Ready to up your Google Ads game in the eCommerce world? Tune in as we dive deep with digital advertising expert Kristians Sikora, exploring everything from Performance Max campaigns to conversion tracking secrets. Whether you're a seasoned pro or just starting out, this episode is packed with actionable tips to skyrocket your online success!
Join host Matt Edmundson and guest Kristians Sikora from Aime Media as they unravel the complexities of Google Ads in eCommerce. Learn about customer acquisition strategies, the dos and don'ts of conversion tracking, and how to balance different advertising approaches for optimal results. Plus, get a glimpse into the global dynamics of digital advertising and pick up insider tips from a seasoned expert!
Key Takeaways:
Well hello and welcome to The eCommerce Podcast with me,
Speaker:your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:Sorry about that.
Speaker:My voice went a little bit hoarse at the start, but welcome to the show.
Speaker:Hopefully it's going to carry on working.
Speaker:That's bizarre.
Speaker:This is working all right a minute ago.
Speaker:Anyway, this podcast is all about helping you deliver eCommerce well.
Speaker:And to help us do just that, we're chatting with today's guest,
Speaker:Kristians Sikora from Aime Media about maximizing Google Ads.
Speaker:Performance Max and Customer Acquisition Strategies.
Speaker:I mean, that's a heck of a topic, isn't it?
Speaker:And so we're gonna get into all of that, just turning my phone off.
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Speaker:Let's talk about Christians, an eCommerce wizard with a golden Google ads touch.
Speaker:Love that.
Speaker:Turning eight figure budgets into success stories across the glove from
Speaker:boosting numerous under the radar brands
Speaker:to cofounding an agency that's rocked over 20 million 20 million in ad spend,
Speaker:ah be nice to have 20 million to spend on ads in a lot of ways, wouldn't it uh
Speaker:he's mastering, google now Kristians',
Speaker:not just a strategist he's the go to guy for making.
Speaker:ecommerce magic happen.
Speaker:Kristians great to have you on the show.
Speaker:Loving your bio, man.
Speaker:The go to guy for making eCommerce magic happened.
Speaker:No pressure there, then.
Speaker:Um, yeah, that's probably the, the touch of one of my, uh, partners at the agency.
Speaker:So he loves, he loves talking me up, but, uh, yeah, um, that, that puts
Speaker:some, uh, some pressure, honestly.
Speaker:It does a little bit.
Speaker:It's always, it's always exciting to be the go to guy or, or to make, make
Speaker:the strategy to, to build up that strategy and, and actually see it work.
Speaker:It's uh, really frustrating or, or nervous at the beginning, but, but uh,
Speaker:yeah, uh, apparently it has paid off.
Speaker:very good.
Speaker:Well, you know, it's, it sounds like it's paid off, which is, which is awesome.
Speaker:I actually think your bio was rewritten by Sadaf.
Speaker:Uh, is what tends to happen.
Speaker:So you send your bio in and Sadaf normally goes, yeah, I'm just
Speaker:going to jazz that up a little bit.
Speaker:Uh, cause she just does that with every single guest on all our podcasts.
Speaker:Um, and nine times out of 10, the guest sits there listening to me
Speaker:reading the bio going, I didn't write that, but it sounds really good.
Speaker:I'll take it.
Speaker:And so the amount of requests we get for people from guests to say,
Speaker:could you just send us that bio?
Speaker:So then it appears on their LinkedIn or whatever
Speaker:is quite
Speaker:actually, that would be nice.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:So whereabouts in the world are you, sir?
Speaker:So, um, yeah, I'm in Latvia.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:been, yeah, basing mostly, mostly here.
Speaker:Um, and then, uh, yeah, we're, we're kind of doing our stuff all over the world.
Speaker:So, uh, one of our partners is also in Latvia, other one is, uh, He's a nomad,
Speaker:you know, traveling around, spent some time in Amsterdam, uh, now he's in Lisbon.
Speaker:So it's always interesting, uh, how our, uh, kind of work together goes as well.
Speaker:But yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm here in, uh, Latvia,
Speaker:It's interesting, isn't it?
Speaker:Now, because the way the internet is and the way the world is, it doesn't
Speaker:really matter where you're from, uh, is the, is a genuine response.
Speaker:It's like, actually, um, we have partners in, uh, Hungary.
Speaker:We have partners in, um, trying to think,
Speaker:do we have any in that?
Speaker:No, we have, um, Well, we got partners in most of those old Baltic nations,
Speaker:you know, and I, and I, and it, and it's wonderful because I really, one,
Speaker:it's just always nice to connect with people from different cultures who
Speaker:always interpret the world in a very different way to what I do, which is
Speaker:always quite helpful, I feel, um, because my worldview can be quite limited.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:But also, it's just really interesting how the world is a much smaller place, and
Speaker:you know, you're based in Latvia, I'm in Liverpool right now, we're recording this
Speaker:over the web like we're next door to each other, uh, and it's the most remarkable
Speaker:thing, and um, I, I just love that.
Speaker:I love the fact that you've got a partner that's a digital nomad,
Speaker:because, you know, if you're that phase of life, why would you not do that?
Speaker:Go and enjoy yourself a little bit, you know?
Speaker:Um, and it's, it's, it's one of the, the more wonderful sides
Speaker:of technology, uh, I find.
Speaker:So how did,
Speaker:Like everything is just that, that much closer and so much,
Speaker:yeah, that much reachable.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:as long as you got a fast internet connection, the world is now at your
Speaker:feet, isn't it, really, in a lot of ways.
Speaker:Um, so you're, you're in Latvia, you've got this agency, how long
Speaker:have you been doing Google Ads?
Speaker:Uh, yeah, so I started with Google ads basically four, four
Speaker:years ago, a bit less, uh, it was pretty sudden to be honest.
Speaker:I was just asked that this company I was working for, um, yeah, I
Speaker:was a general marketing or junior marketing specialist basically.
Speaker:Um, and they asked me like, do I do, do I, do I know Google ads?
Speaker:I was like, yeah, sure I do.
Speaker:I started jumping on calls, uh, learning everything I could about it.
Speaker:Um, and six months later, it already felt like I'm kind of, you know,
Speaker:in my, in my comfort zone with, uh, and I actually found the thing that
Speaker:I didn't know I was looking for.
Speaker:Um, and then gradually starting with, with.
Speaker:That company then further moving to an e comm agency and then deciding
Speaker:with, uh, actually my friends to start our own, our own agency.
Speaker:So yeah, really these past three, four years have been, uh, have
Speaker:moved really, really quickly.
Speaker:as they do, because years in digital industries tend to be, we, I don't know
Speaker:if you have the same thing in Latvia, in the UK we have things called dog years.
Speaker:And a year, and we call it a dog, it's like, apparently one dog year is like
Speaker:seven normal years or something like that, you know, and it's kind of like,
Speaker:um, and so I think that applies to the digital sphere, doesn't it really?
Speaker:It's like one year in the digital world is, is the equivalent of seven
Speaker:years outside it sort of thing.
Speaker:And so if you've been involved with it for four years, that's actually
Speaker:quite a long time, which is why I often refer to myself as a dinosaur.
Speaker:Because I've been involved with website design since the late
Speaker:nineties and I've been an eCommerce since the early noughties, 2002 was
Speaker:my first eCom, so, so, hence the reason I'm a bit, bit of a dinosaur,
Speaker:Kristians, but, um, but that's okay,
Speaker:I mean, they'll actually, I never thought about it that way, but that
Speaker:actually sounds, sounds really true.
Speaker:Cause for me, the, the four years feel really, really long.
Speaker:Like I, I basically know, know half of the stuff or, or, or not most of
Speaker:the stuff about Google ads, but then there are guys like who are doing
Speaker:this for 10, 15, 20 years, basically.
Speaker:And I just can't imagine the knowledge that they have and the,
Speaker:yeah, how they feel about this.
Speaker:Yeah, but it's interesting, isn't it?
Speaker:Because, uh, you see, I knew a lot about Google Ads, say, ten years ago when we
Speaker:did it in house in our eCom businesses.
Speaker:But the reality of it is Google ads 10 years ago are very, very
Speaker:different to Google ads right now.
Speaker:And actually some of my old thinking is unhelpful because I'm tethered
Speaker:to a way a system used to be rather than the way the system actually is.
Speaker:And Google, uh, Google is one of those companies that is constantly
Speaker:reinventing everything, isn't it?
Speaker:And constantly changing the rules.
Speaker:So how do you stay on top of it all?
Speaker:How do you keep, keep up to date?
Speaker:You know, what, what are some of the tips and tricks you've got for, for
Speaker:making sure you know what's going on?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:you can be a part of, uh, that actually cause, uh, cause something
Speaker:that they are great value.
Speaker:But the best value I think you can get is actually from podcasts and LinkedIn.
Speaker:There are hundreds, hundreds of.
Speaker:Really awesome Google media buyers that are posting amazing value on LinkedIn.
Speaker:Uh, both here in like Europe, uh, in, in, um, in UK as well.
Speaker:A lot, I know like three guys that I'm following myself, uh, us as well.
Speaker:Um, yeah, we try to do that as well.
Speaker:Kind of give free value, uh, tips, recommendations,
Speaker:anything that can actually.
Speaker:Kind of the thinking now around Google is that Google is trying
Speaker:to maybe push and take your money.
Speaker:So the, the, the easiest value can, becomes, uh, the things that you can
Speaker:do to actually save your money and, and leverage it in the most efficient way.
Speaker:So um, Yeah, just, just following people on LinkedIn, reading their basically
Speaker:daily, daily, uh, content is an amazing way to learn and up your game.
Speaker:Uh, even if you're just at the very beginning, because the, the tips range
Speaker:from, yeah, the most basic stuff to some really high level stuff, but
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:that's, that's the best way, uh, yeah, place to get, get the value.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:get that.
Speaker:Totally true.
Speaker:Um, LinkedIn is a gold mine of information in a lot of ways.
Speaker:Um, to be fair, part of me was expecting you to say Twitter, or
Speaker:X as it's now called, isn't it?
Speaker:It's not called Twitter anymore.
Speaker:I must stop that.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, do you do the Twitter thing or not really?
Speaker:Just LinkedIn?
Speaker:I actually wanted to, yeah, kind of follow, follow that up with, uh,
Speaker:yeah, the, the The Twitter topic is we did actually, or I did actually
Speaker:find value there previously, but then it just got too crowded for me.
Speaker:So I actually find that, uh, LinkedIn with the longer form posts, um, kind
Speaker:of makes it, I don't know, more, more easily digestible for my brand at least.
Speaker:Um, and, uh, yeah, maybe Twitter is a bit too crowded or X is a bit too crowded.
Speaker:Yeah, there's a lot of noise, isn't there?
Speaker:Yeah, that's the problem, isn't it?
Speaker:It's like, how do you find the people that you definitely want to hit
Speaker:and sort of filter out the noise?
Speaker:There's a lot of noise, I think, on social media, uh, which is, is, is,
Speaker:you know, again, makes me sound a little bit old, doesn't it, I suppose.
Speaker:Um, so here you are in Google, what are some of the things that we then
Speaker:should be thinking about right now as eCommerce entrepreneurs, entrepreneurs,
Speaker:uh, you know, um, I totally lost the ability to speak for a minute, but,
Speaker:uh, you know, as business owners, as entrepreneurs, people running eCommerce
Speaker:websites, what are some of the things that we should be thinking about, um,
Speaker:where Google ads is concerned right now?
Speaker:probably say if you're an eCommerce brand running, uh, Google ads, the first
Speaker:place you have to kind of think about and look is, or actually I would say two
Speaker:most important pitfalls that I've seen over the accounts, um, is the conversion
Speaker:tracking, uh, itself and, and then.
Speaker:A lot of people tend to rely on PMAX too much, um, so I would say that's kind of
Speaker:maybe a worrying part, actually, because it can get out, out of hand, especially
Speaker:with, uh, faulty conversion tracking.
Speaker:So, yeah, I think I'll probably try to address the points one by one.
Speaker:Yeah, let's dig into those because, uh, well, let's start with conversion
Speaker:tracking first and foremost.
Speaker:Well, let's not assume that everybody knows what that means.
Speaker:Um, what do you mean by conversion tracking and then let's dig into
Speaker:why we're not getting this right.
Speaker:yeah, so, um, essentially the easiest example that I've
Speaker:found people understand is.
Speaker:It's the Facebook pixel, but for Google.
Speaker:So, um, it's the tracking code or the tracking parameters that you
Speaker:install in your website that help.
Speaker:You understand and Google understand how many of those clicks resulted in sales
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:what were the You know amount of amount of the purchases and also really important
Speaker:if you want to do remarketing so dynamic marketing Filter out your existing
Speaker:customers from new customers Separate that so you don't overbid on existing
Speaker:customers and what we see and I think a big issue is that One, people try to do
Speaker:it themselves or two, people try to do it with Google support, but even there, kind
Speaker:of recommendations and steps differ from each other and usually they don't check
Speaker:whether everything's installed correctly.
Speaker:So what usually tends to happen is that you have multiple purchase conversions.
Speaker:Uh, conversion actions running as primary at the same time, meaning that one sale
Speaker:will be counted as two, three, four sales, giving false data to the algorithm.
Speaker:Uh, then also having, you know, add to cart, page view, even phone calls as
Speaker:primary conversion, uh, kind of goals.
Speaker:So that means whenever someone That's basically kind of what I think is
Speaker:giving Google the signal that a phone call or a page view is just
Speaker:as important as a purchase to your
Speaker:hmm.
Speaker:Mm hmm.
Speaker:brand, which is what you don't want to do.
Speaker:So it also gets tricky because then if you don't know your conversion
Speaker:tracking, you might go to your kind of campaigns to see the performance
Speaker:and see, oh, I'm doing like 20x ROAS while it's actually being counted.
Speaker:The conversion value of a page view or add to cart, not the purchase itself.
Speaker:So that's how you can really, really lose your way.
Speaker:Like right at the beginning, as you start running Google ads is just seeing
Speaker:one number on Google, thinking it's true while you're not seeing the same thing.
Speaker:On your, on your, yeah.
Speaker:In your bank account basically.
Speaker:Mm-Hmm.
Speaker:Which to be honest with you, I mean, it comes up time and time again
Speaker:and I think it comes up time and time again because the problem in
Speaker:a lot of ways is still not solved.
Speaker:Um, there is always a discrepancy between what Google tells you, um, and
Speaker:what you think is true based on the numbers that you see on your website.
Speaker:And so, trying to get more and more accurate data becomes this
Speaker:sort of The, the, the sort of the, the holy grail, doesn't it?
Speaker:That we sort of almost chase after is like, how do we get perfect attribution?
Speaker:Um, how do we get perfect numbers out of Google?
Speaker:I, I still don't know if there's an answer, but some of the things that
Speaker:you said strike me as quite interesting that actually we can inadvertently
Speaker:set up the, the tracking, um, the conversion tracking on the Google site
Speaker:in, in a way that's maybe not helpful.
Speaker:Um, so how?
Speaker:Is this something you see a lot of people doing?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, yeah, a lot actually.
Speaker:I think.
Speaker:Um, and just disclaimer, I don't know how to do conversion tracking myself.
Speaker:That's my, my colleague, my partner, partner at our agency.
Speaker:He's the one who's master conversion tracking.
Speaker:Um, and it's really, uh, kinda.
Speaker:a specific thing to, to master.
Speaker:So one is like Google ad strategy and one is conversion tracking on itself.
Speaker:um, that's why I can understand why people get it wrong.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, sorry, I forgot the initial question.
Speaker:Yeah, no problem.
Speaker:I'm curious if people, if you see a lot of people making this mistake, and I think a
Speaker:lot of people, a lot of people listening will be going, it's
Speaker:interesting what you've just said.
Speaker:What are some of the things?
Speaker:I mean, I appreciate your, your, your partner does it, um, hopefully
Speaker:you've picked up one or two things, but what are some of the
Speaker:things that we should be aware of?
Speaker:How can we check it ourselves?
Speaker:Um, how, how do, how do we know if we've got conversion tracking wrong?
Speaker:Okay, yeah.
Speaker:Uh, so actually out of all of the audits I've done this year, um,
Speaker:I think only two accounts had the conversion tracking correctly.
Speaker:Uh, the best way to ensure that you have set it up correctly is
Speaker:to, uh, using Google Tag Manager.
Speaker:Uh, that's the, probably the most accurate data you can, you'll be able to get.
Speaker:But, uh, the first, yes, thing you can do to check it is just go
Speaker:under settings, under conversions.
Speaker:And if you have More than one action basically set as primary, then something's
Speaker:probably not being counted right, or it's being counted multiple times.
Speaker:So, under the first tab or first table that is, you're seeing
Speaker:purchase actions, you should only have One action set as primary.
Speaker:And that should probably be, uh, connected with server side tracking
Speaker:or like direct website tracking.
Speaker:Um, and then if you move, uh, further in the settings tab, then you'll,
Speaker:you'll should see only All of the remaining actions are secondary.
Speaker:So add to cart, secondary action, not being counted into, uh, the
Speaker:overall accounts, performance, page views, leads, directions.
Speaker:If you have those as well, everything should be set as secondary.
Speaker:I would probably, if you're an eCommerce brand, delete the kind of
Speaker:phone calls and, and lead any, any.
Speaker:Lead related conversion actions from the account.
Speaker:So leave, uh, add to cart, leave page view as secondary actions.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, then just have the best, yeah, the best ways to
Speaker:check if you have only one primary conversion action, which is purchase.
Speaker:Um, yeah, I would say there are steps or there are strategies where you can,
Speaker:can maybe trick your ad account if it's completely fairly new, where you are
Speaker:using An add to cart action as a primary one, but, uh, yeah, for the majority
Speaker:of cases, I would say just leave it for purchase primary conversion and, and
Speaker:that should be kind of the first maybe step to success with conversion tracking.
Speaker:And I actually liked what you said before, that it is this kinda
Speaker:topic that no one knows if we.
Speaker:So like I said, I don't know how many of you ever will get it right.
Speaker:Even now the cookie of Google is not able to track all of the conversions.
Speaker:So there's still discrepancy of what Google is showing
Speaker:hmm, mm
Speaker:what the actual kind of impact of Google Ads is to your business.
Speaker:Usually, I've seen, if you're using apps like TripleWhale or Nordbean, which
Speaker:are third party attribution tools is where you can see more accurate data
Speaker:and Using those apps, you can actually see that there's usually a 20 40 percent
Speaker:discrepancy from what you're seeing on Google and what you're actually getting.
Speaker:So, you're actually getting much better performance than what
Speaker:Google is showing you with kind of the conversion tracking there.
Speaker:Um, and, and it is Yeah, I can't even say how important it is to get it right,
Speaker:because Google is essentially a smart bidding, it's the smartest algorithm for
Speaker:any paid channel, and if you feed it bad data, your outcome is going to be bad as
Speaker:well, so it relies on that data, it relies on the quality of that data, so that's
Speaker:kind of the I really the foundation of everything because once you start reading
Speaker:it that one sale is actually worth four sales Then it will start thinking that
Speaker:you know I can bid more to get that one sale and then then you find yourself in
Speaker:the situation where you're where you're Yeah, metrics are just in the ground.
Speaker:yeah, no, very, very good, uh, key information there, and so go away and
Speaker:check your It's interesting actually, one of the things that, um, I do, uh,
Speaker:Kristians, when I go And see clients.
Speaker:So I do a, you know, I do a bit of e-comm coaching, um, with, with people
Speaker:and I, it's something I quite enjoy.
Speaker:One of the questions that I like to ask clients whenever I sit down with 'em
Speaker:for the first time is I ask them, what's the primary purpose of your website?
Speaker:Uh, and, and, and everyone looks at you like you, you're talking crazy talk
Speaker:because it's like, what, what, what do you mean that it's an eCommerce site?
Speaker:And I'm like, yes, but is the primary purpose of your website to sell product?
Speaker:Yes or no?
Speaker:Mmm.
Speaker:Um, because the amount of eCommerce websites who will say that,
Speaker:but actually the rest of their site is not geared towards that
Speaker:is quite extraordinary, right?
Speaker:And so, but we agree 99 percent of the time for most eCommerce
Speaker:websites, the primary purpose of that website is to sell stuff, okay?
Speaker:So we write that on the, on the board, you know, primary purpose to sell stuff.
Speaker:And this ties in with what you're telling Google really, your primary conversion
Speaker:tracking is obviously is a purchase.
Speaker:Interestingly that Google want you to put in secondary, because one of the
Speaker:questions that I follow up with is what's the secondary purpose of your website?
Speaker:Um, and it's one of the questions I've been asking for years and it
Speaker:throws people because it's like, well, I just want to sell stuff.
Speaker:And I'm like, yeah, but what happens to the people that come to your website
Speaker:that don't want to buy your stuff?
Speaker:They're not ready for whatever reason to buy the stuff.
Speaker:If you exist just to sell them stuff, if that's your primary purpose,
Speaker:how are you engaging with them?
Speaker:And I think that all comes down to your secondary purpose.
Speaker:And for me, Again, not true necessarily all of the time, but for
Speaker:most eCommerce websites, most of the time, the secondary purpose of that
Speaker:website is to get the email addresses of highly relevant traffic, right?
Speaker:So using lead magnets, freebies, whatever mechanism, you know, makes
Speaker:sense for your site and for your brand.
Speaker:The key aim has got to be to get the email address of the person
Speaker:that's come to your website and then put them into some kind of email
Speaker:sequence or funnel that eventually will hopefully lead to a purchase.
Speaker:You build a relationship with them over time.
Speaker:Um, so if you can't get the sale, can you get the email address?
Speaker:Yes or no.
Speaker:Um, and it's a, it's a remarkable, it's very simplistic way of
Speaker:thinking about your website, right?
Speaker:But if they're your two primary, if your primary is purchase, your
Speaker:secondary is to get the email address.
Speaker:Um, it changes, I think, quite a bit how you do your website and it
Speaker:changes quite a bit how you, how you do Google, I think, Google Shopping.
Speaker:And what's fascinating to me in this conversation is that actually if you
Speaker:set, if I've heard you right, setting the secondary purpose on Google as
Speaker:lead generation or getting someone's email address is not something
Speaker:that you would necessarily advise.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Yeah, because, um, yeah, really email for Google doesn't tie
Speaker:in with, with, uh, purchases.
Speaker:Uh, if you want to do like lead gen phone calls, uh And then try to get that
Speaker:email address, those would be, yeah, for lead gen kind of accounts and lead
Speaker:gen businesses or, yeah, B2B basically.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:That's kind of, yeah, for Google lead gen or phone calls, that's
Speaker:tied with the campaigns that are.
Speaker:Already created towards Legion as well.
Speaker:So, um, and I'm second saying, yeah, secondary action.
Speaker:'cause basically you don't have, uh, more options to choose from.
Speaker:So it's either primary and it's getting used as the, uh, you know,
Speaker:nor Northern Star for your account.
Speaker:And, and you know, it's counting the conversion value or secondary,
Speaker:which is basically you can, yeah, you can observe the, uh.
Speaker:Kind of values that are going through those actions like add to carts and
Speaker:and see maybe how I took how many add to carts like Google God versus the
Speaker:percentage of purchases it got so but that's yeah the the yeah as a secondary
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, fair enough.
Speaker:Fair enough.
Speaker:Fascinating.
Speaker:So the, the second, so the first thing you said was conversion tracking,
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:and then the second thing you said was relying on max too much.
Speaker:yeah on on on performance max cuz yeah, it's basically I think the the Google
Speaker:Media buyers around the world are either You know, move away from PMAX completely
Speaker:or have PMAX in your account still.
Speaker:Um, I've seen accounts where PMAX has done, you know, great things.
Speaker:Uh, but there are far more many accounts where I've seen it
Speaker:drain your, it drain your money.
Speaker:Um, especially when it goes to that, you know, plus 10, 20, 30k a month.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:PMAX can do a fairly good job on shopping and search campaigns, even if
Speaker:there's a little bit of a brand in it.
Speaker:But once you try to scale it past a certain point where it If you cannot
Speaker:meet the demand with, with, you know, shopping and search, then it
Speaker:just starts cannibalizing your own, uh, other paid media, uh, channels.
Speaker:So either you're also organic traffic or the traffic that would have
Speaker:gotten to your site and made the purchase from meta ads or, or TikTok.
Speaker:And yeah, PMAX just kind of swoops in, takes, uh, says, thank you for the sale.
Speaker:I'm gonna, I'm gonna accredit to myself for, um, yeah, showing, I don't know,
Speaker:a display ad maybe, or, or a video ad that doesn't have a click on it,
Speaker:but because of engaged view, uh, yeah, it will say thank you for the sale.
Speaker:This, this one is all, all Google.
Speaker:Um, and that's why you probably see oftentimes, like, crazy
Speaker:On, on your p max campaigns.
Speaker:One thing is that you, you have a lot of branded terms there, which should
Speaker:have gone to your brand search or maybe even your organic, uh, listings
Speaker:or rankings, and then it's just, or, or attributing, uh, or cannibalizing
Speaker:on, on your other traffic channels.
Speaker:So, um, there's really, because PMAX is such a black box,
Speaker:it's, it's difficult to tell.
Speaker:Where you are getting these sales, but that's why it's important to look at
Speaker:your overall kind of business numbers and look at your marketing efficiency ratio.
Speaker:Maybe try to pinpoint that moment in time when when you started scaling PMAX.
Speaker:And look whether your revenue actually grew with that PMAX because Google
Speaker:will show that, you know, you, you started running PMAX from, I don't
Speaker:know, 200 a day to 1, 000 a day.
Speaker:It will show you're still keeping up with 4x, 5x ROAS, but then you
Speaker:look at your backend numbers and see that nothing actually changed.
Speaker:that's when, when, when you have those first signals that you have
Speaker:to look deeper into it, um, because Google might be just stealing.
Speaker:Your, your Facebook or meta traffic or, or your organic traffic and
Speaker:kind of wanting you to spend more on Google, showing you great numbers,
Speaker:but, but you are actually just, yeah.
Speaker:Losing money on those sales.
Speaker:'cause you would've gotten them for, for free most of the time.
Speaker:So, or, uh.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:For, for better cost.
Speaker:So how do we mitigate that?
Speaker:Um, yeah, so first thing, probably if you're running a high scale or even
Speaker:some sort of PMAX campaign, it doesn't mean that it's necessarily true for you.
Speaker:You have to, you have to do your own research, basically look at your, all of
Speaker:your channels, look at your, uh, yeah.
Speaker:M.
Speaker:E.
Speaker:R.
Speaker:or Media Efficiency Ratio, see whether that really might be the case, look
Speaker:at like insights within PMAX, how much is branded in there, how many
Speaker:conversions are you getting from your shopping campaigns, so those you can
Speaker:find under listing groups and products.
Speaker:Uh, yeah.
Speaker:And, um, and see whether that might be true for you.
Speaker:If you have a, yeah, if you have a feeling that it might be the case, start
Speaker:lowering your PMAX spends and see whether that affects affects your top line.
Speaker:Um, if it does, then yeah, then maybe PMAX is actually doing something good
Speaker:for you and you can explore it kind of.
Speaker:Cuz we're pushing more into it.
Speaker:But what most of the times we see is that with decreasing or even shutting
Speaker:PMAX off completely, the top line doesn't really change that much, so, and that
Speaker:can be actually gonna managed much more efficiently with using the, you know, good
Speaker:ol reliable standard shopping campaigns.
Speaker:If you are an eCom brand, that's probably the best way for you to grow actually.
Speaker:Past that, that certain point that actually PMAX could, so PMAX
Speaker:basically becomes a problem at scale.
Speaker:Fascinating.
Speaker:Fascinating.
Speaker:So actually the old standard, I like what you called it, the standard shopping
Speaker:campaign, uh, is actually still, should still be part of your, uh, arsenal, um,
Speaker:your, your strategy, even in the, in the light of things like performance
Speaker:max and, and all the sort of the new fangled things that are coming forward.
Speaker:because it just gives you much more control.
Speaker:You actually have control over those, those search terms.
Speaker:I know Google is pushing out a lot of new features for, for PMAX as well,
Speaker:but it's still Not that manageable.
Speaker:It still feels like a black box.
Speaker:Um, so, and you can still start or leverage your kind of the smart
Speaker:bidding algorithm for standard shopping as well, because that's
Speaker:kind of one of the best strategies.
Speaker:Moving forward is not using manual CPC with standard shopping, but actually use a
Speaker:TROAS strategy with standard shopping and
Speaker:Christians, just that there's a lot of terminology there, and I'm aware
Speaker:that people listening to No, no, no, I'm aware that we have different
Speaker:people listening to the show and some people just starting out.
Speaker:Some people like me maybe have been around a little while.
Speaker:So just explain some of the different terminology that you've
Speaker:used and then let's dig into it.
Speaker:So one of probably the yeah The the most used strategies with standard shopping
Speaker:previously was using manual CPC or manual cost per click where you Tell Google how
Speaker:much you are willing to pay for For that click and it will find you sales, uh, or
Speaker:not sales clicks, set you in into bidding actions where you will, you know, not pay
Speaker:more than that click, uh, that, that bid.
Speaker:Um, so it's, it's more of a manual setup and, uh, it doesn't really maybe take
Speaker:into account how, um, Purchase intent that click is, if that makes sense, like
Speaker:how warm that user might be to actually wanting to purchase or whether that's
Speaker:someone who's just, you know, Googling, uh, random products, trying to learn more
Speaker:about them or, or find images or whatever.
Speaker:Uh, so now the idea is actually to leverage that smart bidding.
Speaker:Algorithm that Google has that, you know why it's so important actually to,
Speaker:uh, give all of your best data to it?
Speaker:'cause it can make this decisions on showing the ads, shopping ads, uh, to
Speaker:people who are more likely to convert.
Speaker:Basically, those who have.
Speaker:Showing a history in Google's opinion that, yeah, they might buy something.
Speaker:So you leverage that and move to a target ROAS strategy where you
Speaker:basically already, it's essential for you to know your cost as well.
Speaker:It will not work in a way where you set up 4X or 400 percent target ROAS
Speaker:and, you know, a thousand euro a day.
Speaker:Add spend and you'll suddenly make, start making, uh, yeah, 40, 000 a day.
Speaker:Uh, yeah, Google will probably tell you that it's, uh, that they, it
Speaker:is not able to spend your, your money at that, at that space.
Speaker:But where it does become helpful is knowing your numbers and knowing that
Speaker:Google will probably under attribute the conversion value, the sales.
Speaker:Uh, that it can get its hands on.
Speaker:Um, and so you, let's say you, you know, that a 2X ROAS works for you.
Speaker:You know, there's like a 20, 25 percent discrepancy from what Google is showing
Speaker:you to what you're actually seeing, uh, in the back end, in your top line.
Speaker:And then adjusting that.
Speaker:So let's say running your standard shopping at 150%, so 1.
Speaker:5X ROAS, but you know, that, you know, 2X ROAS would suffice for you
Speaker:and you know, In real life, that 1.
Speaker:5 on Google is actually closer to two or about two extra hours
Speaker:in, in, yeah, in real life.
Speaker:Um, and that's where you can start kind of playing with, uh, with, with those
Speaker:smart bidding algorithms and strategies.
Speaker:So, uh, I know cases where people are actually spending.
Speaker:You know, five, four or five figures a day on, on shopping
Speaker:with a target draw as goal of 0.
Speaker:5 or 50 percent basically.
Speaker:And still that is, that is profitable for them.
Speaker:And that's actually scaling the brand, the account, not just Google
Speaker:wise, but the brand itself as well, because it just gives that.
Speaker:You know, visibility around the shopping network, it puts you first place.
Speaker:It lets you, uh, compete in the bidding actions with your competitors.
Speaker:Plus it's, it's kinda saying Google that I still need to make, you know,
Speaker:I still need to find those, I still need for you to find those people
Speaker:that are more likely to convert as opposed to throwing the ad to everyone.
Speaker:So probably Google is gonna adjust its bids then to bid
Speaker:a bit more on people that.
Speaker:Have shown, you know, uh, uh, purchase history previously and bid less to
Speaker:someone that might not, might, might not result, um, in a conversion.
Speaker:So that's kind of one of the, I would say, most popular kind of advanced strategies
Speaker:going around there, um, is, is actually, uh, giving Google the opportunity to
Speaker:use smart bidding and, and knowing your numbers, still limiting it in a way
Speaker:Um, yeah, but kind of trying to make the most of it and, and, and actually
Speaker:having control over it, adding your negative keywords, um, uh, all the time.
Speaker:And, um, yeah, working your way kind of from there.
Speaker:The smart bidding strategy that you just talked about, which
Speaker:makes a lot of sense in my head.
Speaker:I mean, and it's nice that technology is getting to a place where you can look
Speaker:at the numbers and go, right, actually guys, what I'm after is I'm after a row.
Speaker:If we can hit this.
Speaker:target ROAS number the return on ad spend in other words for every dollar
Speaker:that I spend on advertising every pound I spend on advertising with you I need
Speaker:to generate two pounds or two dollars in revenue that would be a two times ROAS
Speaker:very oversimplified but in essence that's what we're saying and so we're saying
Speaker:right Um, the product that I'm selling, in effect, if I hit a two times ROAS, I
Speaker:know I'm breaking even on the first sale.
Speaker:If you're sending me people with good buyers intent, I'm okay because
Speaker:they'll buy from you a second time, a third time or whatever the strategy
Speaker:is that you, you know, you've set.
Speaker:Um, and so now we're getting to a stage where we can tell Google, actually,
Speaker:this is a kind cause before, like you say, you'd manually have to do it.
Speaker:Are we, are we near my ROAS numbers?
Speaker:Yes or no.
Speaker:Turn that one off, switch that one, you know, ramp that one up kind of a thing.
Speaker:Um, and so we, we would spend hours doing that really, wouldn't you?
Speaker:In Google AdWords.
Speaker:Now it's all this sort of smart.
Speaker:And I like how you can tell Google and Google all that, well, let's
Speaker:increase the bids then to get those types of people to your website.
Speaker:You said something which was a bit of a throwaway comment that
Speaker:I want to sort of come back to.
Speaker:Um, about therefore sharing the data with Google.
Speaker:What did you mean by that?
Speaker:So, uh, yeah, again, it comes down to conversion tracking and, and.
Speaker:Give me Google the best data.
Speaker:So one is obviously the data that's coming from Google, but
Speaker:also uploading your customer list.
Speaker:So if, for example, you have, you know, uh, an epic history in, in Facebook
Speaker:ads in, uh, or customers that I've come, sorry, from meta ads, from other
Speaker:channels, and you're just starting off with Google or Google has been the smaller
Speaker:player in your whole kind of media mix.
Speaker:Uploading your customer lists might help the algorithm as well.
Speaker:So one, it can be used for.
Speaker:Exclusions.
Speaker:So, you know, Google knows that these X amount of customers
Speaker:have already bought from you.
Speaker:Google just doesn't know about it.
Speaker:So you can start mix, uh, yeah, matching them and excluding them.
Speaker:Your type of funnel campaigns.
Speaker:Um, and then I do feel like that also, if you give Google enough data, that also.
Speaker:Helps the algorithm to kinda look for, for what it should target, kinda
Speaker:giving, giving the history and um, but yeah, it mostly is tied to the
Speaker:data that you're feeding Google.
Speaker:So again, don't give it the idea that one purchase is worth three purchases.
Speaker:If you have three conversion primary conversion actions running at the
Speaker:same, so yeah, that's just make sure you're your conversion tracking because
Speaker:everything else goes from there.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:So if you, uh, um, I mean, there's a, there's a lot there, Kristians.
Speaker:Thank you for, for your, uh, insight on it.
Speaker:I'm really curious by it.
Speaker:There's a lot there to think about.
Speaker:I mean, in some respects, what you've talked about is, I like it because
Speaker:it's quite straightforward and simple.
Speaker:It's not, you know, convoluted, which is quite helpful.
Speaker:Um, but it makes the assumption that you've got existing data.
Speaker:What happens if you are just starting out, uh, you start in an eCommerce business?
Speaker:How does your strategy for Google ads then change?
Speaker:I'm new to Google ads.
Speaker:I've got a new business.
Speaker:I've not really got any sales data of any history of any kind.
Speaker:I'm selling a widget.
Speaker:I know Google ads is going to be part of that campaign.
Speaker:What's the best place to sort of start with something like that?
Speaker:um, I actually found from my experience that Google should be an add on channel
Speaker:sometime further down the line, not the channel that you actually start with.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Yeah, there obviously are some exclusions to that, but generally
Speaker:for eCommerce, I found that being the case that usually Meta and, and, and,
Speaker:uh, yeah, Meta is the primary one.
Speaker:And even when we have gotten our accounts up to a scale, usually
Speaker:the split is still like 30, where Meta is the biggest spender.
Speaker:Um, and just, if you're starting out, I would probably.
Speaker:Say, give your marketing spend to Meta first and then, uh, start kind of
Speaker:integrating Google in the picture as well.
Speaker:Um, and if you do start with a completely fresh account.
Speaker:Then I would say, uh, yeah, run the standard shopping campaign.
Speaker:First go with manual CPC because you don't have the data to start running
Speaker:a target role as, or leveraging any smart bidding strategies.
Speaker:Uh, Do create a brand search campaign as well, uh, I'm not a fan of them or I'm
Speaker:not a fan of them at scale because, uh, I think that's a big, uh, big pain point
Speaker:for, for Google as well and other agencies or other freelancers running Google ads
Speaker:is telling you that your brand search is basically your Google ads and your
Speaker:return on brand search is your Google ads, but for a fresh account to start
Speaker:running a brand search campaign, it's, it can be Get you those first conversions
Speaker:in those first kind of data points in so, uh, it's a slow process, but It will
Speaker:will help yet So just give Google some sort of an idea of how your customer
Speaker:looks like even if they came in through a branded search Campaign, but the first
Speaker:campaign is probably standard shopping manual CPC and Yeah That's probably
Speaker:the first part of running a campaign.
Speaker:Even before running a campaign, there's probably tons to do with
Speaker:your product feed optimization within your Google Merchant Center account,
Speaker:so that's another beast completely.
Speaker:But that's probably just as important as conversion tracking
Speaker:before you start running anything.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I mean, uh, the shopping feed optimization is something that we seem,
Speaker:we seem to be constantly tweaking.
Speaker:Uh, with our, with our stuff on Google.
Speaker:I'm intrigued though, why you would say if you're new, if you're, if
Speaker:you're established, um, I liked what you said, then your meta Google split
Speaker:should be around 60, 40, maybe 70, 30.
Speaker:Um, I'm curious as to why, if you're starting out, you would focus
Speaker:the majority, if not all of that budget onto something like meta.
Speaker:Why not Google straight away?
Speaker:Um, yeah, even though Google Is search intent based and even with
Speaker:shopping campaigns, you, you get to put your product out there with,
Speaker:uh, with all of the competitors.
Speaker:So you can, you know, they can compare the prices, they can compare, uh, reviews,
Speaker:images, like how the product looks itself before they make a decision to click.
Speaker:But there's probably been already some sort of, um, kind of awareness
Speaker:generated, like for that product itself.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And when someone goes looking for a product, they see, you know, your brand
Speaker:and brand A and brand B, it might be the case that they click on a competitor just
Speaker:because they've seen them on Facebook and they have some sort of already
Speaker:brand recognition with them because Yeah, you're still, you're still fresh,
Speaker:you're still new, you're showing up there, but they just don't know you,
Speaker:and they might have seen, you know, one or two Facebook ads from a competitor,
Speaker:so that's where the click goes as well.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's probably where Google and Facebook really ties together, is that
Speaker:Facebook is amazing for Brand awareness, visibility, and just building that kind
Speaker:of trust already with the product itself.
Speaker:So, um, yeah, in most cases, uh, Google success is really
Speaker:tied into, uh, Facebook success.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's interesting.
Speaker:Well, I, it's quite an interesting viewpoint.
Speaker:I wonder, I've heard before actually, um, and certainly the balance of ad spend.
Speaker:I've, we've talked a lot about that in the past, but I think, um, it's interesting.
Speaker:If you are starting out, Meta over Google is, is a probably a good place to start.
Speaker:What do you think dear listener?
Speaker:Agree or disagree?
Speaker:I'm curious to know.
Speaker:Right, Christians, listen, I've totally enjoyed the conversation, man.
Speaker:Lots of notes, as always, and but I'm also aware of time.
Speaker:So I probably should bring this to a close.
Speaker:If people want to reach out to you, if they want to connect with you,
Speaker:what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:Um, yeah, you can connect with me on LinkedIn.
Speaker:Uh, I'm posting there a lot.
Speaker:Even if you just want to follow for the content, I'm trying to do
Speaker:more, more, more posts, uh, lately.
Speaker:Um, yeah, you can connect.
Speaker:I don't know if, uh, they probably see my name somewhere so they can
Speaker:find me on LinkedIn or go to imamedia.
Speaker:com, uh, And yeah, you can, you should find a Calendly button there
Speaker:to, to jump on a call with us.
Speaker:Yeah, we, we even, uh, we know that kinda getting, getting, uh, starting to work
Speaker:with an agency is a tough commitment.
Speaker:It's a tough decision.
Speaker:So even if you just want to have a free audit, uh, we do that as well.
Speaker:Uh, recommendations, everything.
Speaker:You know, no strings attached.
Speaker:So that's how we, we really want to give value first, uh, to anyone out there.
Speaker:Cause there's really a lot of ways for you to lose money on Google
Speaker:and, and not do the right thing.
Speaker:Uh, so we just, yeah, our priority is to, to make everyone happy.
Speaker:And if it leads to something, yeah, then yeah.
Speaker:Uh, but yeah, probably I would say LinkedIn then, uh, probably
Speaker:that was a longer answer that.
Speaker:No, she
Speaker:That's fine, find
Speaker:but, uh,
Speaker:we will of course link to your LinkedIn profile in the show notes.
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:Right, so that's, that's, yeah.
Speaker:Go
Speaker:we'll put those in the show notes.
Speaker:So if you're listening on a podcast, just go to the show notes on the
Speaker:app, you'll find the link there.
Speaker:If you're watching on YouTube, we'll put the link in the description.
Speaker:And, of course, if you've signed up to the newsletter, it'll just be in
Speaker:the email, just click the link in the email, it's very, very simple.
Speaker:Uh, but that's aimemedia.
Speaker:com, I pronounced it wrong, so it's not Aimee, it's Aimee, A I M E media.
Speaker:Yeah, so there are different ways to pronounce it.
Speaker:We honestly haven't settled on a one way, uh, ourselves.
Speaker:We just keep changing.
Speaker:I have a company called Aurion, A U R I O N.
Speaker:Um, and that's actually the, you know, the, the group, the
Speaker:company's group is Aurion.
Speaker:Everything comes under Aurion.
Speaker:And the amount of times you, I, you know, people will say
Speaker:it's Matt from Orion, Orion.
Speaker:I just, it's just, no one knows how to pronounce it.
Speaker:I don't even know if I'm pronouncing it right, so I'm with you.
Speaker:You know, I just call it Aurion.
Speaker:I just sound really confident.
Speaker:But of course, we will have all of that, like I say, in the show notes.
Speaker:Listen, Kristians, thank you so much for coming on to the show, man.
Speaker:Genuinely love the conversation.
Speaker:Really, really appreciate it, and I hope, I hope you have a tremendous
Speaker:success with your agency and with what you're doing with ads.
Speaker:I'll follow you on LinkedIn, I'm gonna learn a lot, no doubt, but yeah,
Speaker:thanks man, really appreciate it.
Speaker:Pleasure being here, Matt.
Speaker:Uh, yeah.
Speaker:Uh, amazing, amazing, uh, podcast experience.
Speaker:That's good, wow, that's always helpful,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:keeps people coming back.
Speaker:What a great conversation, huge thanks again to Kristians for joining me
Speaker:today, also big shout out to today's show sponsor, the incredible eCommerce
Speaker:Cohort, I appreciate, incredible I'm involved, hence it's incredible.
Speaker:Sounds a bit arrogant.
Speaker:Anyway, uh, but remember to check them out at ecommercecohort.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's the group, the membership, the mastermind, whatever you want to call it.
Speaker:We're all in there every month.
Speaker:Come join us.
Speaker:Be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your
Speaker:podcasts from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up.
Speaker:I don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first.
Speaker:You are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:Christians has to bear it.
Speaker:I've got to bear it.
Speaker:You've got to bear it as well.
Speaker:Now, the eCommerce Podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is.
Speaker:The Wonderful, Beautiful and Talented Sadaf Beynon, and Equally
Speaker:Beautiful, Talented Tanya Hutzalak.
Speaker:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if you'd
Speaker:like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the website eCommercePodcast.
Speaker:net, where incidentally you can sign up for the newsletter, which I've
Speaker:mentioned if you haven't done so already.
Speaker:So that's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Kristians.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.
Speaker:Bye for now.