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Google Shopping Now Pay To Play Only

The eCommerce world has changed forever, and it's official: since yesterday, October 17,  Google Shopping results in the US come only from Merchants who are buying Product Listing Ads campaigns in AdWords accounts.

If you have not yet opened an AdWords account, linked it to your Google Merchant Center, and created Product Listing Ad campaigns with associated products, promotional ads, bidding and budgets, the product listings you are used to getting free clicks for will no longer show in the new Google Shopping results.

For the first time since Google relaunched Froogle as Merchant Center in 2009, product advertisers must pay for clicks, track sales, understand their commercial value - and run their online advertising campaigns for profit.

Actual click costs are as yet uncertain in this new environment, and it remains to be seen where they will go as Merchants are forced to compete against each other in ad auctions - as AdWords advertisers have done for many years. Only those who know their numbers will survive and prosper.

For Merchants With No Adwords Account

It goes without saying that you will have to open a new AdWords account, which needs to be linked to your Merchant Center account.

You can then create a new Product Listing Ad campaign directly from within your Merchant Center although you need to manage it and any others online with the AdWords interface, which new users are bound to find confusing and complicated.

Consider Getting Professional Help

Researching, setting up, managing, and optimising AdWords and Merchant Center accounts (as well as analytics, sales funnels, landing pages and other essentials) is a serious ongoing commitment but, done successfully, can and should be a highly profitable investment although often best outsourced.

If considering a third party Agency, look for the following:

For All Merchants

Earn more than you spend: "Clicks are for show, but Conversions are for Dough"

AdWords always works - it's just that many advertisers do not understand the advertising platform, the website visitors they are buying, or their own internal sales processes and economics sufficiently well to enjoy the profitability they should.

If you're not trying to spend more on AdWords, rather than less, something is going wrong.

When managed correctly, AdWords campaigns can be run on unlimited daily budgets because they are based on cost per sale, margins, and customer satisfaction, not just click costs.

Traffic + Conversion + Economics + Support = Profitability

You need the best, targeted buyers, ready to exchange their money for your products in an accountable online transaction, to cover your costs and margins and earn a profit in the process.

It is critically important to track online sales conversions within AdWords, and this is achieved by the simple inclusion of a snippet of code on your sales completion "thank you" page.

Never Hire An Agency Who Is Not Obsessed With Your Conversions!

Because then your AdWords spend (and their contribution) becomes accountable for the profit it brings you.

Google analytics can also be used to provide this information but it is best to use one or the other rather than both to avoid confusing the data.

Also, only track your sales conversions wherever possible, and avoid tracking lead signups or catalogue downloads and the like as well, because these will have very different financial values to your purchases and will make calculating your actual profitability more difficult.

Keep a careful eye on your average order value over time as an indicator of financial targets to achieve with your AdWords campaigns - every campaign can and should be considered a profit centre in its own right wherever possible.

Do Not Panic Buy

It's understandable that many Merchants will immediately want to create new Product Listing Ad campaigns in time for the holiday season, but there are risks with this:

How To Control Costs And Profitability, And Avoid Wasted Spend

Stay tuned for further developments in the new world of Google shopping ...

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