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.
Speaker:Now, before we jump into it, let me tell you, be like me, put your phone in Do Not
Speaker:Disturb before you hit the record button.
Speaker:We are gonna let you know about the newsletter.
Speaker:Now, the newsletter is an awesome piece of kit.
Speaker:If you've not already subscribed, why not?
Speaker:If you're a regular to the show, uh, you should be subscribed.
Speaker:If you're new to the show, check it out, just go to ecommercepodcast.
Speaker:net, sign up to the newsletter because each week, all of the tips, the
Speaker:strategies, the notes, the transcripts, they all come straight to your inbox.
Speaker:Don't even have to lift a finger, it's awesome.
Speaker:Now, this show is brought to you by the eCommerce Cohort.
Speaker:The eCommerce Cohort, if you don't know, is our monthly membership group where you
Speaker:get access to some amazing, uh, workshops around the topic of eCommerce from amazing
Speaker:people all over the world, many of whom.
Speaker:Have been amazing guests on this show, so do go check them out, uh, this week
Speaker:we've got Claire Daniels, uh, this week, this month, next month, November, coming
Speaker:up, we've got Claire Daniels, uh, doing her workshop, which I'm super excited
Speaker:about, all about marketing, so you're not going to want to miss that, she was
Speaker:a great guest, so do come check that out.
Speaker:Prices start from just 14.
Speaker:99 a month.
Speaker:It's pretty low really.
Speaker:Uh, so yeah, come and check it out.
Speaker:eCommerce Cohort dot, that's eCommerce Cohort dot com.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That's the show sponsor.
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.