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3 remarketing tips for Google AdWords

If you’re involved with a commercial website, then you know the majority of your sales aren’t going to come from first-time visitors.

In fact, 96 per cent of shoppers don’t make a purchase during their first visit, Google Inc. product marketing manager Tran Ngo says in a video series aimed at helping marketers get the largest return from their AdWords budget.

“From the moment a person has left your website or abandoned their shopping cart, advertisers should be using display marketing to re-engage those potential customers with tailored messages delivered at the right moment, in the right context,” she says.

Developing a marketing plan aimed at these former buyers or visitors, known as remarketing, is essential if advertisers want users to remember their brands as they browse the Internet, Ngo says.

Here are three tips that can help.

Choose the right remarketing tags for your site

There are three types of tags that you can use to start your remarketing list, Ngo says:

 

 

 

 

Once you have chosen your tags, Ngo says to make sure that you tag both your desktop and mobile site, and, if you have an app, tag that as well.

“A common pitfall that we see a lot of advertisers facing is tagging their site partially, which means they might be missing some of their site visitors from their remarketing lists,” she says.

Create effective remarketing lists

The framework to keep in mind when creating remarketing lists, Ngo says, is the path taken by consumers through your website. At every stage, you’ll have the opportunity to reach viewers who reached one stage, but did not go further, whether they reached your home page, category page, product or offer page, or abandoned their cart.

To create a home page remarketing list, simply go to the audience section of your page’s shared library and create a list where the URL equals your homepage. The same process can be used to create a category marketing list, but with category URLs.

To reach users who have abandoned their carts, you can use custom combinations: select audiences who have visited your shopping cart page and combine it with “none of these audiences” who have visited your purchase confirmation or thank you page.

Another important remarketing category is past customers.

“A big mistake advertisers usually make is that they forget about this list. This may be counter-intuitive – these people just bought your products, why would they be interested in buying again?” Ngo says. “But it’s exactly that fact that they’re familiar with your brand, your site, and sales process that they’ll be more likely to buy again.”

To reach former customers, create a remarketing list for visitors who have reached your purchase confirmation page. You’ll also want to upsell or cross-sell to these customers since they’ve purchased from your site before, Ngo says.

Optimize your remarketing campaign settings

“Reach and timing matter in remarketing,” Ngo says. “The more people you reach, the more chances you get to reconnect with your past site visitors, and offer them compelling ads and offers regardless of their context and location.”

She outlines three ways AdWords users can do so:

While implementing remarketing lists can be a boon to advertisers, Ngo also recommends limiting the number of remarketing lists created: after all, fewer lists means more users in each, and that will make optimization easier without losing any remarketing benefits.

You can watch Ngo’s video series below.

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