Trying to kick remarketing ads? Contributor Andreas Reiffen discusses why you may be addicted to them and explains how KPIs directly aligned with business objectives help avoid the vicious cycle that comes from ROAS-based objectives.
Pay-per-click (PPC) managers love remarketing. At first glance, this makes perfect sense, as it enables marketers to easily improve their return on advertising spend (ROAS) numbers.
But is it really money well spent?
Recently, we performed an audit for a multinational retailer with a specific concern: improving new customer growth. Things developed nicely, there were no performance issues and ROAS more than doubled as spend increased slightly.
But digging a little deeper, we noticed something interesting. Remarketing lists for search audiences (RLSA) traffic had spiked and retargeted website visitors accounted for half of all sales.
That wasn’t all. While ROAS picked up, their new customer rate decreased by almost 50 percent!
Obviously not what finance asked for. This unwelcome reality means a slow growth of new customers leading to limited repeat purchases and shrinking future profits.
So, what does this mean? If you win few new customers, it stands to reason that you can expect fewer repeat customers.
Retargeting known users ostensibly yields great performance. And using RLSA helps marketers reach ROAS targets effortlessly. It looks seriously good on paper, but could it be too good to be true?
How RLSA helps
We set out to discover how much RLSA helps with new customer acquisition and overall incremental revenue — the metrics that truly matter to your business.
retargeting raises another concern: Does RLSA truly have a bottom-line, incremental impact? Ask yourself:
- How many people would have bought my product without seeing the retargeting ad?
- Which portion of my paid performance would have come in through non-paid channels anyway?
- Am I paying for traffic that I might have received without any advertising pressure?
enhanced cost per click (ECPC) against manual bidding. Base bids on RLSA increased by 23 percent against the control group. Compare this to a mere 16 percent increase in non-RLSA cost per clicks. Viewed more closely, this increase came from lower-funnel audiences (such as cart abandoners) which show the best key performance indicators (KPIs).
Effective cost per click is machine-learning-oriented. It optimizes the KPIs you provide via AdWords, and these numbers don’t reflect incrementality. Because of this focus on ROAS, Google tries to achieve what you ask it to do, which, in turn, makes you retarget more and more.
target KPIs, a couple of pointers can help.
- Stay skeptical. If results appear too good to be true, they probably are. This holds especially true when evaluating for ROAS (Remember, it doesn’t consider new customer acquisition or incrementality). Be mindful that you automatically retarget users anyway, even without RLSA.
- Administer an incremental health-check, since appearances can be deceptive. The better the numbers you see, the less incremental they may be. Why not test for yourself? Measure incrementality for RLSA, brand and PPC as a whole.
Why does high ROAS usually mean low incrementality? Because you’re targeting users who already know your shop and are likely to have bought there previously.
These users naturally have the highest conversion rates. But they’re also the ones most likely to return through unpaid channels. So why spend extra budget?
Testing incrementality using Google Analytics
So, what are some best practices for testing the incrementality of RLSA? We recommend using analytics data versus engine data; this controls for the natural cannibalization often found in AdWords.
Step 4: Measure results with a custom report in Analytics
Set the “Primary Dimension” as “User Bucket.” Then, aggregate bucket performance into test groups and compare performance by several KPIs (such as Transactions, Sessions, Users or Page views). The lower the difference between the buckets excluded from AdWords and those that were pushed in AdWords, the lower the incrementality of RLSA.
But while optimizing, it pays to be proactive… think about the next strategic step-change. New, better KPIs offer a perfect example, as they open new room for growth.
The famous management consultant Peter Drucker said something quite applicable to our over-reliance on RLSA:
There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.
Elevating your thinking on measurability and data accuracy creates a healthier and more profitable enterprise and ultimately leaves your campaign efficient and effective.