Filtered clicks
Whoever arrives already saw product and price: they came to buy.
Shopping shows your products with photo and price before any other result. We optimize your feed, structure campaigns by margin and tune bids to ROAS so you sell with profit, not just volume.
When someone searches for a product on Google, the first thing they see is the Shopping strip: photos, prices and stores. Whoever clicks there has already seen your product and your price — they're a filtered buyer, not a browser. That's why Shopping tends to be the channel with the best return for ecommerce… when the feed is done right.
And that's the secret few people look after: the feed is everything. We optimize your titles so they match real searches (brand + product + attribute), we complete attributes, images and prices in Merchant Center, and we resolve the disapprovals that drop products without you noticing. A poor feed competes blind; an optimized one shows up more and pays less.
On that foundation, we structure campaigns by margin and priority — your star products shouldn't fight for budget against low-profit ones — and we tune bids to a realistic target ROAS. With dynamic remarketing to chase whoever saw a product and didn't buy.
Tell us about your case and we'll show you exactly how Google Shopping would apply to your business in Ireland — no commitment and no fluff.
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Titles, attributes and images that appear in more searches.
A structure that prioritizes your most profitable products.
Return target defined with you and optimized every week.
The exact product they saw, following them to the purchase.
Which SKUs sell, which burn budget and what to do.
Products, prices, competition and real profit.
Merchant Center and attributes at their best.
Budget assigned by margin, not at random.
Conversions with value to optimize for return.
More to what sells, out with what doesn't.
It requires an online store with a catalog (Shopify, Tienda Nube, WooCommerce). If you don't have one yet, we build it too.
On Shopping, your product competes with photo and price in plain sight. Being well optimized decides whether they choose you — and whether the click leaves you a profit.
Whoever arrives already saw product and price: they came to buy.
We optimize for real return, factoring in your profit.
More impressions and a better cost thanks to optimized titles.
No dropped products and no silent disapprovals.
To advertise products on Google Shopping you need three pieces connected to each other, and the order in which you set them up determines how quickly you start selling. The first is an online store with a real catalog: an ecommerce platform (Shopify, Tienda Nube, WooCommerce, Magento or a custom store) where each product has its page, its price, its availability and its buy button. Shopping doesn't sell from a PDF or from an Instagram catalog; it needs a URL per product where it can send the buyer. The second piece is a Google Merchant Center account, which is where your product feed lives —the file that tells Google what you sell, at what price, with which photo and with which attributes—. The third is a Google Ads account linked to Merchant Center, from which campaigns are created and budget is controlled.
The feed is, by a wide margin, what separates a campaign that sells from one that burns money. It's not enough to connect your store and let Google pull the data automatically: that "raw" feed usually comes with poor titles, empty attributes and badly assigned categories that leave you competing blind. What we do at Orbis is optimize it thoroughly:
Before your products appear, Google checks that your store is legitimate. That means verifying and claiming your website, having your shipping, returns and payment method policies visible, and providing contact details. In Ireland this matters especially because many small stores don't have these pages and then don't understand why their Merchant Center gets suspended. We leave that whole ecosystem complete and bulletproof so the launch isn't held up by reviews.
It's also worth having the business well measured before investing: the conversion tag with value (which reports not only how many sales there were, but how much you sold in money), connected correctly to your platform. Without conversion value, you can't optimize for ROAS and you'd be flying without instruments. If you also sell via WhatsApp —very common in Ireland—, we factor that closing into the measurement so as not to underestimate what Shopping really generates.
In short: to get started with Google Shopping in Ireland you need a store with a catalog, Merchant Center with an approved feed and Google Ads linked, plus an optimized feed, policies in order and measurement with value. It sounds like a lot, and that's why we set it all up from start to finish: you give us access to your store and your accounts (which are always yours), and we leave the whole ecosystem ready to compete. If you want, let's talk it over and we'll tell you where you stand and how far you are from launching.
This is probably the number-one frustration for anyone trying Shopping on their own in Ireland: you upload the feed, you wait to see your products in the Google strip… and they show up as "disapproved" or simply don't appear. The good news is that the cause is almost always identifiable and fixable. The bad news is that, if you don't address it, you can lose days or weeks of sales without noticing, because Google rarely warns you with a big sign: products fall silently inside Merchant Center.
It's key to distinguish two levels of problem. A product disapproval affects one or several items: the rest of your catalog keeps working, and it's fixed by adjusting the feed. An account suspension is far more serious: it takes down your entire Merchant Center and usually comes from policy violations (misrepresentation of the business, problems with the store's information, or several unaddressed disapprovals piling up). Recovering a suspended account is a delicate process that requires fixing the root cause and requesting a review; it's not a matter of "uploading the feed again". That's why we insist so much on setting up the policies properly from day one: preventing a suspension is far cheaper than recovering from it.
The first thing is a full Merchant Center audit: we review the diagnostics product by product, identify the patterns (is it an attribute missing across the whole catalog? is it the images? is it the price?) and fix them at the source, not patching them one by one. We rewrite titles and attributes, align prices and availability between feed and site, and bring the images into compliance. Then we set up continuous monitoring: we check the feed status frequently so that, if a product falls, we lift it before you lose sales, instead of discovering it a month later when the report came out badly.
In Ireland this is especially valuable because many stores operate with catalogs that change often —products come in and out, prices shift by season, sizes sell out— and each of those changes is an opportunity for something to be disapproved. Having someone looking after the feed turns that risk into something controlled. If your Merchant Center is already giving you trouble, we review it and tell you exactly what's dropping it and how we lift it.
Let's be honest from the start, because this question is exactly where the most fluff gets sold in Ireland: anyone who promises you a specific ROAS without knowing your business is lying to you. The return on ad spend (ROAS: how much money you sell for every peso you invest in ads) depends on so many variables specific to your operation that there's no universal number. What we can do is explain what it depends on, how a realistic target is defined with you and why a "high" ROAS isn't always good.
Here's a nuance almost no one explains. If you only chase the highest possible ROAS, you end up investing very little in your safest products and leave sales on the table. Sometimes it's worth lowering the target ROAS to gain volume: if each additional sale still leaves a profit, selling more at a somewhat lower return puts more money in your pocket than selling little at a sky-high return. The right question isn't "what's my ROAS?", but "how much total profit am I generating?". That's why we optimize for return with margin, not for a vanity number.
Our process is straightforward and free of magic promises. First we gather the real numbers of your operation: margin by category, average order value, payment gateway fees, shipping and returns costs. With that we calculate your break-even ROAS —the point where you neither win nor lose— and from there we set a target that leaves you a healthy profit. Then we launch with a learning period in which the system gathers data; during those first weeks the numbers move around and that's normal. As conversions with value come in, the automatic bids (tROAS) fine-tune and the return stabilizes.
And we report transparently: you'll see how much you invested, how much you sold, what ROAS you achieved and, above all, which SKUs carry the result. In Ireland we also account for the WhatsApp closing, because many sales that Shopping originated end up via chat and not attributing them would make your ROAS look lower than it really is. If you want an estimate grounded in your case —not a made-up number—, tell us your margin and your average order value and we'll give you an honest range, plus you can use our ROI and ROAS calculator to run your own numbers.
The feed is the heart of Google Shopping, and here's the uncomfortable truth: your campaign will never be better than your feed. You can have the most generous budget and the best-calibrated bids, but if the feed is poor, you compete in fewer searches, pay more per click and stop appearing to buyers who were looking for you. Unlike Search, on Shopping you don't choose keywords: Google decides which searches to show you in based on your feed's data. That's why optimizing the feed is, in practice, doing "catalog SEO".
The product title is the attribute with the greatest weight in deciding which searches you appear in. A generic title like "Sports sneakers" leaves you out of thousands of specific searches. The structure that works puts what people actually type up front: brand + product type + key attribute + model/variant. For example, "Nike Air Max 90 men's sneakers size 27 black" appears in many more combinations than "Nike Sneakers". We order the important terms at the beginning (the first characters are the ones shown the most) and adapt them to the language of Ireland: here people say "tenis" and not "zapatillas", "playera" and not "remera", and those nuances decide whether you appear or not in the real search.
The image is the first thing the buyer sees and also a frequent cause of disapproval. They must have a clean background, no watermarks, no promotional text on top and clearly show the product. A good image raises the CTR (click-through rate) and therefore the performance of the whole campaign, because more relevant clicks at a good price improve your economics.
The feed must reflect the real price and stock at all times. A difference between feed and site disapproves the product; a sold-out product that stays active wastes clicks and annoys the buyer. For catalogs that change often —typical in Ireland due to seasons and promotions— we set up frequent updates so the feed doesn't fall behind.
Here's the strategic part that sets a managed feed apart from an abandoned one. We use feed rules to fix or enrich data in bulk without touching your store, and custom labels to mark products by margin, by season, by best-sellers or by markdowns. Those labels are gold: they let us structure campaigns that prioritize your profitable products and control the budget by group, instead of treating the whole catalog as an undifferentiated bag. We also leverage Merchant Center promotions to show discounts directly on the listing, which improves the CTR on key dates like El Buen Fin.
Optimizing the feed isn't an event, it's a process. We review which search terms are bringing you sales and which only spend, adjust titles accordingly, watch for disapprovals and reorder priorities based on what sells. A living feed, cared for week by week, is the difference between a campaign that stalls and one that improves its return over time. If you want, we audit your current feed and show you exactly what's holding back your sales in Ireland and how we fix it.
If you're researching Google Shopping in Ireland, you'll run into two paths for advertising your products: standard Shopping campaigns and Performance Max (PMax) campaigns. Google has pushed hard toward PMax in recent years, to the point that many accounts migrated almost by default. But "what Google recommends" and "what best suits your business" aren't always the same thing, so it's worth understanding the real difference before deciding.
Standard Shopping campaigns (also called regular or inventory Shopping) show your products mainly in Google's Shopping strip and on the Shopping tab. Their big advantage is control and transparency: you can clearly see which search terms trigger your ads, you can structure the catalog into product groups, adjust bids by category or by SKU, and exclude searches that don't convert with negative keywords. For a business that wants to understand what's happening and make fine-grained decisions, that visibility is very valuable. The downside is that it requires more management work and only covers the Shopping inventories, not Google's entire network.
Performance Max is an automated campaign that, with a single budget, distributes your ads across Google's entire inventory: Shopping, Search, YouTube, Gmail, Display and Discover. You give it your feed, your goals (usually a ROAS), some text and images (the "assets"), and the system decides where, when and to whom to show. Its strength is reach and automation: it can find buyers in places a Shopping-only campaign doesn't reach, and it often performs very well in sales volume. Its weakness is the black box: historically it gave little visibility into where the money was spent and which searches it triggered, though the reports have improved. It also tends to "cannibalize" brand traffic (taking credit for sales you would have had anyway) if it isn't controlled.
The honest answer is that it depends on your situation, and often the best strategy isn't to choose one, but to combine them intelligently:
Here's the most important thing: the campaign type matters less than the quality of your feed, your measurement and your structure. A PMax on a poor feed performs badly; a standard Shopping campaign without conversion value configured can't optimize for ROAS. That's why, before fighting over PMax yes or PMax no, we make sure the feed is optimized, the conversion with value is well measured and the catalog is segmented by margin with labels. On that foundation, choosing and combining campaigns becomes a matter of strategy, not a gamble.
At Orbis we make this decision with data from your account, not by trend or by what "Google said". We test, measure the real incremental lift and keep the structure that leaves you the most profit in Ireland. If you already have campaigns running and don't know whether your mix is the right one, we review them and tell you with numbers whether it's worth adjusting course.
We audit your feed (or create it) and tell you how much demand there is for your catalog in Ireland.
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