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Guide to Google Ads for Ecommerce – How to Structure Your Account

Google Ads Structure Header

How many campaigns should I have? How should I group my products? Should I run Shopping or Performance Max Campaigns?

The Google Ads account structure is the cornerstone of running a successful campaign. A flawed structure can limit your growth and profitability, while a robust foundation can make scaling your account much easier.

So what’s the best Google Ads campaign structure? It really depends on your business and budget. There isn’t a one-size-fits-all formula, but this guide can help you get to your ppc nirvana.

To Set Up Google Ads Account, Start Small

Your account structure should reflect your business size, goals, budget, and stage as an advertiser. Having overcomplicated structures in the early stages will eventually work against the algorithm.

Fresh accounts will probably benefit more from the basics. Once you start getting conversion data and have an audience tag running, you can scale. A basic structure may include:

#1 Search Campaigns

  • Branded.
  • Non-Branded (with branded exclusions): organizing ad groups to target audiences and keywords efficiently, meaning,  keywords should be grouped by topic and intent. Thoughtful structure improves quality score and lowers costs.
  • DSA (Dynamic Search Ads): start targeting selected categories that perform. Exclude out of stock products, non-performing categories, and positive keywords that you use in your dedicated search campaigns.

#2 Shopping Campaigns - Intent Split Structure:

For more control over budgets and bids, we recommend having at least 2 Shopping campaigns: one to capture upper funnel (low intent) and a second one for mid & low funnels (mid & high intent). If you have enough budget, you can split into 3: upper, mid, and low funnels.

To create an intent split, forcing Google to show certain campaigns for certain terms versus others, use campaign priorities, bids, and negative keywords.

Funnel graphic for Google Ads structure showing low, mid, and high intent

Your low intent shopping campaign should exclude branded terms, product types, and standard exclusions. Set it up with high priority, a low CPC bid, and the lowest budget. On the other hand, give your high intent campaign low priority, a high CPC bid, and higher budget.

This will cause  all generic and irrelevant searches to be captured by your low intent shopping campaign, letting more specific and lower funnel searches end up in your higher intent campaigns.

Pro tip: automatically add converting search terms from Shopping campaign 1 to your negative keyword list to funnel them to your low funnel campaign.

Graph for Google Ads structure showing low, mid and high intent

#3 Display Remarketing - Split Into:

  • Display Warm Segments
  • Display Hot Segments

Before setting up a display remarketing campaign, it’s important for you to know what your window to conversion is so that you can split into warm & hot segments for personalized messaging.

For instance, if your window to conversion is on average 7 days, your hot audience would include 10 days based segments. But if your window averages 30 days, then your hot segment could include up to 45 days audiences.

Scale Up with Performance Max

Once you have generated enough conversion data, you can switch to Performance Max. What does this mean? Before switching to Performance Max, make sure:

  • You have enhanced conversion tracking set up.
  • You have enough conversion data available (at least 30 conversions in the last 30 days).
  • You have enough budget to achieve at least 30 conversions monthly (an average of 30 conversions every 30 days).

The most used (and proven) Performance Max structures are by profit or by product performance. 

By Profit:

  • Low Margin > higher tROAS
  • Mid Margin
  • High Margin > lower tROAS

By Performance:

  • Bestsellers > higher tROAS
  • Potential
  • Zombies > lower tROAS

Each approach has its pros and cons. To know what works best for you, test extensively because every business is unique. To dive deeper into how to structure your PMax campaigns, check out our Performance Max article.

Now, even if you are switching to PMax, we strongly recommend keeping a fallback shopping campaign. We find that under Performance Max campaigns, a lot of products get no traction – what on ecomm we call “zombie products”. This could happen because your bids are not competitive enough or other products are getting priority.

So, if you rely purely on PMax, you will miss out on many clicks and incremental revenue.

Level Up Your Game with Dynamic Search

Use Dynamic Search based on Product Feed + RSLA to find additional conversions. These are product-level search ads which you can customize with ad copy using Google’s “if” function to build highly relevant ads:

Navigate to your DSA campaign, create a new ad and on your description field hit “{“. Select the field IF > Audience. Select your audience and insert your text for your segment and for the remaining audiences. It should look like this:

You can also add YouTube campaigns for remarketing and prospecting segments. Make sure you have enough budget for this campaign to work.

  • For Remarketing, follow the same rule as for Display and split in Warm & Hot Audiences.
  • For Prospecting, build ad groups based on segments:
    • Affinity
    • In-Market
    • Custom Segments

Overall, try not to overcomplicate things. If it’s hard to keep up with all your campaigns, you might not have the right structure for you. Need help? Rise Marketing Group is here to help with all of your e-commerce marketing needs.

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