Why Should Anyone Click Your Google Shopping Ad?
-
Date Published9 October 2025
When someone searches your product type in Google, they’re met with an aisle of near-identical options. If you sell desks, it’s you vs. hundreds of desks. So… why should they click yours?
After optimising Shopping and Performance Max (PMax) campaigns with millions in ad spend, we’ve noticed the brands that win do a few simple things differently—and they do them consistently.
Below is exactly what we implement for top-performing Shopify brands, why it works, and how to apply it in your own account today.
Problem: Product titles sound nice… but don’t match what people actually type.
Example: A client listed “Modern Computer Desk”. It read well, but it was invisible among lookalikes.
What we did: Checked Campaigns → Insights & reports → Search terms and found the real money phrase: “adjustable desk for home office.” We added that exact phrase to the product title.
Result: Within two weeks, click-throughs jumped—and conversions followed.
Do this now (5-minute task):
Tip: Prioritise products with high impression share but low CTR. Title relevance is often the culprit.
Problem: One campaign for every product. One budget to cover “rent, groceries, and holidays.” Something suffers.
Why it matters: Google’s algorithm will push spend to a handful of easy winners while great products stay unseen.
Fix: Split campaigns to control where money goes and what signals Google learns from.
Proven structures:
For big catalogues (1,000s of SKUs): Start with Branded vs. Non-Branded; add Category if search intent (from Step 1) shows clear differences.
Why it works: Cleaner signals, steadier CPA/ROAS, easier scaling.
Do this now:
You don’t need to be the cheapest—you need to look competitive where it matters.
Where to look: In Google Merchant Center → Products, there’s a Sale price suggestions column. Google runs simulations using your ad performance, price sensitivity over the last 7 days, and market data to suggest which items benefit most from a price change.
A fast, profitable test:
Note: If you change the price on-site, the product page must reflect the discount. Promotions help you test ad price perception without tanking margins across every channel.
If you sell in Europe, route your Shopping ads through a Comparison Shopping Service (CSS) partner. You’ll typically pay ~20% less per click—baked into the auction after Google’s EU fine. Same campaigns, same data, different entry point.
Compounding impact: Spend £20k/month? That’s roughly £4k in extra clicks—every month.
Tools we like: We often pair DataFeedWatch for feed management with a CSS partner to claim the discount.
Do this now:
Average advertisers glance at ROAS once a month and “go with their gut.” Top brands label the account so spend flows automatically to what works.
Create dynamic custom labels for:
How to use labels:
Outcome: Your account shifts from reactive to proactive. Every pound knows where it’s going and why.
If you’d like help applying this to your Shopify store—title rewrites, smart structures, promotions, CSS setup, and data-driven labelling—book a call with Marketing XP. We’ll show you what’s working right now and build a plan that protects margin while you scale.
When someone searches your product type in Google, they’re met with an aisle of near-identical options. If you sell desks, it’s you vs. hundreds of desks. So… why should they click yours?
After optimising Shopping and Performance Max (PMax) campaigns with millions in ad spend, we’ve noticed the brands that win do a few simple things differently—and they do them consistently.
Below is exactly what we implement for top-performing Shopify brands, why it works, and how to apply it in your own account today.
Problem: Product titles sound nice… but don’t match what people actually type.
Example: A client listed “Modern Computer Desk”. It read well, but it was invisible among lookalikes.
What we did: Checked Campaigns → Insights & reports → Search terms and found the real money phrase: “adjustable desk for home office.” We added that exact phrase to the product title.
Result: Within two weeks, click-throughs jumped—and conversions followed.
Do this now (5-minute task):
Tip: Prioritise products with high impression share but low CTR. Title relevance is often the culprit.
Problem: One campaign for every product. One budget to cover “rent, groceries, and holidays.” Something suffers.
Why it matters: Google’s algorithm will push spend to a handful of easy winners while great products stay unseen.
Fix: Split campaigns to control where money goes and what signals Google learns from.
Proven structures:
For big catalogues (1,000s of SKUs): Start with Branded vs. Non-Branded; add Category if search intent (from Step 1) shows clear differences.
Why it works: Cleaner signals, steadier CPA/ROAS, easier scaling.
Do this now:
You don’t need to be the cheapest—you need to look competitive where it matters.
Where to look: In Google Merchant Center → Products, there’s a Sale price suggestions column. Google runs simulations using your ad performance, price sensitivity over the last 7 days, and market data to suggest which items benefit most from a price change.
A fast, profitable test:
Note: If you change the price on-site, the product page must reflect the discount. Promotions help you test ad price perception without tanking margins across every channel.
If you sell in Europe, route your Shopping ads through a Comparison Shopping Service (CSS) partner. You’ll typically pay ~20% less per click—baked into the auction after Google’s EU fine. Same campaigns, same data, different entry point.
Compounding impact: Spend £20k/month? That’s roughly £4k in extra clicks—every month.
Tools we like: We often pair DataFeedWatch for feed management with a CSS partner to claim the discount.
Do this now:
Average advertisers glance at ROAS once a month and “go with their gut.” Top brands label the account so spend flows automatically to what works.
Create dynamic custom labels for:
How to use labels:
Outcome: Your account shifts from reactive to proactive. Every pound knows where it’s going and why.
If you’d like help applying this to your Shopify store—title rewrites, smart structures, promotions, CSS setup, and data-driven labelling—book a call with Marketing XP. We’ll show you what’s working right now and build a plan that protects margin while you scale.