About one-click target ROAS experiments for Shopping

Target ROAS experiments for Shopping let you test target ROAS against your standard Shopping Campaigns using manual CPC bidding and measure the impact. The experiment splits your budget between the experiment and the original campaign, which is the most reliable way to remove any bias and seasonality from the experiment.

When you're finished with your experiment, you can apply the experiment directly to your original campaign. Target ROAS experiments are only available for standard Shopping campaigns using manual CPC bidding.

Before you begin

Before you start your target ROAS experiment for Shopping, you need at least 15 conversions in the past 30 days. This will allow you to directly compare the performance of that target ROAS bid strategy against your original campaign. If you want to specify a ROAS target, you should keep it close to historical average and then change it to the new ROAS target after a week or two. This is to ensure that the campaign gets enough traffic to learn from in the first few weeks.

You should pick a test window between 30 and 60 days based on the length of your average conversion delay. If your average conversion delay is less than 7 days, you can test for 30 days. If your average conversion delay is more than 21 days you should test for 60 days. Target ROAS experiment reporting will show 95% confidence intervals to help you determine when the experiment results are statistically significant.

Note: You can pick your own confidence intervals (80% is the default confidence interval) and be able to understand your experiment metrics better with dynamic confidence reporting.

Create a target ROAS experiment

  1. In your Google Ads account, click the Campaigns icon Campaigns icon.
  2. Click the Campaigns drop-down in the section menu.
  3. Click Campaigns.
  4. Click Settings tab on the top.
  5. Select the campaign that you want to test.
  6. Under 'Bidding and budget', in the 'One-click target ROAS' section, click Try target ROAS to optimise for conversion value. You’ll see information about your experiment based on the original campaign and parameters based on experiment best practices.
  7. Click Change options if you want to change any of the following settings:
    1. Name: Give your target ROAS experiment a name.
    2. Start date: Date that the experiment is created.
    3. End date: Recommended number of days to test.
      Note: If your campaign tends to have a long conversion delay, you may want to test for longer than 30 days.
    4. Experiment split (50%): Budget split between experiment and original campaign. We recommend that you don’t change this.
    5. Target ROAS (%): Recommended target ROAS is calculated from the last 28 days average ROAS, excluding most recent days due to conversion delay. If you want to set a different target ROAS, make sure that you set an initial target that is in range with historical ROAS.
    Note: If you make any changes to the original campaign, they won't be reflected in the experiment. You must manually make changes to the experiment settings or create a new experiment.
  8. Click Create. The new experiment will be listed in the Experiments page under the 'All experiments' section. You can manage your experiment: edit, run, pause or delete. Learn more about how to Find and edit your experiment.

Make changes to your experiment

You can make changes to your original campaign and your experiment, but be aware that significant changes can make it difficult to compare. If you make any structure campaign changes on the original campaign (for example, adding a new ad group, remove or add products) these changes will not be automatically applied to the experiment. Remember to also make these same changes to the experiment arm for a clean apples to apples comparison.

Apply your ROAS experiment

After a few weeks have passed, you should review your experiment. You can adjust your target ROAS based on desired results:

Change your Target ROAS to add more conversion value or more efficiency.

Want more conversion value? Want higher ROAS?

If volume of sales is your goal, and you want to drive more conversion value, lower your ROAS target.

Lowering your ROAS target will allow target ROAS to enter more auctions and drive more conversion value. This might be at the expense of efficiency.

If efficiency and higher ROAS is your goal, raise your ROAS target.

Raising your ROAS target will limit target ROAS to entering auctions that Google believes are more likely to lead to a conversion. This means higher ROAS, but less volume.

If you're happy with the current level of efficiency and/or volume, leave the ROAS target as is. When you're ready to apply your experiment, read Apply your experiment.

Related links

Was this helpful?

How can we improve it?
Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu
15564704130762517461
true
Search Help Centre
true
true
true
true
true
73067
false
false
false