As marketers, we know the path to conversions is not direct and often there are multiple touches from the advertiser to the customers. This means as advertisers, we need to look at the entire purchase experience. As PPC managers, we should examine how other channels are impactful on what we do.
Consider a recently published report by Google, "The Customer Journey to Online Purchase." In this report Google reviewed 36,000 Google Analytics accounts with e-commerce tracking enabled, profiles whose owners have authorized sharing. Conversion metrics are derived from the Multi-Channel Funnels reports in Google Analytics.
Google lined up the traditional purchase funnel to "assists" and "last interactions" in the purchase path where assisting channels are awareness builders and a customer is considering and researching options prior to purchase. The "last interaction" channels are the "last click" where the customer finally converts.
Likewise in PPC, we see search activity vary depending on the place in the purchase funnel. During the awareness and consideration phase we see keyword searches are of a more general nature, whereas customers will search more specifically and for brand terms as they near the time to buy. All of this can give clues as to a customer's place in the purchase cycle and how to tailor our PPC strategy to reach her.
How do you determine your customers' purchase path from Google Analytics and AdWords?
In Google Analytics, find Multi-Channel Funnels reports under Conversions in the left-hand-side navigation.

In AdWords, find it in the Tools and Analysis tab under Conversions, then select Search Funnels on the lower left.

Within both of these platforms there are numerous valuable reports.
Google Analytics Multi-Channel Funnels Reports
The main difference in the reporting from Google Analytics to AdWords is that Google Analytics will show the big picture and include other channels in addition to AdWords. This presents the opportunity to examine how PPC compares to other channels and how the channels rank in the overall picture. In the screenshot below, we see top paths by channel, whereas AdWords top-level information on this starts at the campaign level and drills down.
AdWords Search Funnels Reports
Path length. This report shows how many clicks or impressions occurred before conversion. In the example below, we see the majority of conversions occurred from one click at approximately 64 percent, but about a third of the conversions came from two or more clicks.
Much of the data is available from the campaign level down to the keywords level. It's important to become familiar with what the data means to determine how you can best use it.
Conclusions
A simplified conclusion and action plan for an advertiser may look like this:
The customers tend to convert in one day or less (75 percent) and the majority (64 percent) convert in less than two clicks, showing a short sales cycle. Removing any barriers to conversion on landing pages and focusing on direct response offers in ad copy will continue to support these trends and ramp it up.Shoppers convert most often from paid search, and within paid search, from Product Listing Ads and paid brand terms. Squeeze every opportunity out of the Product Listing Ads by optimizing and refining feeds and campaigns to capitalize on the existing positive trend.However, we can see that more general keywords have assisted in both clicks and impressions to drive conversions to the brand keywords. This may be an opportunity to expand into keywords likely to drive in "assists." We can test various themes, then check back to see if there was any impact in the purchase funnel. Optimize current campaigns by tossing out keywords that haven't added any value over time.Each advertiser will have different challenges and opportunities, but clearly define those and examine the purchase funnel as it's applicable. The data presented there will shed actionable insight into AdWords campaigns.
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