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Two new chart types in the Report EditorFebruary 21, 2019We’ve launched two new chart types in the Report Editor: the stacked bar chart and the bubble chart. There are now six total chart types available for your reports: Line chart Bar chart Stacked bar chart Pie chart Scatter chart Bubble chart These two new chart types can provide additional ways to interpret your data and glean insights. For example, you can use a stacked bar chart to see how clicks in an ad group breakdown by device and you can evaluate that mix over time. You can use a bubble chart to view clicks, conversions, and cost by campaign in one chart, as the size of the bubble can represent a third metric. Try these two new charts in your reporting. Example of stacked bar chart in the Report Editor Posted by Abhishek Kumar, Product Manager, Google AdsRead more- 27Universal App campaigns are now simply App campaignsFebruary 20, 2019Universal App campaigns help connect your app with consumers. Today, we are simplifying the name of “Universal App campaigns” to “App campaigns.” This move will not affect campaign features or functionality, and there’s no action required for existing campaigns. App campaigns will join Search, Display, Video, Shopping and Smart as the top-level campaign names available in Google Ads. Full list of Google Ads campaign types after App campaigns name change You’ll start to see these changes roll out over the next month. We hope this more direct name will help advertisers and developers get started with Google Ads and select the right campaign type for their business goals. Posted by David Mitby, Director of Product, Mobile App AdvertisingRead more
- 28Easily find predefined reports for the dataset you’re viewingFebruary 20, 2019Predefined reports are ready-made reports that show useful data, such as time of day and location statistics. We’ve received feedback that many of you drill deeper into your campaigns or ad groups before moving into predefined reports. The transition from campaign or ad group level reports to predefined reports showing the same scope of data is now easier. Previously, the only way to get to predefined reports was through the ‘Reporting’ icon on the very top navigation bar in Google Ads. This always starts you at account-level data and you can filter down deeper from there. Today, if you notice something while looking at campaign or ad group data that needs investigating, you can use the newly located ‘Reporting’ icon that lives above the statistics table you’re looking at. When using this icon, the loaded predefined report will carry over the same scope of data you’re viewing to make for a quicker transition. For example, if you had scoped down to a particular ad group or only search campaigns, and then opened a ‘Day’ report using this icon, the report will be filtered to only that ad group or search campaigns, respectively. However, the icon at the top right opens the predefined report for your entire account. Posted by Abhishek Kumar, Product Manager, Google AdsRead more
- 29Updates to mobile page speed score on the Landing Pages tabFebruary 19, 2019Slow mobile pages can slow down your business. 53% of visits to a mobile site are abandoned if it takes more than three seconds to load.1 In July we introduced the mobile speed score to let you quickly see which landing pages are providing a fast mobile experience, and which ones may require your attention. We’ve recently updated the mobile speed score algorithm to require fewer ad clicks in order to calculate a score. This means you’ll now see a speed score for more of your pages. Evaluated on a 10-point scale, 1 being very slow and 10 being extremely fast, the mobile speed score is based on a number of factors, including page speed and potential conversion rate. To improve your mobile speed score, consider adopting mobile technologies like Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP). AMP pages typically load 85 percent faster than standard mobile pages.2 As a result, 90% of AMP pages see a high mobile speed score of 10. Learn more about evaluating your mobile landing pages here. Posted by Prashant Nair, Product Manager, Google Ads 1. Google Data, Aggregated, anonymized Google Analytics data from a sample of mWeb sites opted into sharing benchmark data, n=3.7K, Global, March 2016 2. Google Data, Global, April 2017Read more
- 30Click share coming to Search campaignsFebruary 11, 2019Click share is the estimated share of all achievable clicks that you have received. Click share has been available for Shopping campaigns since 2015. We’ve begun rolling it out for Search campaigns and plan to have it available for all Search campaigns in the coming weeks. The lower your click share, the more opportunity you have to capture additional clicks. For example, if your ad is clicked 20 times, but we estimate that it could have been clicked 100 times if you had more extensions, higher bids, or higher budgets, your click share is 20%. Best Practice: Use click share to view click growth opportunities with more extensions or bid or budget increases. Use impression share to view impression growth opportunities with bid or budget increases. Click share will be available at the campaign, ad group, and keyword levels for Search campaigns in the coming weeks. Posted by Pallavi Naresh, Product Manager, Google AdsRead more
- 31Parallel tracking for Display and Video campaigns available May 1st, 2019February 11, 2019Speed matters when it comes to landing pages. 53% of visits are abandoned if a mobile site takes more than three seconds to load.1 With >parallel tracking, users will head immediately to your landing page after clicking your ad while their browser processes click measurement requests in the background. Last year, we announced that parallel tracking would be expanded to Display and Video campaigns in March
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