigns.
There are two ways to exclude brand traffic from PMAX: brand exclusions and negative keyword lists. Negative keyword lists apply to all traffic, whereas brand exclusions work only across search and shopping traffic.
To apply brand exclusions, simply navigate to your PMAX campaign’s settings. Scroll down to Brand Exclusions, then enter the name of the brand list you wish to exclude. If you haven’t created a brand list yet, you can do so right in the PMAX campaign’s settings or in the Shared Library.
To apply a negative keyword list, you have to fill out the Performance Max Campaign Modification Request Form. This form will provide you with a Google Sheet template you can use to apply negative keywords. You can also request to apply a negative keyword list that already exists in your Google account if you’ve already got one that you’re using for traditional nonbrand search campaigns.
Mistake #2: relying on Google Ads conversion data
Don’t trust the conversion and revenue data Google Ads provides. Google Ads conversions are ‘estimated’ because data privacy laws prevent the ad-serving platform from using third-party cookies to accurately track users across the web.
Solution: Implement a solution that tracks every conversion touchpoint in your funnel.
Choosing one that uses first-party cookies like Google Analytics or Marin Attribution will ensure that there are no tracking gaps after third-party cookie deprecation.
Google Analytics is the most common choice, but marketers far and wide are having issues with the new Google Analytics 4 (GA4). Common complaints include data discrepancies, a poor API, and an overly complex, unintuitive UI. To quote Reddit user NewAccountPlsRespond, “Why does creating an insanely straightforward and simple report involve having 5 dimensions, 3 audiences, and numerous inputs? Like holy hell. And don't get me started on the API”.
GA4 may get the job done, but try an independent solution like Marin Attribution if you’re looking for something more user-friendly. Marin Attribution tracks conversions and revenue across all marketing channels and lets you choose the attribution model that best fits your business. All your conversions are displayed side by side in a straightforward UI.
Regardless of which tracking solution you choose, ensure that your tracking codes are placed correctly on every page of your website where a conversion could occur. Then, make sure that data is being fed back into your Google Ads account via the API. Review your PMAX campaign’s settings to ensure that its conversion goals reference that first-party data.
Mistake #3: Leaving “auto-apply recommendations” on
Sometimes, Google’s recommendations seem to be more about increasing revenue for Google than actually optimizing your campaigns. While some of their recommendations are helpful, auto-applying all recommendations is never the right move. I wrote another post about the importance of using publisher-independent platforms for things like tracking and recommendations, and you can check that out here for more details. In summary - did your teacher let you grade your own homework? No? Then why would you trust Google to auto-optimize your Google campaigns?
It’s critical that you understand how, when, and why changes are happening in your account. Sure, you can review Google’s recommendations and apply any that align with your goals, but there will likely be many recommendations that you choose to dismiss.
Solution: Turn off auto-applied recommendations
Navigate to the ‘Recommendations’ page and click ‘Auto-apply’ in the upper right corner. Then click ‘Maintain Your Ads’. Here you’ll find a checklist of all the different types of changes Google can auto-apply to your campaigns. I recommend unchecking all of them. You’ll still see them in the Recommendations tab, and you can manually apply them if you see fit. Here’s a step by step video guide that will help.
Mistake #4: ‘Presence or Interest’ location targeting
PMAX location targeting defaults to ‘presence or interest’ meaning it will serve ads not only to people in your target locations but to those ‘interested’ in those locations too. ‘Interested’ users are usually people who plan to travel to your target location soon. It can be good to target travelers if you’re in the hospitality or entertainment industry, but if you’re a dentist, for example, people probably won’t make an appointment at your office while they’re on vacation.
Solution: Switch your location targeting settings to ‘Presence’
This will only target people who live in or regularly visit your target locations. You can do this under campaign settings > location options.
Mistake #5: Leaving URL Expansion on
URL Expansion is on by default for PMAX campaigns. This means that your PMAX campaigns will send users to whatever landing page on your site Google deems most relevant to the search term, NOT your final URL. This sounds good in theory - searchers are sent to the most relevant LPs possible. But you don’t want to be paying for ads that send traffic to an LP with no call to action!
Solution: Opt out of final URL expansion or exclude URLs
In campaign settings, under ‘Final URL Expansion,’ you’ll find two options:
Your first option is to leave final URL expansion on but exclude certain URLs. You can either list out URLs to exclude or use a ‘URL contains’ rule to exclude URLs that contain certain text strings. This option may be the best of both worlds if the majority of your site’s landing pages are paid search optimized and feature CTAs.
Your second option is to turn off URL expansion entirely. Choose this option if you have only one LP you want to send paid search traffic to.
Can you trust Google?
PMAX was sold to paid search marketers as a sort of set-it-and-forget-it, self-optimizing campaign type. I don’t know about you, but I don’t let the house set my bets for me when I gamble. Similarly, I’m not going to let Google spend my money for me.
A lot of the pitfalls I described above occur due to Google auto-applying optimizations in an illusive way. If you want straightforward, publisher-agnostic help improving your cross-channel campaigns' performance, Marin’s Insights can help.
Insights are customized, cross-channel recommendations designed to improve campaign performance. Powered by AI, they will uncover opportunities to reduce wasteful spending and maximize performance across all your publisher accounts. Schedule a demo today to learn more.
EasyGo increases conversions from Apple Search Ads by 42% with Marin
EasyGo, headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, is a pioneer in the online gaming industry. They develop high-quality, engaging games and have quickly become one of Australia’s fastest-growing companies. Their marketing team leverages Apple Search Ads (ASA) to reach users actively searching for gaming apps on the App Store, ensuring they capture high-intent users at the moment of interest.