How to Sell on Google Shopping: A Beginner’s Guide

As an online seller, your ultimate goal is to attract new buyers without driving up your marketing costs. You’re already grid posting and tweeting for traffic — but did you know you can attract real customers by getting your product in front of shoppers right when they’re looking for it?

Enter Google Shopping. This small but mighty tab on the Google Search Result Page showcases sellers’ products from around the globe, specifically ones related to your searches.

Being the largest search engine on the internet, Google is the ideal platform to show off your product to buyers, especially when their interest is already piqued. According to a Think With Google survey, 55 percent of people search for products to buy on Google.

In this article, we’ll take an in-depth look at Google Shopping. What it is, how it works, and how you can use it to drive your sales.

Сontents:

  1. What is Google Shopping?
  2. How Google Shopping Works
  3. Why Use Google Shopping?
  4. How to Sell on Google Shopping
  5. Everything You Need to Know About Google Merchant Center
  6. How to Set Up a Google Shopping Product Feed
  7. Paid Campaigns in Google Shopping
  8. What are Smart Campaigns?
  9. Automated Google Shopping
  10. How Much Does it Cost to Advertise on Google Shopping?
  11. How to Optimize Your Google Shopping Listing

How to sell online
Tips from e-commerce experts for small business owners and aspiring entrepreneurs.
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What is Google Shopping?

Google Shopping is a dedicated shopping search engine powered by Google. Shoppers can use it to search for products from online merchants, compare prices, and purchase them safely.

These search results also show up in the form of image ads when someone enters a product-related word or phrase into the search box. This makes it easy for shoppers to compare offers from different vendors.

Confused? Let’s take a look at these example search results for the term “speakers”:

Google Shopping widget is always at the top of SERP

See the “Shopping” tab next to “Images” right below the search box? Clicking it will take you to the dedicated Google Shopping search at Google.com/shopping.

If you click any of the search results, you’ll be directed to the merchant’s site.

How Google Shopping Works

Retailers list their products on Google Shopping so they show up in their search results. Google promises that putting products on its platform will help “Reach hundreds of millions of people who do shopping-related searches on Google each day” and increase revenue by 33%.

In fact, you, the seller, can upload your entire inventory and start shopping campaigns, to maximize your chances of showing up for the right buyer.

Here are some highlights of the Google Shopping feature:

You can learn more about Google Shopping campaigns by listening to this podcast:

Why Use Google Shopping?

There are three main reasons why Google Shopping should be part of your traffic acquisition strategy:

1. Search volume

With over 3.5 billion searches per day, Google is the most visited website on the Internet.

Over half of these searches are for products. Your store can’t afford to miss out on a Google Shopping opportunity.

2. More clicks

The top organic result (i.e., non-paid page) in Search Engine Results Pages (called SERPs) has an average CTR of 31%. The second and third results get around 14% and 9% of clicks, respectively.

However, since Google Shopping results are displayed before organic results, they get a bulk of the clicks for each search. The fact that you see a picture of the product and its price also drives up the clicks for each displayed product.

In fact, for most popular product queries, you can’t see any organic results above the fold. But you can see a whole bunch of Google Shopping results.


If you want targeted traffic from product queries, you’ll want to advertise on Google Shopping

3. Targeted traffic

As an online seller, you don’t want just any old web traffic; you want traffic that results in sales!

This is what makes Google Shopping so attractive for e-commerce stores.

When a shopper searches for “speakers under $100”, they aren’t casually browsing. The search’s specific terms probably mean that they are actively looking for “speakers” that cost under $100.

That means that listing your products on Google Shopping gives you access to far more targeted traffic than any other medium.

3 Ways to Sell on Google Shopping

Adding your products to Google Shopping has always been free. But showcasing them effectively to online shoppers costs money. Or at least, it used to. Until recently, the tool used the same approach to searches as Google Adwords. The products that were listed for free appeared in search results, but below the paid ads.

In April 2020, Google changed its policy and began to balance the top spots between promoted products and those listed for free, giving sellers a more equal opportunity for exposure.

Recently, Google announced that the sellers that participate in the “Buy on Google” checkout experience would no longer have to pay commission on transactions.

As a result, online stores have selling opportunities through Google Shopping, no matter their budget and business size.

Free listing on Google Shopping

Yes, Google Shopping is free. You can upload your products to the Google Merchant Center and have them listed in the Google Shopping Tab.

Start by signing up for Google’s Merchant Center. This will enable you to manage your listings and upload your products manually.

You’ll have to enter your website URL, your store name, and your country of operation. After entering these details, Google will ask you to upload a file to your server to verify site ownership.


Identify yourself! You can edit this information later, by the way.

Getting your product to Google Shopping is an excellent opportunity for your business, but does it give you enough exposure to expect a significant spike in sales? Probably not.

Unfortunately, paid ads haven’t gone anywhere, and they still usually hold the top spots for product results.

To avoid frustration, treat free Google listings as the first step on your Google Advertising path. List your products for free and monitor their performance. This data will help you to reveal their potential and focus on the most profitable products with paid campaigns.

2. Paid advertising on Google Shopping

Paid Google Smart Shopping ads appear in front of potential and existing customers in the Google Search Network (next to search results, on Google Maps, Google Shopping, Google Images), Youtube, Gmail, and Display Network. The Google Smart Shopping service automates your bids and ad placements using machine learning; it figures out the best time and place to show ads to your potential and existing customers.

Note that Google Shopping integration doesn’t support Google beta countries. You need to sell to one of these supported countries. Your store should also meet Google Shopping Policies.

3. Automated Google Shopping ads with Ecwid

Setting up Google Shopping involves a lot of steps: setting up an account, waiting for approval, structuring campaigns, adding negative keywords, optimizing titles, images, and prices, troubleshooting if something goes wrong.

Ecwid wants to help you sell more in less time — which is why we launched a new service for all merchants: Automated Google Shopping! Now you can delegate the entire process to our professionals and keep your focus on selling.

To start selling on Google Shopping for free with Ecwid, you don’t need a Google Merchant account. You don’t need a Google Ads account. You don’t even need an e-commerce website. We’ll create all the necessary Google accounts and connect them to the store. And we’ll generate a valid product feed, sync it with Google Merchant Center, and keep it up to date.

Everything You Need to Know About Google Merchant Center

Google Merchant Center is a cloud-based service by Google that stores and manages information about your products in one place, distributing and syncing this information across Google services (surfaces).

To start selling your products in Google Shopping organic listings, you’ll need to create a Google Merchant Center account and upload all your products (with images and descriptions) using a product feed.

Without this step, selling on Google Shopping is impossible. GMC also verifies your website ownership, calculates your taxes, and estimates the buyers’ shipping costs. The Merchant Center is free to use, whether you’re running Google Ad campaigns or not.

Uploading products to Merchant Center

There’re several ways to get your products to Google Merchant Center:

Integration. Most e-commerce platforms, like Ecwid, have direct integration with the Merchant Center to upload your products and synchronize your inventory.

Product feed. This is a file that contains all the necessary information about your products, their categorization, and their image locations. The product feed can be composed manually or automatically. This means you can create a file listing of all the information by yourself, or you can download the feed from your online store, if the platform allows it.

You have several ways to maintain your Merchant Center inventory using a product feed:


Choose the method that is easier for you to maintain

Here are the Product Feed templates provided by Google:

Local Promotion with Surfaces across Google

The Google Merchant Center allows physical store owners to showcase and sell products to local shoppers across Google services (local shoppers meaning those who reside near the seller geographically). This system is called “Surfaces across Google.”

The “Surfaces” include:

(availability of listing types for each Google surface varies by country. Learn more.)

To take advantage of free listings on Google surfaces, the businesses have to opt-in to the program in the Merchant Center.

Click Growth and then Manage programs in the left navigation menu. Then, click the Surfaces across Google program card, and follow the instructions.

Pro tip!

Google advises to create a separate feed for your local listing and upload it daily.

“Shopping Actions” in Google Merchant Center

In the same list of the programs, you will stumble upon another option — Shopping Actions. What’s that?

Google Shopping Actions is a program that enables merchants to sell products across Google services by letting Google directly accept payments. This way, buyers won’t have to visit your store and will complete the purchases right in the Google Shopping tab.

To denote the products that are available to purchase from the shopping tab, Google shows a shopping cart icon on listings from retailers that participate in Google Shopping Actions. Google also has separate “Buy on Google” filters on mobile and desktop.

Retailers of all sizes can sell their products directly on Google, with zero Google commission fees, through the “Buy on Google” checkout experience. Retailers can work with their own third-party providers, starting with PayPal for payment processing and more.

Here’s how Shopping Actions works:

  1. A shopper finds your Shopping Actions listing;
  2. The shopper completes the purchase using “But on Google”;
  3. Google collects the full price, adds taxes and any shipping charges;
  4. Google sends the order to you in Google Merchant Center;
  5. Google sends you the money;
  6. You pack and ship the product to the customer.

The Shopping Actions program is currently only available in the United States and France. But it’s going to expand significantly in 2021.

Read more about how to participate in Google Actions for free in Google Help Center.

Tracking Efficiency in Google Merchant Center

Merchant Center has a built-in reporting system that displays both paid and unpaid campaigns. However, the internal analysis won’t take you further than an ad click that sends the customer to your website.

If you want to sync the Merchant Center to your website sessions, and find out whether that click leads to a purchase or not, you will need to use Google Analytics.

Sounds easy, right? Sorry to disappoint you. GA treats incoming sessions from Google Shopping as “google/organic,” making it impossible to detach them from the rest of their regular search sessions.

Fortunately, there’s a way to work this issue around — UTM tags. You can tag your product links right in the feed or using Feed Rules in Google Merchant Center. In Google Analytics, make sure to uncheck the manual tagging override in the Advanced Settings option of the Property settings.


Uncheck the manual tagging override in the Advanced Settings option of the Property settings to track Google Shopping conversions

Still confused? These articles can help you out:

The cost of using the Merchant Center

Nothing! You heard us, the Google Merchant Center is free to use. But running ad campaigns will cost you money. Continue reading to find out how much.

Before Uploading Products to Google Shopping

Before you upload your product feed to Google Merchant Center, you need to make sure that your store meets the Google Merchant Center requirements.

Get your store ready

Accurate contact information. You need to display accurate contact information on your store website, including a physical address, a phone number, and/or an email address.

Refund Policy and Terms of Service. Ensure that you have a clear and easy to find Refund Policy and the Terms of Service page on your store website.

Secure checkout process. Ensure that your website is SSL-protected and operates through a secure connection (https://).

Language and currency. When submitting your product data to Google Merchant Center, you need to use the language and currency of your target country. Check the list of currencies and languages by country if you are unsure what language and currency you are supposed to use.

Shipping and tax settings. Your Google Merchant Center account must have the same shipping and tax (US only) settings as you have in your Ecwid store. This way, customers see the exact price they’ll have to pay, including the shipping and tax fees, on your Google Shopping Ads.

You can determine how to set up shipping and taxes in your Google Merchant Center in these guides: Set up shipping, Set up taxes (US only).

Verify the ownership of your website

Before uploading your product data to Google Merchant Center, you are required to verify the ownership of your website and prove that you are an authorized owner of it.

If you have Ecwid installed on your website, please perform the following steps to verify your website in Google.
To claim your Ecwid Instant Site domain, follow the guide’s steps: Verify Ecwid Instant Site in Google.

How to Set-up a Product Feed in Google Merchant Center

There are several ways to add your products to Google Shopping:

DIY for the win

Google provides a detailed Onboarding Guide on how to get your Merchant Center ready for action. But here are the highlights:

Stage 1. Business settings. You will need to provide your business information, configure checkout preferences (check out on your website, on Google, at your local store), associate your account with your website platform, and choose email preferences.

Stage 2. Inventory panel. You’ll then upload the feed and see how your products will look in Google Shopping.

Stage 3. Finalize the setup. Add your tax information, set up shipping, verify your website, confirm that your website and URL belong to you, sign up for Google Surfaces and Shopping Actions.

Stage 4. Start promoting. Create paid ads, communicate with customers, run sales, trace conversion, optimize performance.

As soon as you access the Merchant Center, the onboarding process will help you set up your account and get your products online. However, if you need more info about the process or the benefits of specific options, visit the Google Merchant Center Guide.

Download it with Ecwid

If you’re looking for a quicker setup, you can use a ready XML feed file with your product data, upload it to Google Merchant Center, and build your ad campaigns from there.

To generate a product feed for Google Shopping:

  1. Go to your Ecwid Control Panel → Other Channels → Google Shopping.
  2. Click Generate Feed.
  3. Select the Marketplace category where you want to submit your items.
  4. Choose the Product condition for your goods.
  5. Click Save.

We all love magic buttons!

Ecwid generates the feed within seconds. When the feed is complete, you will see a feed URL that you can copy to your clipboard. You’ll need to submit this feed URL in Google Merchant Center.


You dont even need two hands to do this

To upload the feed to Google Merchant Center:

  1. Sign in to your Google Merchant Center account.
  2. Navigate to Products → Feeds.
  3. Click the New feed (Plus) icon.
  4. Select the Target country and Language and click Continue.
  5. Assign the Feed name and select the Scheduled fetch upload. Click Continue.
  6. Provide the Feed file name. Do not use the Feed URL for this field.
  7. Set the Fetch frequency and the Fetch time. Keep in mind that Ecwid regenerates the feed every 5 hours.
  8. Set your Timezone.
  9. Provide the Feed URL that you copied in your Ecwid Control Panel. Click Continue.

Give Google a few minutes to fetch and process your feed. After that, you will be able to view the feed properties and check for errors. Check out the Troubleshooting section to see common feed errors and learn how to fix them.

To see the full instruction on uploading an Ecwid generated product feed to the Google Merchant Center, visit our Help Desk.

To start advertising on Google Shopping, you will need to connect your existing Merchant Center account with a Google Ads account.

If you don’t have one, what are you waiting for! Create one by visiting the Google Ads web page.

Pro tip!

On the following screen, choose to Switch to Expert Mode to see more options. Select Create an account without a campaign to save time on this stage.

When you have things set up in Google Ads, go to the Merchant Center.

  1. Find Set up Shopping Ads on the dashboard and click Continue.
  2. Scroll down to Google Ads account and click Link your account.
  3. In the list of available accounts, click LINK.
  4. Return to Google Ads account and refresh the page.
  5. In the Bell icon on your top right, find the Merchant Center’s notification and click View.
  6. You will see the message about Merchant Center attempting to link to Google Ads account with the status Pending. Click VIEW DETAILS.
  7. In the open request details, choose the option APPROVE.
  8. Return to the Merchant Center and also refresh the page.
  9. Done!

Create your first Google Shopping campaign

With the Merchant Center and Google Ads accounts set up and linked, you’re ready to start your first promotion campaign on Google Shopping!

Advertising is a fascinating but complicated world, involving numerous settings, options, and opportunities to mix and match these settings.

Sounds like a lot? Well, we’ve provided a shortcut:

We recommend watching a comprehensive video tutorial by Darrel Wilson, who teaches people how to make websites (mostly on WordPress) with no coding skills by creating free tutorials. Check out this one about Google Shopping tutorials (Skip to 28:47).

What is a Smart Campaign in Google Shopping

The Google Smart Shopping service uses machine learning to automate your bids and ad placements to maximize your advertising investment. It uses your product feed and other advertisers’ experience to display your ads at the best time and place to potential customers.

Smart Shopping program combines all relevant information about your product, digital assets (like a website), and your business. The program then analyzes it to automatically create a variety of ads across Google networks. It tests different combinations of the image and text to find the most relevant ads with the highest efficiency achieved across the Google Search Network, the Google Display Network, YouTube, and Gmail.

Smart Shopping campaigns can track events such as online purchases, signups, purchases from phone calls, and store visits as conversions for further optimization. The system continually tries to maximize conversion value for the daily budget you set, automatically.

Smart Shopping campaigns feature product shopping ads, local inventory ads, and display ads (including dynamic remarketing and dynamic prospecting).

Create your first Smart Shopping campaign

If you don’t know how to start a Smart Shopping campaign, here’s a simple step-by-step published in the Google Support Center:

Important: Each campaign can only be linked to one Merchant Center account and can only have one country of sale.

Important: Smart Shopping campaigns take priority over other Standard Shopping and display remarketing campaigns for the same products. To retain your overall spending, it is recommended that you set a budget that is equal to the sum of those other campaigns.

Important: Unless you have very different ROAS goals or budgets for specific products or groups of products, it is recommended to include all of your products in a single campaign.

Important: These assets will be used to create ads to show users who have visited your website but have not yet expressed interest in a specific product. Once user interest has been indicated, relevant data will be pulled from your product feed to create an ad.

Congratulations! Your first Smart Shopping campaign is ready. Give it some time to learn and optimize to your budget, products, and goals.

Read: How Soundwave Art Earned 415% Return with Google Smart Shopping and Ecwid.

4 easy ways to maximize Smart Shopping campaign profitability (by Google)

1. Focus on revenue

If your primary goal is to maximize conversion or revenue, create a separate Smart Shopping campaign for each product type you have: one each for sneakers, t-shirts, and sweaters, for example.

2. Prioritize inventory

Having individual Smart Shopping campaigns for different product types, you can easily define the Smart Shopping budget shares for each of the campaigns. Boost the most profitable campaigns by giving them the largest share of your total budget.

You can also create a special campaign for products that are available for a limited period, like the Holiday season. The Smart Shopping campaign algorithm will then prioritize it during the peak period.

3. Increase profitability

If some of your products are more profitable than others (those with higher margin), you can create a separate campaign for those products. It’s a simple way to make a Smart Shopping campaign more efficient and profitable. Google advises using Custom labels to mark the most profitable products and to make it easier to unite them into a separate campaign later.

Don’t forget to decrease the target ROAS (return on ad spent) to generate more demand for your product and increase profitability.

4. Maximize reach with releases

If you’re launching a new product (or even a new brand), you want to get the word out as quickly and effectively as possible. In this case, you might want to launch a campaign for the new product(s) with low ROAS. This way, the ad’s reach will grow significantly, allowing more shoppers to see your exciting product(s).

Watch the following demonstration (1:12)

Cut Corners: Automated Google Shopping Ads (hands-free money-making)

You can save plenty of time with ad campaign management by enabling the automated Google Shopping for your store. You can delegate the entire feed submission and management process to professionals and focus on fulfillment.

A handy integration of Ecwid and Google (powered by Kliken) can help you run hands-free promotion of your products with Google Shopping ads, and find more customers across Google.

Check out what we have to offer.

With Automated Google Shopping, you won’t have to go through the trouble of: setting up an account, waiting for approval, structuring campaigns, adding negative keywords, optimizing titles, images, and prices, troubleshooting if something goes wrong — we’ll do everything for you.

Just select the right package and you’re ready to launch a low-effort Google Shopping campaign:

Free
  • Submission of free product listings across Google Surfaces.
  • The free package can be used only on paid Ecwid plans.
Basic $150/mo
  • Free product listings across Google Surfaces.
  • Paid Google Smart Shopping ads with a monthly advertising budget of $150.
Essential $300/mo
  • Free product listings across Google Surfaces.
  • Paid Google Smart Shopping ads with a monthly advertising budget of $300.
Premium $500/mo
  • Free product listings across Google Surfaces.
  • Paid Google Smart Shopping ads with a monthly advertising budget of $500.

There is also the monthly automation fee of $20 that comes with the packages and covers the creation and management of your Google Merchant Center for Free Listings/Google Smart Shopping as well as daily feed updates, smart feed optimization, adding eligible products on Google Surfaces, and unlimited Smart Shopping campaigns with no management fees.

The setup of Google Shopping ads is fully automated by Ecwid and Kliken, and takes a few clicks:

  1. From your Ecwid admin, go to Marketing → Google Ads.
  2. In the Automated Google ads section, click Enable.
  3. Pick a country (you can only select one country per campaign) and a language (your ads will be shown to people who have chosen this language in their browser settings):
  4. Click Continue to Categories. Pick the right Google category for your store to make sure your ad shows up in the right search results. Then select the condition of your products (New, Refurbished, or Used).
  5. Click Continue.
  6. Choose what products you want to advertise. If you don’t use categories in your Ecwid store, all products will be automatically selected for ads. If you want to promote specific products only, put them in categories in your store first, and then select these categories for the campaign:
  7. Click Continue to Store Review.
  8. If any errors are indicated, click View Details and follow the instructions on fixing them, then click the I fixed this, Refresh my store button.
  9. Click Continue to Preview to see how the ads will look like.
  10. Click Get my store on Google Shopping.
  11. And voila! Your ads have been created!

It usually takes between 3-5 days for the ads to go through Google’s approval process. After that, they will show in relevant searches to shoppers browsing on Google.

Want more expertise to guide you? Listen to our podcast episode with Ricardo Lasa. Lasa is the founder of Klicken, and a mastermind of the Ecwid-Google Shopping integration that made it possible for Ecwid to save so much time on Google Shopping management.

How Much Does it Cost to Run Ads on Google Shopping?

The answer is simple: as much as you want to spend.

Google gives you maximum flexibility with the budget as it doesn’t have a minimum limit for bids and daily budgets. You can launch a campaign with as low as $0.01 for a click. Though, we doubt this is the most effective way to bring in revenue.

Some stats: The cost of a click for the Google Shopping ads is usually below $1. The average small business advertising budget is somewhere between $1,000-3,000/mo. That only takes into account the ads on Google. Some brands hire experts to run and optimize their campaigns, report efficiency, and search for opportunities. Those services may cost $350 to $5000 or 12-30 percent of ad spend per month.

Based on this, your minimum monthly Google Shopping budget might be around $1,350 if you’re planning on using outside help.

Predictable pricing and results

There’s a way to evade uncertainty with ads campaigns and know the process instead of guessing at it  Automated Google Shopping with Ecwid.

The benefits:

Start selling on Google

How to Optimize Your Google Shopping Listing

You’ve now added your products to Google Shopping and probably launched your first ad campaign. But there’s still one piece of the Google Shopping puzzle left: optimization.

Optimizing your Google Shopping listing will help you get the most out of your ads. Remember: Google Shopping ads work like any conventional AdWords ad. Your CPC (Cost Per Click) is decided not only by your bid but also by your CTR, target ROAS, ad relevance, and more.

Let’s take a look at what you can do to optimize your Google Shopping listing.

Create an informative listing title

Your listing title is the primary source of information your shoppers have. So it’s a must to create titles that inform shoppers about your product and meet their expectations. For example, a customer searching for a specific brand will expect to see brand names in titles. If they don’t, they might skip over your listing.

Pro-tip: Check out your competitor’s listings to figure out what potential buyers look for.

Also, make sure to follow good SEO practices. The general rule of thumb is to place important keywords at the beginning, and less relevant terms at the end of the title. Google weighs initial keywords far more heavily.

See an example with “blue patagonia jacket” below:


You can see that the brand name “Patagonia” is more critical for titles than the color

Generally, a good listing format to follow is brand → gender → product → color → size. Only switch up this order when search results aren’t filtered by brand first.

Add special offers

Special offers help shoppers distinguish your listing from others. They are displayed by simply adding text at the bottom of your listing to catch your shopper’s eye. Offers tempt users to click-through to learn more about a special deal.

Take a look at the product listings for “high heels wedding”:

 

You can create an offer in a variety of ways. For example: free shipping, coupon codes, or contest giveaways (on your site). Remember to add an expiration date on your offers to create a sense of urgency.

Add reviews

Reviews have become an integral part of the online shopping experience. Studies show that shoppers read reviews before making a purchase. Adding reviews to your listing is a great way to improve your offer as they serve as proof of quality right on your listing.

Reviews allow you to communicate that your product is high-quality and your service impeccable. This qualitative validation can cause shoppers to choose your listing over others.

Think about it: if you’re  looking to buy a juicer, you’re probably going to click the first listing you see that has many positive reviews.

Keep in mind that reviews are only shown on listings from advertisers that share all of their reviews with Google (both good and bad). You need a minimum of three reviews to get the rating stars under your listing.

Another cool thing about reviews is that they have built-in search and can answer shoppers’ questions. Google gives visitors hints about what they can ask. Answering possible questions in reviews is an excellent trick to building trust between your brand and potential customers.

 

Add better pictures

Your product images are the first impression shoppers have of your product. For this reason, take your time in selecting the right image. Think about a picture that will motivate a potential buyer to click-through to your product.

Here are some image tips to help you pick the best pic:

Use white backgrounds only. Dark backgrounds, watermarks, and logos don’t work. Though your product may look amazing in these variations, don’t use them on your listing. Learn the most common mistakes that may cost you sales.

Think diagonally. Google Shopping displays product images in a square frame. Most listings don’t make efficient use of this space, and display products from a side view. This reduces the level of detail shoppers can see, which might make them click elsewhere.

Place your products diagonally. This way, you can provide more detail and fill the available space much more efficiently.

Check out the difference in detail between a side and diagonal view.

Use your own images. Stock images are a no-go. Using your own photos sets you apart from the sea of stock photos, and lets you flex your creative muscles and show off your photography chops.

For example, you can show a product from a different angle or add post-production touch-ups that make your product stand out.

Over to You

Google Shopping is a powerful way to reach new buyers when they are looking for a new brand or product to try out. Google’s immense reach and targeting capabilities make it a beneficial sales channel, and a great place to find customers.

However, achieving the results you expect will take time, patience, and hard work (unless you choose to automate Google Shopping).

Make sure to follow Google’s set guidelines and optimize your listings, and you’ll soon have shoppers flockling to your store, ready to buy.

 

About The Author
Max has been working in the ecommerce industry for the last six years helping brands to establish and level-up content marketing and SEO. Despite that, he has experience with entrepreneurship. He is a fiction writer in his free time.

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