Digital ad spending in the U.S. is forecast to top $244 billion in 2023, accounting for nearly 72% of all advertising categories. It’s a significant expense, so you should be optimizing your campaigns for peak performance.
Measuring the Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) is one of the most important marketing metrics to check whether your advertising efforts are working effectively. Since cost per acquisition (CPA) is one of the biggest expenses for many sellers, managing your ROAS and conversion rates is critical to success.
ROAS helps you determine whether campaigns, platforms, channels and strategies are meeting your goals. Without measurement, it’s too easy to waste your precious ad dollars. One study estimated that advertisers are wasting more than $94 million per quarter due to a combination of poor ad targeting, ad placement and improper attribution.
A good ROAS will vary depending on the industry, the products or services, and the profit margins you need to operate efficiently. A four-to-one return is a good rule of thumb for most industries, but some businesses need to have a higher ratio to meet their financial goals. Others may be able to justify the cost per conversion at a lower target ROAS.
ROAS is expressed as a ratio of revenue compared to advertising expenses.
ROAS = (Revenue attributed to ads / costs of ads)
For example, if you earned $10,000 from your advertising and your advertising costs were $2,500, your ROAS would be $10,000 / $2,500 = 4. In this example, it would show a 4:1 return on investment. In other words, you’re gaining $4 for every $1 you spend on ads. ROAS is also sometimes expressed as a percentage. In this case, the percentage would be 400%.
ROAS can also vary depending on a wide variety of factors, including your advertising budget, how and where you advertise, and the quality of your marketing campaign. A low-quality ad is likely to produce poor ROAS no matter how much you spend.
When evaluating your ROAS calculation, you should also consider:
Whether you’re buying Google Ads or other digital advertising, your goal is to maximize your return while minimizing your costs. We have five ways you can better manage your marketing effort to reduce costs and improve ROAS.
One of the more challenging aspects of digital marketing is choosing the right bidding strategy. There are several models to choose from, including:
Depending on your goals and marketing strategy, other options exist. For example, you can budget for a share of voice, such as ensuring your ads run 50% to 100% of the time someone searches for particular keywords. Google recommends you allocate your marketing based on your business and campaign goals.
BUSINESS GOAL |
CAMPAIGN GOAL |
BIDDING STRATEGY |
Increase sales or leads |
Maximize conversions on a fixed budget or fixed ROAS |
Target ROAS bidding |
Increase transactions of leads |
Maximize conversion on a fixed budget or fixed cost per action |
Target CPA bidding |
Increase site visitors |
Get as many clicks as possible within your ad budget |
Cost per click |
Build brand awareness |
Improve position on search results, show at desired locations |
Target impression share |
Unfortunately, many companies spend their ad dollars without optimizing their landing pages. Once your ad drives traffic to your e-commerce store, where they go on your website is critical to conversions.
You will want to optimize your landing pages for conversions. Best practices include:
Regularly review your keyword targeting. Customer behavior and search patterns change constantly, so what might be a great keyword today might not perform as well tomorrow. You are also in competition with others for keywords, so you need to make sure you’re getting the performance you need.
High-quality keywords that drive qualified traffic and lead to conversions are the goal, but a lot of money can be spent on keywords that don’t perform well.
Best practices include:
You should also consider long-tail keywords. Long-tail keywords have lower search volume, equaling lower competition, but often have a higher ROAS.
Keep an eye on what your competitors are doing. Analyze the keywords, ad campaigns and targeting methods they use. This can help you uncover opportunities you might otherwise miss.
When you see your competitors make changes to their strategy, such as price reductions or sales, it’s important to see the impact that has on your ad spending to see if a similar strategy would work for you and whether you need to react.
The customer journey today rarely contains a single touchpoint. Before someone makes a purchase, they likely encounter multiple touchpoints. They may have first become aware of your brand, product or service. They may have visited your website and done some research. Maybe they saw an email or clicked on a link in your email newsletter.
Finding out what each touchpoint contributes to the conversion is important to assign credit and eliminate waste. When you know which channels and which touchpoints provide the highest return, you can allocate your budgets more efficiently.
Best practices for multi-touch attribution include:
Determining what led to a sale can be tricky. Was it your great ad campaign, your brand reputation or different touchpoints of your overall marketing? Multi-touch attribution helps you measure the impact of touchpoints using multiple attribution models:
Marketing attribution software can help you evaluate the performance of various touchpoints that influence the effectiveness of your advertising spending. Attribution software provides a more accurate view of the customer journey and what contributes to conversions. With data-driven insights, you can spend more efficiently to improve your ROAS.
You can also improve your overall marketing. Attribution software will identify touchpoints beyond your ad channels to identify which marketing efforts generated the most engagement and conversions.
You also get deeper insights into your digital marketing channels. Cross-channel insights can help you better understand how channels work together to drive conversions. For example, someone might see an ad via search and do research on your website but not make a purchase until they see an ad on social media. When you understand the role each touchpoint played across channels, you can focus your cross-channel marketing strategies better to optimize ROAS.
Cart.com’s Unified Analytics is a suite of tools to connect data from across shopper journeys to provide valuable insights and validate recommendations. The Unified Analytics multi-touch attribution model captures real-time data and tracks customer paths to help you understand a holistic view of the buyer journey for better targeting and return on investment.
See how Cart.com can help improve your ROAS. Contact our sales team today.