Where consumers go, advertisers will follow. It’s very apparent to see where consumers are today as mobile consumption is rapidly growing and trumping all other forms of media.
This should prove to have a lasting and positive impact on the advertising industry as it has opened new channels of communication between brands and consumers, but it also poses challenges from a measurement and an attribution standpoint that has left many advertisers in a cloud of confusion. As any marketer, publisher or statistician can tell you, mobile is the only media that is truly growing…and growing fast. However, the data is also showing that as more consumers have taken to their mobile devices to consume media, their propensity to buy products or “convert” appears much weaker than it does on other platforms, but this does not accurately tell the full story.
There is a significant gap on what most advertisers are able to track vs. the true value of mobile’s ability to influence and convert customers. So the fastest growing audience for advertisers does not always appear to yield the strongest ROI and herein lies the problem. Or for some like Google…herein lies the opportunity. Google recently announced a new feature called Estimated Total Conversions, available to AdWords customers using Google conversion tracking.
As a part of this new reporting, advertisers can also see Estimated cross-device conversions, that Google is proudly representing as an exciting way for marketers to gain insight into the “new conversion types that are a part of a constantly connected, multi-screen world so that they can make the best advertising decisions possible.” What this really means is that Google realizes people are searching on all types of devices these days and therefore interacting with ads on all types of devices. The resulting confusion for marketers is the inability to know if the same person who clicked on an ad on their mobile device, for example, is the same person who went on their laptop to complete a purchase.
Google started to roll out the new product on October 1st, which is interesting timing given that the holidays, a time of increased spending, advertising and confusion among conversion tracking, are fast approaching.