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Google Ads - Difference Between PMax Feed Only and Smart Shopping Campaigns Weekly Google Ads Live Q&A -

Missed the Live Q&A Session? Catch Kasim and John every Friday at 1 PM PST as they answer everything you want to know about Google Ads, especially on Performance Max campaigns - strategies, secrets, guides, and so much more! See you next week! đź’š

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For now, you can watch the replay where Kasim and John share the differences between PMax Feed Only campaigns and Smart Shopping campaigns, how to prepare for Black Friday & Cyber Monday, their thoughts on the new PMax update regarding “Automatically created assets”, and so much more!


0:00 Weekly LIVE Q&A To Scale Your Business through Google Ads - Oct 7

2:50 ​If you’re going to do lead gen for real estate investors, would you do PPC (no pmax) or YouTube?

7:33 ​Is there some kind of synergy if you were to run PPC and YT ads for the same lead gen?

11:21 Differences between PMax Feed Only and Smart Shopping campaigns

14:41 Preparing for Black Friday & Cyber Monday campaigns with Performance Max

23:40 Are negative keywords coming to Performance Max campaigns?

31:37 Automatically created assets in PMax

40:55 Are there any other tools for tracking that should be used or is the Shopify Google API enough?

45:12 Do you have a preference for conversion tracking - adding the codes to the site or importing from an Analytics source?

53:43 Click bots and fake traffic cost online advertisers billions of dollars every year


Related videos:

đź’¸ Click Bots and Fake Traffic Cost Online Advertisers $35 Billion a Year: https://youtu.be/G2xZWVEmvko

đź›’ Ways to Increase Average Order Value (AOV) Part 1: https://youtu.be/EU-ZyipA318



This ULTIMATE GUIDE gives you EVERYTHING you need to know about how to set up, build and optimize your Google Ads Performance Max campaigns: https://sol8.com/performance-max/


🦾🦿 The Ultimate Guide to Google Ads Performance Max for 2022 (Part 1-3): https://youtu.be/oXoFn7dUvL8

https://youtu.be/_mOv9_qrtpg

https://youtu.be/syadgcDVntU


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The only guide you’ll ever need for Google Ads for YouTube:

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Transcript
JOHN:

Awesome.

JOHN:

Matt.

JOHN:

So if I add an audience list, website visitor list.

JOHN:

Hey, thank you, . If I add an audience list, website visitor list to feed only.

JOHN:

Will it dynamically remarket?

JOHN:

So the answer is yes, it will use it as a hard target, but the expansion

JOHN:

opportunity will take over from there.

JOHN:

It will take over as expansion opportunity.

JOHN:

So what this means you've added it as a heart target and I burned

JOHN:

through with that audience.

JOHN:

Now it's going to cold traffic esque.

JOHN:

That audience signal.

JOHN:

What that means is it's going to essentially say, Okay, I've

JOHN:

looked at this as a remarketing.

JOHN:

Once it goes through the remarking though, it doesn't just stop there.

JOHN:

It doesn't just say, Okay, now I marketed, and the campaign

JOHN:

just kind of goes dormant.

JOHN:

or, What it does is it uses six channels to go try to find people that

JOHN:

look like that and may succeed and.

JOHN:

you can use it, as an asset a signal in an asset group.

JOHN:

So yes, it will target those people.

JOHN:

But just know that once it burns that audience, it will go completely

JOHN:

cold and will not tell you if that audience that is retargeting or.

JOHN:

Track as an audience to go after and now is decay and it's got way more

JOHN:

impressions and clicks from other areas and it's gonna dive into that.

JOHN:

So just know that that is something that will happen regardless.

JOHN:

So what Pax essentially does is, let's say search.

JOHN:

Dropping YouTube vsb discovery display, finding an audience, and that's the

JOHN:

audience signal that you give it.

JOHN:

It bursts with that one.

JOHN:

It says, Okay, now I'm gonna help all of a sudden spike YouTube

JOHN:

and try to find more people.

JOHN:

That's why all of a sudden you're wondering why like the YouTube view go

JOHN:

from like 2000 to 78,000 in two days because the area that it was finding

JOHN:

those users has decayed and now it needs to go and generate its own audience.

JOHN:

So just know that that's something that will happen.

JOHN:

If you do decide to do that fairly safe, if you added it as a signal inside and

JOHN:

as group along with other as groups.

JOHN:

So this way, if that one decays and burns out.

JOHN:

And you have other campaigns or other assets and signals that are

JOHN:

asset groups of signals that are performing well, you'll just see less

JOHN:

clicks going to that asset and you can turn it off if you'd like to.

JOHN:

Alfred, if you guys were going to do lead gen for real state investors let's see.

JOHN:

Julian's helping me out when the cost's gone.

JOHN:

Cool.

JOHN:

I don't know if Julian doesn't actually become the hosted, but will do it for

JOHN:

me, but right now I think it's locked.

JOHN:

I can't click on anything.

JOHN:

So hopefully that'll work.

JOHN:

, Hopefully we'll be able to highlight all of your chats soon after Julian leaves.

JOHN:

So Julian, if you wanna hop off, let me know.

JOHN:

And I'll see if this works.

JOHN:

. If you were good for real estate investors, would you

JOHN:

do PPC to PAX or YouTube?

JOHN:

I would absolutely do YouTube and then inbound search, actually.

JOHN:

Inbound search, you can still define to an extent the intent, if you're

JOHN:

looking at people who are looking to property in a specific area, that

JOHN:

is something that can be very good.

JOHN:

You can turn on a nationwide campaign, but then also use geographical city names

JOHN:

as a keyword and use exact or phrase.

JOHN:

I'm in your Nashville, Tennessee, and I might run a nationwide campaign

JOHN:

or campaign targeting let's, they like New York, California, some

JOHN:

places having kind of a mass exo.

JOHN:

That might be something that I'd look to track.

JOHN:

So I can bid fairly low CPCs.

JOHN:

I'd probably run it, manually so I can control my position.

JOHN:

But if I would run, let's say, $3 CPCs for people looking for investment

JOHN:

properties in Nashville, Hey, I was trying to do my best doing this

JOHN:

by myself, so I'm glad you're here.

JOHN:

answer your question, if we were gonna do a lead generation for

JOHN:

real estate investors, would you do people cino, pax, or YouTube?

JOHN:

I said inbound search and YouTube.

JOHN:

And one of the reasons why inbound search, I run an nationwide campaign manual, low

JOHN:

CPCs, bid low, and then bid a exactor phrase match on geographical locations.

JOHN:

So I was saying I'm in here in Nashville, Tennessee right now, and if I was

JOHN:

gonna be doing this for Nashville, I'd look at, New York, California areas

JOHN:

that have a high amount of exodus of.

JOHN:

areas that are having some either problems, taxes, whatever, may prompt

JOHN:

them to move or want to invest into different areas that are more up and

JOHN:

coming run a phrase match for investment properties in Nashville I can capture

JOHN:

those people that are nationwide looking in Nashville, go outside.

JOHN:

It's much less competitive because now you're, wide reaching is gonna

JOHN:

keep you in a lot less competitive ecosystem than in the location.

JOHN:

So I'd run that first, and then I'd also run YouTube, but also at a very slow burn.

JOHN:

YouTube is gonna be, More of a brand awareness.

JOHN:

I would actually want to high locations.

JOHN:

So don't just be like the whole United States.

JOHN:

Do it either by city, by city, or do it by state.

JOHN:

By state.

JOHN:

Maybe even say, Hey, where am I actually finding pockets of opportunity.

JOHN:

Make sure that your call to action is very easy.

JOHN:

to jump over that hoop that they have to jump through is very simple.

JOHN:

Don't a lot of like a contact form to talk to an investment

JOHN:

specialist today for YouTube.

JOHN:

YouTube would be like, get access to the list of properties we.

JOHN:

Perfect.

JOHN:

That demand is gonna say investment properties in Nashville.

JOHN:

They can execute on that, and you can follow up with them as you wish.

JOHN:

But also on YouTube, if you're saying like, Hey, we have a

JOHN:

ton of properties here in.

JOHN:

In Nashville, we're adding 10 new investment opportunities.

JOHN:

We're updating it frequently to get access to this exclusive list for free.

JOHN:

Write your inbox and update it daily.

JOHN:

Just, click this, click this link and fill out the information and

JOHN:

we'll put you right on the list of, highly accredited investors.

JOHN:

People like you, whatever it may be.

JOHN:

Make sure that it's an easy hoop to jump through.

JOHN:

Don't ask for merit 0.2 frequencies on average to capture a actual conversion.

JOHN:

So make sure that it's low hanging enough that if they see two YouTube

JOHN:

ads, they're gonna take an action.

JOHN:

Is there some kind of synergy if you were to run PPC and YouTube

JOHN:

ads for the same lead gen sort of.

JOHN:

So most often what you're gonna have is more overlap with a brand name rather than

JOHN:

kind of the typical cold traffic keyword.

JOHN:

I'll use an example.

JOHN:

If you're gonna be doing real estate investors, and you were

JOHN:

saying, you have kind of a, tagline that you're always using like,

JOHN:

Golden Properties in Nashville.

JOHN:

You might have people that are like typing in Golden Properties in Nashville, but

JOHN:

you're buy nashville properties.com.

JOHN:

You're going to have more people that are gonna be googling your brand name

JOHN:

than those cold traffic keywords because they're like, Oh yeah, I remember there

JOHN:

was people that do actually can buy these like golden properties in Nashville,

JOHN:

like that's gonna stick with them.

JOHN:

Whatever sticks with them is what they're gonna Google.

JOHN:

What I would make a good habit to do, Just run a brand campaign and a DSA

JOHN:

campaign, an observation setting of the people that watch your YouTube ad.

JOHN:

So watch the YouTube video as an ad.

JOHN:

That's an audience you can create and overlay that in an

JOHN:

observation in your brand campaign.

JOHN:

Second, run a DSA campaign to your entire website by targeting, The people who

JOHN:

saw your YouTube video as an ad Haynes one is gonna observe the people that

JOHN:

saw your ad Google the brand name, and the other one is only gonna target the

JOHN:

people that saw your YouTube video.

JOHN:

Then Google the cold traffic keyword that matched anything on your website.

JOHN:

Bam.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Okay.

JOHN:

I see Dave asked last week, John indicated that if standard shopping

JOHN:

was producing okay results, consider running feed only Pax alongside

JOHN:

it as PAX does more remarketing and standard more cold outbound.

JOHN:

Does it apply to restricted categories as well?

JOHN:

running standard ETA and some DSA and looking for ways to

JOHN:

increase retargeting, thinking of putting 15 to 20% into pmax feet.

JOHN:

. So if you're already, let's just see in your restricted categories, it

JOHN:

depends on the restricted category.

JOHN:

but here's what's interesting.

JOHN:

If you're running eta change those RSA immediately, you're gonna

JOHN:

get 'em just a better ad rank.

JOHN:

And Google's already ignoring ETA's.

JOHN:

So if you're still running ETA's, absolutely.

JOHN:

Switch that over.

JOHN:

I've seen like.

JOHN:

40% increase in lethal from changing over an ET as a standard operating

JOHN:

procedure regardless, just do that.

JOHN:

But if you're looking for ways to increase retargeting, yes,

JOHN:

I would run, I would do this.

JOHN:

I'd run a feed only PAX campaign.

JOHN:

If you have a previous smart chopping campaign, upgrade that to a PAX campaign

JOHN:

that actually works a lot better.

JOHN:

Than just a standard PAX campaign that's doing feed only.

JOHN:

So launch a standard shopping campaign that has been converted

JOHN:

to a PAX or convert an old one.

JOHN:

Doesn't matter which one, as long as it has some sort of activity in it.

JOHN:

Once you convert that into a Performance Max campaign,

JOHN:

then strip all the assets out.

JOHN:

And if you can't strip all the assets out, which means if it's like.

JOHN:

The lease is required.

JOHN:

Build a new asset group, elite deal and asset group.

JOHN:

That's actually truly a feed only.

JOHN:

Turn your expansion off and then use a T rose or TCPA where your standard shopping

JOHN:

may not have it, or at least one that's higher than your standard shopping.

JOHN:

That will actually help you do a little bit more remarketing, and then it'll

JOHN:

see if the search categories will start to give you some cold traffic as well.

JOHN:

John Rolo.

JOHN:

John asks if you've been asked this before, feel free to skip.

JOHN:

What are the differences between Pex feed only and smart shopping campaigns?

JOHN:

Or standard shopping campaigns?

JOHN:

Does feed only re.

JOHN:

All right.

JOHN:

Standard shopping campaigns are now shopping campaigns and search campaigns.

JOHN:

There's no such thing as just shopping only campaigns anymore.

JOHN:

Google forces you to be on the search network as well.

JOHN:

That is click to the website and you got one of them.

JOHN:

Then they're gone.

JOHN:

Meaning if you don't have something to remark them, that

JOHN:

campaign will not remarket.

JOHN:

So that's what standard shopping does.

JOHN:

inbound, click direct Response one, and done a feed only campaign.

JOHN:

and a smart shopping campaign are exactly the same.

JOHN:

If a smart shopping campaign, if feed only campaign are exactly the same.

JOHN:

If you take a smart shopping campaign, upgrade it, then strip out all the assets

JOHN:

by either removing them from the asset group, and if you can't, some can't.

JOHN:

You have to add a new asset group with nothing in it.

JOHN:

Then delete the old ass group, then turn off your expansion.

JOHN:

That much turns it back into smart shopping campaign New.

JOHN:

Performance max feed only that has not been upgraded from a standard,

JOHN:

a smart shopping campaign, you're running an inbound search on DSA

JOHN:

and shopping at the same time.

JOHN:

And if you have your expansion turn on is basically a wide open

JOHN:

entire website DSA campaign, the shopping campaign in one that.

JOHN:

Dynamically remarket not only its own traffic, but everything

JOHN:

else that you're driving to your site, including social traffic.

JOHN:

So that's the differences between those.

JOHN:

You can't turn a PAX Feed only campaign into a smart shopping campaign.

JOHN:

You can only have a smart shopping campaign that was upgraded and that

JOHN:

you keep as a smart shopping campaign.

JOHN:

Yeah, by only using zero assets.

JOHN:

No.

JOHN:

Your expansion . Do you think Google will stop feed only Pax

JOHN:

kind of defeats the purpose of Pax?

JOHN:

No.

JOHN:

I don't honestly think it will.

JOHN:

The only way that it would do that is if you couldn't develop a new

JOHN:

asset group without any assets in it.

JOHN:

Google did have that in the beginning.

JOHN:

Then they got rid of that.

JOHN:

They allowed you to actually create an asset group without.

JOHN:

Having any assets in it.

JOHN:

the only way you can actually upload an asset group with nothing

JOHN:

in it was be a Google Ads editor.

JOHN:

And then Google Ads was like, Oh, actually you can start now a, a NASA

JOHN:

group without any sort of assets in.

JOHN:

So they gave us the ability to run a feed only, which I thought was really

JOHN:

weird cuz I would thought the same thing.

JOHN:

It kind of should be called the opposite direction.

JOHN:

I think they're doing this also because topic safetys are

JOHN:

gonna get a little bit haywire.

JOHN:

So I think they're just trying to give us all the available

JOHN:

opportunities for us to utilize.

JOHN:

But that's a little, a little tinfoil hat type of thinking there for me.

JOHN:

Any updates?

JOHN:

Any updated thoughts on preparing for Black Friday cyber money

JOHN:

with free max campaigns?

JOHN:

Yeah, I would actually prepare instead of would actually not do that.

JOHN:

, Yes.

JOHN:

Don't do anything.

JOHN:

actually, , I would use other opportunities for this, I would

JOHN:

look at YouTube and discovery.

JOHN:

So I say do this for Black Fridays every Monday now, but just know that

JOHN:

discovery with feed only, not feed only, I guess, but discovery with a feed,

JOHN:

which turns into kind of like feed only.

JOHN:

Discovery is now a thing that is actually going to support your Pax campaigns

JOHN:

alongside with YouTube warming up traffic.

JOHN:

My opinion would be to warm up traffic.

JOHN:

Use a title card on your discovery with feeds, Send 'em to landing pages that

JOHN:

are more affixed to being, building that hype with new products that

JOHN:

are gonna be released soon with the prices coming down, yada, yada, yada.

JOHN:

Maybe join a newsletter on that, landing page that you're sending

JOHN:

that discovery feed with the, with the card to those pages.

JOHN:

But my opinion would be to not necessarily.

JOHN:

Do much to your Performance Max campaign.

JOHN:

Unless you wanted to a, remove your tcpr t ro as get a little bit more

JOHN:

aggressive in your spending, you're gonna start warming up that traffic

JOHN:

that's gonna have a low rows first because it might take 2, 3, 4 weeks for

JOHN:

them to convert or maybe that they're waiting for Black Friday, Summer Monday.

JOHN:

So don't just throw out all the future and warming that traffic up, but get a

JOHN:

little more aggressive, warming it up.

JOHN:

You can change your asset groups headlines.

JOHN:

That is actually something.

JOHN:

I have not really seen to be detrimental unless you're

JOHN:

running a low spend campaign.

JOHN:

So when you're spending like, two, three, $500 a day you can actually change your

JOHN:

headlines with are fairly minimal loss.

JOHN:

Google's best practice set.

JOHN:

Start a new performance map Friday, seven Monday products.

JOHN:

But not only until the sale but that's only when the sale goes live.

JOHN:

I disagree.

JOHN:

I think that's too long to warm up a brand new PEX campaign.

JOHN:

I'd rather just change my current.

JOHN:

I mean, your headlines and your descriptions are not going to be

JOHN:

damning enough to really tank anything.

JOHN:

But waiting two, three weeks for a new PMAX campaign show the conversions in

JOHN:

the attribution model, like data driven for them to actually be included in

JOHN:

that campaign is gonna take some time.

JOHN:

Meaning that if you have campaign A, that it's reduced

JOHN:

in campaign B, they get start.

JOHN:

There's still the same users, so you're getting half the conversions

JOHN:

in a row as it looks terrible.

JOHN:

It's not scaling as fast unless you wanna switch everything to

JOHN:

last click and then switch it back.

JOHN:

It's just.

JOHN:

Headaches.

JOHN:

So my opinion would be to change your current Pmax asset groups

JOHN:

fills, or at least like coming soon.

JOHN:

But it depends on if you're gonna be sending traffic to a new page

JOHN:

that you built, or if you're just trying to warm them up, Start to

JOHN:

spend more without a TCP a T raw.

JOHN:

Let the campaign learn on some newer traffic.

JOHN:

Get them into the, funnel, which means just pixel them essentially.

JOHN:

you get the Dynamic marketing user and your E-com product, then start to change

JOHN:

your asset groups and then hit it hard.

JOHN:

That'd be the, probably the safest bet.

JOHN:

Theodore, I have a client with a website similar to Upwork and

JOHN:

fiber hiring freelancers, and every time I make a search ad, it

JOHN:

gets restricted for employment.

JOHN:

Is there something I can do about that?

JOHN:

No.

JOHN:

. I actually lost a client because of this.

JOHN:

But Google took a really hard restriction on employment.

JOHN:

You cannot target a person based on employment.

JOHN:

And not even in your ads.

JOHN:

It's actually even on your website.

JOHN:

You could still run like we're hiring or keywords and phrases you're not allowed

JOHN:

to say on the site that I have not had enough experience to identify them all.

JOHN:

So you can't say stuff like we're hiring, but you can say like, work with us on

JOHN:

every single page on our website, ever.

JOHN:

So go through all your blogs.

JOHN:

Like that's one example.

JOHN:

So Google won't allow you to target a person based on them being unemployed,

JOHN:

and that's up to the discretion on what they think unemployed means.

JOHN:

Are you going after them because unemployed and you're offering a

JOHN:

job, or are you saying that you need to fill in a spot on your team?

JOHN:

But it's nebulous as to the exact word and for your entire

JOHN:

website in order to comply.

JOHN:

I think it's worth it if Google is just gonna be your only channel,

JOHN:

work with your Google rep by saying, I need to change this,

JOHN:

but how do I make this sound good?

JOHN:

And if you don't have a Google rep, it's a long, hard road for sure.

JOHN:

Like I was saying, like I lost client.

JOHN:

We couldn't figure it out.

JOHN:

It just kept coming back after three months, it just went.

JOHN:

It went away on its own after three months and the client actually called me.

JOHN:

He's like, Why are we spending so much?

JOHN:

I'm like, We're not.

JOHN:

What are you talking about?

JOHN:

They left the campaign on after they took it back.

JOHN:

He's like, we'll hang tight soon.

JOHN:

We just shut up and spend, cuz that restriction removed three

JOHN:

months later from that website changes and then it came into play.

JOHN:

So I don't really even know that campaign started to work, but Google

JOHN:

all of a sudden just said, Oh, okay, well this is now finally close enough

JOHN:

after three months of no changes.

JOHN:

So it's gonna be.

JOHN:

Like that you said it's a long, hard road if you don't have a Google rep.

JOHN:

Because it's a long, hard road.

JOHN:

If you do have a Google

JOHN:

at least you feel like you're going somewhere.

JOHN:

Bump up up for traffic or take the 10 mile longer route like you're

JOHN:

gonna get there the same time.

JOHN:

, its like you're lonely, but then you get George Art Banks is like

JOHN:

a companion and you're like, Oh.

JOHN:

Alone.

JOHN:

Alone.

JOHN:

. Ryan, new member.

JOHN:

Thanks for being here buddy.

JOHN:

Appreciate you.

JOHN:

Dave Fogel.

JOHN:

I'm messing with Sharp Spring Boo.

JOHN:

They have an option for frequency capping and impression pacing.

JOHN:

What would you recommend for both?

JOHN:

I'm not sure.

JOHN:

Inside Sharp Spring.

JOHN:

Sharp Spring has to have some sort of ad management software.

JOHN:

I bet.

JOHN:

Cuz They've actually rolled out their own attribution tool too.

JOHN:

Dave SharpSpring sucks.

JOHN:

Go to go high level . Man, let me just give you a general thumb impression

JOHN:

and frequency pacing is based off of your, time lag and your conversion path.

JOHN:

it's only thing I can guide you on.

JOHN:

And also what your CPA and your, goals are, essentially if you're like, Hey,

JOHN:

these people take a month before they convert, Don't set a frequency or

JOHN:

impression unless you look at what the typical good performing campaigns,

JOHN:

impressions and frequencies are.

JOHN:

I couldn't predict how many times a person needs to see and ad before they

JOHN:

convert or how long it take to convert.

JOHN:

So that's based on how long someone takes to.

JOHN:

We would say, this is a good idea.

JOHN:

I can't do it the other way around.

JOHN:

It's kind of a car before the horse.

JOHN:

Unfortunately I don't know that yet.

JOHN:

Jet Till asks, have you tried Pex new customer only?

JOHN:

How's their performance?

JOHN:

I have it four times and I didn't get any better results.

JOHN:

And all it did was kill my campaign volume by about 56% on

JOHN:

average, if I remember correctly.

JOHN:

what I saw is that because we can trick conversions, Google has stated

JOHN:

that it won't be able to identify everyone that's new and repeat.

JOHN:

Because of technology limitations.

JOHN:

They didn't give us a number.

JOHN:

Is that 50%?

JOHN:

Is it 10%?

JOHN:

No one knows.

JOHN:

What we have to do is say, Here's my customer.

JOHN:

We have a 60% match rate.

JOHN:

well, that sucks.

JOHN:

And then we have to say, Okay, now how about these people here?

JOHN:

Are they new and existing?

JOHN:

And they say, Well, based on the 60% match rate, you have 80 new customers.

JOHN:

Okay, Well then when we looked them back in and it was like, yeah,

JOHN:

50 new customers, 30 returning.

JOHN:

they didn't change anything because Google couldn't.

JOHN:

I was exactly a new customer.

JOHN:

Whatever your match rate is is going to be how accurate.

JOHN:

Hey, I got only 90% returning customers and only 10, it'll help you.

JOHN:

But if you're somewhere around the 60 40 split, 70 30 split, I

JOHN:

don't think it's actually gonna do anything for you just yet.

JOHN:

Theodore says, Congratulations on the marketer.

JOHN:

The year award.

JOHN:

For those of you that don't know John, we're on third

JOHN:

place for marketer the year.

JOHN:

Yeah, I did.

JOHN:

I think you were four or five votes away on second place.

JOHN:

Did you know that?

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

And it was his error.

JOHN:

. Yeah, that pisses me off cuz we've got 80 employees, like five em.

JOHN:

Need to get a good talking to.

JOHN:

And then Tido also mentioned, John and I are both speaking at Ad

JOHN:

World, which we're excited about.

JOHN:

Go buy your ad world ticket.

JOHN:

Luxury Blade is asking about Ad World being one of the top conferences.

JOHN:

I gotta be honest, I think they deliver when you take the amount of value you get

JOHN:

for the cost of the ticket, cuz the names, it's the same names you see everywhere.

JOHN:

You know what I mean?

JOHN:

Ralph Burns, Molly Pittman, Seth Golden, John Moran, you're seeing like real badass

JOHN:

marketers all given real badass talks.

JOHN:

But it's a fraction of the cost because it's entirely virtual

JOHN:

and we're not affiliates.

JOHN:

So I'm a big fan of Bad World.

JOHN:

Yeah, that's great, Suzanne.

JOHN:

Do you think we'll eventually be able to add negative audiences on Pax?

JOHN:

Nope.

JOHN:

I honestly don't think you ever will.

JOHN:

Only because Google is gonna warm up all that traffic in order to convert,

JOHN:

and Google's trying to become its own funnel, which means it is going

JOHN:

to find impress, gain interest, earn visits, remarket, convert,

JOHN:

and then reconvert all within one.

JOHN:

and what you're asking Google to do is to take 30% of its efficiency away

JOHN:

from something that's designed to do.

JOHN:

Google as a whole will not do that.

JOHN:

Google will allow certain people to do that.

JOHN:

Reps that will do that for you.

JOHN:

it's the death of performance Max, honestly, cuz that's

JOHN:

what smart shopping was.

JOHN:

And so they can't say, Hey, let's warm up all this traffic.

JOHN:

And then once they convert, make sure analytics says those

JOHN:

direct, they're not gonna do it.

JOHN:

Gonna ask specifically about audiences created in GA four.

JOHN:

I imagine that doesn't change the answer much.

JOHN:

No.

JOHN:

GA four's, It's getting closer.

JOHN:

it's trying to But I mean, you can't add negative audiences that were created in

JOHN:

GA four oh, I see what you're saying.

JOHN:

No, no.

JOHN:

it's not applicable and even the reps are actually starting to like, push back on.

JOHN:

No, they're just not gonna do it.

JOHN:

They'll argue with you for an hour.

JOHN:

We had this one company that had like such a horrible name.

JOHN:

I can't tell their names.

JOHN:

I wanna expose them, it was like, let's just call it like a traveling.

JOHN:

I don't know what it was called, like traveling.

JOHN:

, I don't wanna say it too much, but it was two words that together no one would ever

JOHN:

say in their life, but then they argue with me, were like, Well, that's a word.

JOHN:

So these are both words.

JOHN:

So people could sometimes, Google those, try to basically say like, Hey, people

JOHN:

would actually type in the word Uber.

JOHN:

But not want the car service, cuz that's a word.

JOHN:

I'm like, who's gonna type an Uber if they don't know the car service?

JOHN:

They're like, Okay.

JOHN:

we're just now of a sudden dumbing our fails.

JOHN:

Like that's a good exercise.

JOHN:

Google.

JOHN:

Thanks . Got it.

JOHN:

Am Judd asks, How do you reckon the people who brows websites

JOHN:

similar to custom segment works?

JOHN:

What Google usually does is kind of take what they call latent semantic

JOHN:

indexing and understands the theme of that website so that it also corresponds

JOHN:

with the themes of other websites.

JOHN:

So categories, generalizations, outdoor equipment, hiking,

JOHN:

tents, camping, those things.

JOHN:

don't get too granular with it, but if you're looking at people

JOHN:

who visit websites similar to, let's say Bed Bath and Beyond.

JOHN:

Interested in home good and closest you're gonna get, not be like, Oh, people that

JOHN:

are looking for like, sheets on that web.

JOHN:

Nope.

JOHN:

Just people that visit that website also have interested in like,

JOHN:

wanting to buy something for their home and or bedroom and or a bath.

JOHN:

but don't go too crazy with it.

JOHN:

My Google rep looked at me funny when I told her I set up a feed only asset group

JOHN:

and nothing else . And then when you say that you're getting a, average ad score

JOHN:

of good , that is also really funny.

JOHN:

They're like, Hey, my ad rigs good and I don't have an ad in there.

JOHN:

They're like, I don't know what you did

JOHN:

It's so soul.

JOHN:

Is this ? I'm Jet.

JOHN:

Recommended audience signals for PMAX when selling a product

JOHN:

that's new and unknown by many.

JOHN:

A drop shipping product, for example.

JOHN:

Right on.

JOHN:

Recommended audience signals for pmax when selling.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

What do you do when nobody knows the product exists?

JOHN:

It's awareness book.

JOHN:

Don't go to pax.

JOHN:

heavily inbound.

JOHN:

Yeah, I was gonna try.

JOHN:

As many content pivots from shopping and search, you're not

JOHN:

gonna be able to control much.

JOHN:

if it was, I would do YouTube and discovery feeds and discovery

JOHN:

by tweeting this right now.

JOHN:

I like that.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

you're basically gonna tell Google is, Hey, you have no audiences for this.

JOHN:

You've never seen this before and you don't even know what it.

JOHN:

Maximize conversions.

JOHN:

So funny.

JOHN:

Conversions.

JOHN:

Who spend your money for sure.

JOHN:

Saba.

JOHN:

Saba in pmax slash lead gen, if the budget is not generous to allocate

JOHN:

for pmax, is it okay to group multiple signals in the same campaign?

JOHN:

Or so, Lead gen campaign.

JOHN:

Yeah, Lead gen campaign.

JOHN:

Well, and Saba, I think I might misunderstand the question here, because

JOHN:

the PAX is separated by asset groups.

JOHN:

So you're gonna have multiple signals in one campaign, but the signals

JOHN:

are separated by asset groups.

JOHN:

Right.

JOHN:

Are you asking, are we bundling signals by asset groups or John,

JOHN:

do you Something I don't hear.

JOHN:

No, I I can see it.

JOHN:

The only thing that you're gonna find out too is with the different asset groups,

JOHN:

your insights tabs are just gonna kind of tell you what end up being matched.

JOHN:

Now over a week, over week though, going to take place is not necessarily

JOHN:

simply because there's a different signal, but there's a massive overlap

JOHN:

in those signals and whichever asset group was simply chosen at the time,

JOHN:

Durst to be captured is going to show.

JOHN:

So for example, if I have two different audiences, there is an

JOHN:

overlap between those two different a.

JOHN:

A lot of times very consistently.

JOHN:

So let's use our constants.

JOHN:

People that are interested in, lead generation dentistry or like people that

JOHN:

are interested x-rays and dental cleaning.

JOHN:

Like those are dental x-rays and dental cleaning.

JOHN:

Cool.

JOHN:

So now we have dental x-ray, dental cleaning.

JOHN:

Take those people and say 99% of the time, the same.

JOHN:

Okay, so now that we know that to be the case, when you look at your insights,

JOHN:

you'll see like, hey, that one search category matched to 17 asset groups.

JOHN:

Why?

JOHN:

Because it's all the same.

JOHN:

Everybody qualified.

JOHN:

That's what they're saying.

JOHN:

Doesn't mean that it was that that asset group one that is what was qualified for.

JOHN:

Does it dictate?

JOHN:

it's inbound search, there's not much that's being dictated.

JOHN:

What you're basically saying is, which RSA on an inbound search, It's

JOHN:

not pmax, it's not asset groups.

JOHN:

It's now basically been whittled down to inbound search in which

JOHN:

RSA won inside that asset group.

JOHN:

Was it based on Signal?

JOHN:

Not really.

JOHN:

They're too much overlapping, but into the other asset group,

JOHN:

was that a amazing moment?

JOHN:

No, it's just they chose that ad group as said, like why would they choose,

JOHN:

one combination of headlines versus a different combination of headlines.

JOHN:

That kind of what it boils down to.

JOHN:

for Pax Lead generation, I usually.

JOHN:

Just bundle everything in the one as the flow of traffic through

JOHN:

there is not segmented at all.

JOHN:

It's about 99% overlap between them all.

JOHN:

And if you had like 10 asset groups, I would challenge you

JOHN:

to find an asset group that has.

JOHN:

Nine or eight or less.

JOHN:

When you have a search category, it's gonna be nine or it's gonna be 10.

JOHN:

Then when you click on that ask group, you're gonna find out which did it come

JOHN:

in from, track that week over week, and if that changes, just know that everything's

JOHN:

kind of being grouped into one.

JOHN:

Garrett, what are your thoughts on the new automatically created

JOHN:

assets update in Google ads?

JOHN:

I.

JOHN:

Mind it too much just because, and Kurt and I are good.

JOHN:

LinkedIn Buddie.

JOHN:

He's, he's awesome.

JOHN:

we go back and forth with strategies.

JOHN:

He was the one that actually said like, Hey, get your rep to actually

JOHN:

add a negative keyword list to Pmax, and then you control the, as or the

JOHN:

keywords inside that negative list.

JOHN:

It's already a tie.

JOHN:

Oh, the list can be dynamic.

JOHN:

Well, yeah.

JOHN:

So instead of going to Google and be like, Can you please add these five

JOHN:

keywords to this Performance Max campaign?

JOHN:

It goes have Google take the negative keyword word list and then apply it

JOHN:

to your Performance Max campaign.

JOHN:

Then you add and remove the keyword.

JOHN:

And I was like, that's live Tweeting for sure.

JOHN:

. Oh, for sure.

JOHN:

Shout out.

JOHN:

He's awesome.

JOHN:

we wrap back a plastic.

JOHN:

Gary, you need to start a YouTube channel.

JOHN:

. drop your Twitter handle into here.

JOHN:

Is it just Garrett Grut?

JOHN:

I'm assuming it is.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

But Awesome, awesome.

JOHN:

Very smart person, but I don't mind the automatically generated create

JOHN:

reason why is I haven't found.

JOHN:

Those type of situations to be detrimental.

JOHN:

I know that you and I were talking about this on LinkedIn where we're like, Great,

JOHN:

now we're gonna have to let the client know why the not approved assets are

JOHN:

actually in live inside their accounts.

JOHN:

I did a little bit of digging and was kind of looking

JOHN:

through a fairly thoroughly.

JOHN:

When there's a page that is from a URL expansion, what Google

JOHN:

has said essentially does says, Okay, what's your ad copy?

JOHN:

My ad copy is, we do Google ads.

JOHN:

It's the only thing that we do, and Google Ads is the best.

JOHN:

But then we have a blog on.

JOHN:

And so your expansion on sends person that Googled Facebook versus Google and

JOHN:

it goes to our Facebook blog that we have.

JOHN:

Well, they don't wanna use the ad copy of, We do Google ads.

JOHN:

Google Ads.

JOHN:

The only thing we do, and we do Google, they want to have it.

JOHN:

Like, what's the difference between Google ads and Facebook?

JOHN:

Like, it's essentially pulling in the dynamic headlines and descriptions

JOHN:

and assets and, and imagery from that page in order to make sure

JOHN:

that if they're gonna send you to a.

JOHN:

Different than what's in your asset group.

JOHN:

At least the headlines makes about 2% of the time.

JOHN:

So I was okay with it, but unless you're seeing something different,

JOHN:

I haven't really seen much differences in my landing page.

JOHN:

Counts I guess instead of my, reports.

JOHN:

Aaron, I have a service based company that does massage.

JOHN:

I have Swedish massage, deep tissue massage, and couple massage

JOHN:

and gift certificates online.

JOHN:

Should I do Pex with three?

JOHN:

These three services?

JOHN:

I'll give you the answer if we can.

JOHN:

Barger

JOHN:

John Once.

JOHN:

Deep tissue massage . Oh yeah.

JOHN:

So my opinion.

JOHN:

If you're looking at local, I would honestly do search first.

JOHN:

Have we tried PAXs New Local at all?

JOHN:

Has anybody tested that?

JOHN:

We don't really have local clients.

JOHN:

Caden's, Caden's trying to hack it.

JOHN:

, of course, is.

JOHN:

he's doing like, where it's like just GMB,

JOHN:

And I was like, Oh, that's brilliant.

JOHN:

But then he died, knew.

JOHN:

That's genius.

JOHN:

I know, right?

JOHN:

so far what we've been able to see and I predicted this on like three

JOHN:

weeks ago, or whatever it was I think local's dead they, they didn't,

JOHN:

include local inside of performance.

JOHN:

Max.

JOHN:

Once Max decided like a local campaign, they basically was like, Okay, cool.

JOHN:

So here's your location extension into p.

JOHN:

I think they just pretty much got rid of local like you, but they have

JOHN:

local specific conversion actions driving directions and that's what I'm

JOHN:

saying, like you just got, you gotta look a location extension of Google

JOHN:

My business that local was running on.

JOHN:

So sort of as like you have all that.

JOHN:

Inside of Pmax now where you also have YouTube GSP discovery display

JOHN:

search, it's now just attacking everything where it's like, Hey, I

JOHN:

just really went run a local campaign.

JOHN:

It's like, nope.

JOHN:

Been in another keyword on search now too.

JOHN:

It's like, shit, I don't need all that.

JOHN:

It's weird.

JOHN:

It's so inconsistent because they took smart shopping and put it in pmax.

JOHN:

They took DSA and put it in Pmax.

JOHN:

You think they take local and put it in Pmax, but instead they just killed it

JOHN:

and gave us some of the local feature.

JOHN:

Yeah, that's pretty much it.

JOHN:

Like the local by itself was not anything spectacular.

JOHN:

It was really just a good map campaign.

JOHN:

It's like old school Google Map campaigns.

JOHN:

So they basically just added that to Performance Max.

JOHN:

That's all they did.

JOHN:

I would say go search.

JOHN:

The problem that I would say is, yes, if you had the big enough

JOHN:

budget and six months, and let this thing really learn and grow and

JOHN:

gain as much user base as you can.

JOHN:

Then absolutely run it.

JOHN:

If you're like, Hey, I can't really spend more than like 5K per month

JOHN:

and I wanna be very specific, I still go search broad with tcpa.

JOHN:

So it's way you can at least not overspend and, but still be themed correctly.

JOHN:

Like you might be bidding on like local Swedish massage and some of 'em might be

JOHN:

like, you know, Swedish massage Near Me.

JOHN:

Even phrase match would capture that.

JOHN:

Using a TCPA is gonna control your costs.

JOHN:

That is a few weeks to kinda learn, but I think that the problem is with local

JOHN:

campaigns and how performance Max, it's what I was saying in the beginning.

JOHN:

I don't think you're actually here for it.

JOHN:

If I have six channels and I'm learning local, Majority of your inbound

JOHN:

conversions are gonna come from search.

JOHN:

That's just usually where Pmax goes.

JOHN:

Just foremost.

JOHN:

Once that's Restasis or if that demand drops a bit or what you show up for

JOHN:

drops a bit because a conf competitor came in and started up upping its bids.

JOHN:

It says, Well, forget up display YouTube.

JOHN:

Exactly.

JOHN:

It's like, well, I'm gonna.

JOHN:

Spend the daily budget, just not where you needed to go, quick

JOHN:

departure that I think is valuable.

JOHN:

I did an interview with Patrick Gilbert, Adventure ppc.

JOHN:

You know Isaac Rodan.

JOHN:

Yeah, his agency.

JOHN:

So Patrick's his coo, freaking brilliant dude, bro.

JOHN:

We got a video coming out on our YouTube channel with him, but he's got,

JOHN:

I forget the name of his associate.

JOHN:

He's got somebody that works with him that the analogy he gave with Pax it's actually

JOHN:

the exact same thing that happened in the Big short with the mortgage tranches.

JOHN:

So they took all these bullshit loans, And they bundled them together

JOHN:

and then they sold 'em to people.

JOHN:

And so Google took all this bullshit traffic and they bundled it together

JOHN:

and like hidden within the bullshit traffic is like some good traffic.

JOHN:

So you do, you'll get a conversion, you'll get a call, but they're like,

JOHN:

it's like Ponzi scheming traffic.

JOHN:

But it's, I don't know, man.

JOHN:

I just thought that was like such a phenomenal way to look at it.

JOHN:

It's exactly what's happening with.

JOHN:

know why I have to, give Google credit though, because their stupid

JOHN:

strategy, they just automated.

JOHN:

They're like, More clicks equals more traffic equals more conversions.

JOHN:

It's like not on display, but like Yes it does.

JOHN:

We'll see . I know.

JOHN:

We'll test it with your money.

JOHN:

Know it's like, well, how many conversions did I get?

JOHN:

You got seven.

JOHN:

Where'd they come from?

JOHN:

Could have been displayed . Guess.

JOHN:

. It definitely was a church like.

JOHN:

It's so funny.

JOHN:

I'm Judd Google automatically creating assets for you based

JOHN:

on your website content.

JOHN:

Seems like such a win.

JOHN:

What could be the possible cons of this?

JOHN:

From what I understand, we can add assets in Google, fill in the gaps,

JOHN:

so it seems like a win-win to me.

JOHN:

Thoughts?

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Agencies are gonna have a bigger problem than this, than anything else.

JOHN:

Like Ace, like we have to build like a spreadsheet that gets approved

JOHN:

by the product manager that gets approved by the marketing team,

JOHN:

the sales team, the higher ups.

JOHN:

And then we finally get to use that, then three days later we get

JOHN:

an email that says, John, why do I see an ad that was not approved

JOHN:

by the six members of our team?

JOHN:

And I gotta be like, Well, it's not Under our control anymore, and it's like, hmm.

JOHN:

That's where we usually kind of get the, pushback, that's like they must

JOHN:

be just messing up in lying to us.

JOHN:

That's the bad part.

JOHN:

The good part is, yeah, it should be fine.

JOHN:

There's not a really big issue with it.

JOHN:

It usually uses your website data anyway to guide itself.

JOHN:

So if you hate your website, you're gonna hate the automatically

JOHN:

created assets, but really.

JOHN:

I was gonna say, if you hate your website, you shouldn't be driving

JOHN:

traffic to your website anyway.

JOHN:

Exactly.

JOHN:

Cory, lend home lots of Amazon advertisers trying to get clients to use Google

JOHN:

ads to send traffic to Amazon with its newish referral bonus program.

JOHN:

Would love to hear your thoughts on this.

JOHN:

Yeah, Amazon advertisers is trying to get clients to use Google ads to

JOHN:

send traffic to, I don't know what the June referral bonus program is.

JOHN:

Do you know what that is?

JOHN:

Kasum?

JOHN:

I have no idea.

JOHN:

I haven't heard of that.

JOHN:

Didn't Amazon sunset their attribution product?

JOHN:

Like they were trying to give us attribution at one point and

JOHN:

then they were like, We quit.

JOHN:

Screw it.

JOHN:

it's still working.

JOHN:

I mean, it's really lackluster.

JOHN:

it's almost like a click on that ad.

JOHN:

Yes.

JOHN:

237 times What?

JOHN:

I sold two.

JOHN:

Why?

JOHN:

That's it.

JOHN:

These people click, Do we want what they buy?

JOHN:

Oh, no , no clue.

JOHN:

, Right.

JOHN:

So it's basically just a link.

JOHN:

Click to conversion.

JOHN:

So Corey, if you can let me know what the June referral bonus program is thoughts

JOHN:

on it, but I'm not sure what that is.

JOHN:

I know that way you do send traffic to Amazon to increase organic rank,

JOHN:

but doesn't sound like the June referral, bonus program, Evan.

JOHN:

using Pax Shopify Syms to add users to an audience.

JOHN:

I don't know what Syms is.

JOHN:

Are there any other tools for tracking that should be used?

JOHN:

Or is the Shopify Google API enough?

JOHN:

Should server side and GTM need to be set up?

JOHN:

Server side GTM compared to the Shopify.

JOHN:

and I think that you're saying the, the tracking.

JOHN:

Oh, sys is just feed management.

JOHN:

It's just data management for e-commerce.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Now when you're saying tools for tracking that should be used or

JOHN:

is it Shopify, Google API enough?

JOHN:

Are we talking about users like dynamic re marketing?

JOHN:

Are we talking about attribution?

JOHN:

Tracking conversions.

JOHN:

Yeah, let me know.

JOHN:

Said tracking.

JOHN:

Tracking.

JOHN:

What?

JOHN:

I wanna make sure cuz the shopping API connection will actually

JOHN:

transfer back to you user data.

JOHN:

And I think that's what you're talking about when you're saying service

JOHN:

side gtm, but you can also have service side GTM for conversions.

JOHN:

So let me know what you're, thinking there.

JOHN:

Corey says that Amazon's offering a 10% bonus of the sales

JOHN:

price on sales generated from non-Amazon marketing effort.

JOHN:

Oh God, that looks, That's kinda insane, dude.

JOHN:

That's like traffic arbitrage.

JOHN:

Well that just looks like a brand nightmare.

JOHN:

I was just gonna say that like brand nightmare for everybody but us.

JOHN:

We should do this.

JOHN:

No, we shouldn't totally do that.

JOHN:

No, this is a bad idea.

JOHN:

Corey, I won't call you later.

JOHN:

What can you say about the update for YouTube targeting,

JOHN:

getting off of custom targeting?

JOHN:

What does that mean?

JOHN:

I don't know what that means.

JOHN:

Gly, we use custom targeting all the time.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Gently give us more context and then we'll come back to you.

JOHN:

If you're doing campaign management for competitive SaaS, high CPCs,

JOHN:

I'm talking 13, 14 cetera, what bidding strategies do you suggest?

JOHN:

I would actually still run manual until you finish this one cycle.

JOHN:

Then go into automated bidding strategy, depending upon the LTV of the cycle.

JOHN:

And here's a cycle your.

JOHN:

Marketing for SAS sass are gonna have a conversion rate between who

JOHN:

did and who did not complete the free trial and become a signup user.

JOHN:

That signup user is worth way more than the cpa, the free trial.

JOHN:

So knowing what the campaign that actually generated the converted free

JOHN:

trial users, that campaign is made.

JOHN:

And if you're spending enough time having high enough frequency, Where the

JOHN:

CPA is of the free trial, actually mark that as a secondary, but your primary

JOHN:

conversion action should be the free trial user that turned into a subscription.

JOHN:

So pay subscription, the pay subscription user, depending

JOHN:

upon what that's coming in at.

JOHN:

Use a maximized conversions, and then throttle that by T cpa.

JOHN:

Be very careful though, because the point of.

JOHN:

From point of conversion is so far gone that you're gonna be like,

JOHN:

Hey, remember two months ago Google when you brought that person here?

JOHN:

Don't do that again.

JOHN:

So you're working in two months cycles at an automated bidding strategy.

JOHN:

Something done on day one and wait 60 days to have it be correlated over here,

JOHN:

but maximize conversions will just get super aggressive for all the people

JOHN:

that turned into those conversions and those people that look like them.

JOHN:

So my opinion would be run manual equally depending upon your campaign hierarchy.

JOHN:

Find out what brings you not only.

JOHN:

Amount of conversions, but a most amount of conversions that turns into a cpa.

JOHN:

But a higher conversion rate means a lower cap potentially.

JOHN:

So once you import that from clicks, from the people that actually convert it

JOHN:

into a free trial or, into a paying user, then say, Okay, where did that come from?

JOHN:

And then if you have enough, more than like 20 a week, then use that

JOHN:

as your primary conversion action.

JOHN:

Certain try to maximize conversions and then reduce spend everywhere reallocate

JOHN:

to that campaign and go Suzanne, do you have a preference on conversion

JOHN:

tracking, adding the codes to the site or importing from analytics?

JOHN:

Absolutely.

JOHN:

Good with type manager.

JOHN:

Adding it to the site.

JOHN:

Importing from analytics will.

JOHN:

Lose about 40 ish percent of your conversions on average.

JOHN:

The last click, same day conversions.

JOHN:

So if you have a person that Google can't identify coming to the

JOHN:

direct traffic one day, it's like, Well, I came directly this site.

JOHN:

Google Ads does not get any credit.

JOHN:

Don't send their analytic conversion to Google.

JOHN:

That was direct.

JOHN:

Well, where'd they come from?

JOHN:

Oh yeah, they had a Google ads like three days ago.

JOHN:

Reading that.

JOHN:

Late on breaks.

JOHN:

What a great name.

JOHN:

Any ideas on strategy for B2B service that's local and somewhat emergency based?

JOHN:

Managed it on a low four digit budget.

JOHN:

We actually have that exact client B2B service that's.

JOHN:

Local and emergency based.

JOHN:

What's emergency based?

JOHN:

And b2b, I don't think B2B emergency though.

JOHN:

They actually might not be with us anymore because they sold their business.

JOHN:

They were here in town.

JOHN:

They were a young couple.

JOHN:

What industry they do emergency it.

JOHN:

So it's like if, all of a sudden your servers blow up or whatever,

JOHN:

they will sprint the hell down there.

JOHN:

Yeah, I can see that.

JOHN:

So B2B Doesn't need to be b2b.

JOHN:

If the search terms are B2B enough, I would say like, server room on fire.

JOHN:

well you don't have a server room in your house, . But if you're like, Hey, I only

JOHN:

do plumbing emergencies for commercial real estate, that's not gonna happen.

JOHN:

Right.

JOHN:

There's gonna be like plumber now.

JOHN:

we're just going exact Matt's search here, right?

JOHN:

It.

JOHN:

Well, I would say that, but I would actually do long tail broad.

JOHN:

So for example, low four digit, it's like two K per month and we're competing

JOHN:

against other plastic surgeons in Chicago and we're getting $80 CPAs and

JOHN:

$3 CPCs cuz we're doing long tail Broad.

JOHN:

you're just gonna increase the cost needlessly long tail broad is

JOHN:

gonna give you potentially the same search traffic, but at a decreased.

JOHN:

And you get the oddities and that's the only way this is gonna work.

JOHN:

Cause if you're looking at like a Dave's $14 as a high cpc, I agree like some

JOHN:

CPCs are like one 50 , but it's high enough if you have a thousand dollar

JOHN:

per day budget or a thousand dollar per month budget because that's what,

JOHN:

$33 a day and $14, you get two clicks.

JOHN:

So what I normally will see is if you can do long tail broad.

JOHN:

It'll allow you to get the oddities at much, much, much cheaper.

JOHN:

So for example, this plastic surgeon in Chicago I'm gonna use this term

JOHN:

that they're not doing and can't take of what we're doing with them.

JOHN:

But let's just say we're talking about like eyelash extensions.

JOHN:

We're not, but that can be something.

JOHN:

It'd be cost of lengthening my eyelashes, $2 click, one click, one impression,

JOHN:

one conversion, $2 conversion.

JOHN:

I'm like, woo, you know, easy.

JOHN:

I didn't have to bid for.

JOHN:

Per, eyelash, $40 cost per click to be number one.

JOHN:

I got the long tail of someone that was looking for a cost and

JOHN:

actually scheduled an appointment.

JOHN:

I'm not saying that happens every time, but I don't know a way to get competitive

JOHN:

without doing it that way, honestly.

JOHN:

So hopefully that works.

JOHN:

David Leon.

JOHN:

Do you find too many people focus on ad setup and one

JOHN:

time sales versus longer term?

JOHN:

Bottom line enhancers, like increasing, OV a focus on an ltv, email marketing,

JOHN:

omnichannel, diversification, et cetera.

JOHN:

Every time David, every time , Well, here's the thing is they

JOHN:

usually come with a, they come on board with those type goals.

JOHN:

Even during the sales process, we investigate the other part, and a lot

JOHN:

of times it's not only that they have a bad ltv, but they can't have a good l.

JOHN:

Like there's some expensive kind of niche products that people are

JOHN:

only gonna buy once every 10 years.

JOHN:

That's why mattresses cost two grand.

JOHN:

If they bought a mattress every three months, those things would be 250 bucks.

JOHN:

But they make all their money cuz then they're not gonna

JOHN:

buy on for another 10 years.

JOHN:

So same thing like that, those type of industries.

JOHN:

Yeah, if we usually don't take on clients that if they have like a low AOV and we

JOHN:

can't increase AOV and they're not gonna develop any new products and they only

JOHN:

really want that, and then they have a really bad profit margin, then we usually

JOHN:

just can't take 'em on as a client.

JOHN:

It's going to fail.

JOHN:

It's not a matter of if, but when, We usually find that if you have a

JOHN:

halfway decent good, halfway decent aov, high competition, no LTV bad,

JOHN:

you're gonna pay for the traffic.

JOHN:

It's simple math, like we all learn this in first grade, but then half is ignore

JOHN:

it for some reason that you can't spend more money than you make on a sale.

JOHN:

And it's a competitive ecosystem.

JOHN:

So you can't buy the Ferrari if you're max bid at auto auction, $6 not gonna happen.

JOHN:

It's just, we just have to look at and invest.

JOHN:

Can we, How can we, What have you done before?

JOHN:

What have worked?

JOHN:

Would we be able to, do we have resource, too?

JOHN:

Then we usually take 'em out as a client if all those align

JOHN:

a to.

JOHN:

Hey guys, I have a question.

JOHN:

I have a client with local business flowers.

JOHN:

I'm mainly using only search campaigns.

JOHN:

Any reason to try pax?

JOHN:

Yeah, so Pax, and if you say local business, if your conversion is in

JOHN:

store traffic, or online sales?

JOHN:

I'll give two different answers.

JOHN:

If it's in store traffic, you're going to have better luck with Pax, but

JOHN:

you're not gonna be able to track it.

JOHN:

it's online, definitely pax if you say I need to track it or I'm hired to

JOHN:

track it, search and then run calls.

JOHN:

So call extension and then make.

JOHN:

Record calls, but it really depends.

JOHN:

It says, Hey, we're right down the street from you.

JOHN:

You're not gonna be able to track anything really.

JOHN:

I mean, you'll get some calls, but your in store might be way better.

JOHN:

But knowing that usually pmax is much wider reaching, especially local.

JOHN:

So it's like if you had search app, YouTube, gsp, Discover display,

JOHN:

oh, within 10 miles you're gonna do better than just search for sure.

JOHN:

But if you need to track it, like, no, no, no, I need to track and,

JOHN:

that type of really, what were the search terms used exactly on this day?

JOHN:

Maybe search might be better, but I still would recommend Pax.

JOHN:

If you can sacrifice some clear data, you'll have a better reach.

JOHN:

Dawn, if our top selling item accounts for 36% of all sales, the next four top

JOHN:

seller, 17%, and the next 40 items, 15%, should I put all the products into one

JOHN:

pmax with one asset group feed only?

JOHN:

Something down that may have already done, and I can't tell if

JOHN:

you have or not from this comment, but it is extremely important.

JOHN:

Selling item accounts for, or items account for 36% of all sales.

JOHN:

Is that from Google or is that from e-commerce and analytics?

JOHN:

Those are two different metrics.

JOHN:

What I mean is that if your top selling item accounts for 36% of

JOHN:

all sales, does that mean that 36% of Google has convergent to.

JOHN:

Product and if so was that product actually sold.

JOHN:

Google is going to force more people into a product click that leads to all

JOHN:

sales of all products, not clicking on that ad and buying product B.

JOHN:

very, very, very, very important.

JOHN:

Corrupt a flow that you can't see inside of Google.

JOHN:

If product A earns a click and they buy product B, product

JOHN:

A looks like it's sold in.

JOHN:

Because it says that was the a click that led to a conversion

JOHN:

with a conversion value.

JOHN:

If you look at analytics, go your conversions, E-commerce product

JOHN:

performance and overlay the campaign ideas, the secondary parameter.

JOHN:

And you see that that campaign ID is also selling 36% of that same

JOHN:

product then yes, I would split 'em.

JOHN:

. But if it says, Hey, sometimes 20 on that product, actually buy something

JOHN:

else, then you can't split it out.

JOHN:

Not yet anyway, until we know why.

JOHN:

a lot of times you'll split it out and you realize everything went down and then you

JOHN:

put back together and everything goes up.

JOHN:

It's just because people are just, Google's forcing that ad and then people

JOHN:

are buying everything else on your site.

JOHN:

Dave, did you decide what the correct paid search fraud number

JOHN:

after reading that ICJ Journal?

JOHN:

Yeah, it's in the journal, Dave.

JOHN:

It's, the report is, it's anywhere between 20% and like 37%.

JOHN:

But it really compelling article, if people haven't read it, it's in our

JOHN:

YouTube Thing is we actually give you 30% better Roaz, . Dude, it's, crazy.

JOHN:

There's a company out of Israel, a uh, data security company, check.ai,

JOHN:

massive billion dollar valuation.

JOHN:

So they're not small people.

JOHN:

They went through and did an analysis across all their clients,

JOHN:

thousands of clients on the amount of traffic that's actually fraudulent.

JOHN:

Here's the part that pisses me off.

JOHN:

The way that you check for fraudulent traffic is not.

JOHN:

They have all these multi variant little tests.

JOHN:

Like one of them is, does the cursor go directly from point A to point B or

JOHN:

is there, a human intervention that the little, little, little, little things,

JOHN:

but they're able to, determine within like close to like 99.99% efficacy,

JOHN:

whether or not traffic is fraudulent.

JOHN:

And they're saying 40% of all the traffic is fraudulent.

JOHN:

And I'm just like, Why, dude?

JOHN:

And they have a billion dollar valuation.

JOHN:

Google has a $1.4 trillion valuation or whatever.

JOHN:

It ends up being they could do that, but they don't.

JOHN:

And it's shocking to me.

JOHN:

basically saying is, Hey, do you wanna lose 40% of your That's exactly right.

JOHN:

I do it.

JOHN:

I don't even think it's the av, it's the revenue that bugs them.

JOHN:

I think what they're afraid of is the minute they actually stop this bot

JOHN:

traffic, everybody's data's gonna.

JOHN:

You know, the number of impressions or ctr, like all that's gonna

JOHN:

go to hell in a hand basket.

JOHN:

So I actually think Google could eat.

JOHN:

The funds because on a long enough timeline, this is an antitrust suit.

JOHN:

And I should be careful saying that cuz I don't want Google to go, eat my lunch.

JOHN:

But like, what else could it be?

JOHN:

There's tens of thousands of advertisers that have paid for traffic that

JOHN:

is now being proven fraudulent.

JOHN:

And Google's sitting there just like continuing to send

JOHN:

this shit down the stream.

JOHN:

It's like when a prosecutor gets busted for like planting evidence in a case and

JOHN:

it's like, well now every case you've ever worked on is, has to be reviewed, right?

JOHN:

All of a sudden Google's like, Not only would all of our traffic go down 40%,

JOHN:

I'd also have a mass exodus of people that are willing to leave, and then when

JOHN:

I get a whole bunch of people to ever say like, Well, can I get my refund?

JOHN:

It would be the death of Google to admit that.

JOHN:

That's, it's interesting man, cuz I don't see a way of this for them.

JOHN:

What is it that the chickens are coming home to roost, , All they

JOHN:

did is just move their house.

JOHN:

Yeah, I think, what Google's gonna do is try to silently figure out a way to combat

JOHN:

this and then just deny it the whole.

JOHN:

Dreading papers and burning evidence and like, no, no, no, no, no.

JOHN:

That never happened.

JOHN:

Like, we gotta figure this out quick.

JOHN:

Fire in my server.

JOHN:

Farm.

JOHN:

Look at that.

JOHN:

We're regenerating traffic.

JOHN:

. Sean, what are your thoughts on XR advertising?

JOHN:

I don't know what XR advertising is.

JOHN:

I don't know.

JOHN:

Yeah, let us know what that is.

JOHN:

Sean, forgive us.

JOHN:

Neither of us went to college.

JOHN:

, Corey, Thoughts on client management around this?

JOHN:

If a client wants to send, and what Corey's referring to, by the way, is

JOHN:

sending traffic directly to Amazon.

JOHN:

What do you do?

JOHN:

If the client wants to man, I need more information.

JOHN:

We've lost every client we've ever done that for.

JOHN:

You realize that?

JOHN:

Cause we've had a bunch of clients that Oh yeah.

JOHN:

If it's exclusively that we've had a bunch of clients like, Oh, just

JOHN:

drive it to Amazon, it's fine.

JOHN:

We totally understand.

JOHN:

We'll give you the conversion lift.

JOHN:

And over a, a long enough period of time, they always fire us.

JOHN:

if a client wants to, Well that's what I'm wondering is like,

JOHN:

is the client wanting to go.

JOHN:

Try to build campaigns around getting the 10% referral?

JOHN:

Or is this, I, I'm not sure when you say client that want something on Amazon.

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Why would the client wanna drive their own drive to their own

JOHN:

website to get their own temp back?

JOHN:

I guess I'm not sure what the benefit would be.

JOHN:

Why would client would wanna do that?

JOHN:

Yeah.

JOHN:

Tell us what you mean.

JOHN:

Corey.

JOHN:

We've got two minutes.

JOHN:

Here we.

JOHN:

Been running YouTube tofu ads for the new product I spoke about earlier on Facebook.

JOHN:

The same videos work really well.

JOHN:

YouTube, NAA and Google has InMarket audiences highly

JOHN:

specific to the product too

JOHN:

I've been running YouTube tofu ads for the new product I spoke about earlier.

JOHN:

Okay.

JOHN:

On Facebook, the same video works really well on YouTube not,

JOHN:

and YouTube has in, how are you measuring YouTube specifically?

JOHN:

YouTube is not necessarily.

JOHN:

Click based, and if you're looking to say, Hey, there's then 10,000 people

JOHN:

that saw the ad and only five clicked on it, but there's 350 other people

JOHN:

that saw the ad and converted remember The Facebook works well because they're

JOHN:

counting views and clicks, still counting views and clicks on YouTube.

JOHN:

Then it's gonna look bad because you can't count a person that saw an ad

JOHN:

five times, then Google the brand name and clicked on it organically and only

JOHN:

give that to Facebook, but not give that same credit to YouTube if you're

JOHN:

not, When I say credit, I mean like, don't just assume that's happening, but

JOHN:

investigate that and say, I've actually looked the direct by isolating both

JOHN:

channels, the direct traffic back from it.

JOHN:

I'm also run a brand campaign of people that saw my ad on YouTube.

JOHN:

They Google my brand name and I can see the overlap of that observation

JOHN:

audience from people that watch my YouTube ADSD specifically.

JOHN:

So what steps have you done to proven that?

JOHN:

Not is what I would be curious of cuz if YouTube, Yeah, it sucks.

JOHN:

my cost for conversion for us is $4,000 for solutions eight.

JOHN:

But how many leads do we get in the last seven days, dude, And

JOHN:

some of the best leads we've ever.

JOHN:

Like it's maybe capturing 10% of what we're actually getting.

About the Podcast

Show artwork for The Google Ads Podcast
The Google Ads Podcast
PPC Strategies, Tutorials, Tips, Tricks, Hacks, and Best Practices