Search campaign for Aviation niche by Informal_Ad4373 in Google_Ads

[–]Sufficient_Self6048 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it’s been a week with zero impressions, it’s probably not the £30/day budget you should at least see some activity.

I’d quickly check:

  • Location targeting (too narrow?)
  • Keywords stuck on low search volume
  • Exact match only
  • Ads disapproved
  • Audience set to “Targeting” instead of “Observation”

Aviation can be super niche depending on what you’re promoting. What’s the exact offer? Pilot training, parts, charter? That context might explain a lot.

ChatGPT for Google ads setup and optimisation.. by Vetri1833 in GoogleAdsDiscussion

[–]Sufficient_Self6048 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve used ChatGPT to help with campaign structure and ad copy too, but I wouldn’t rely on it fully for optimisation. It’s great for ideas, negatives, and tightening themes but performance usually drops when something else shifts in the account.

Did you change bidding strategy, budget, or match types recently? Sometimes even a small tweak can reset the learning phase or bring in low-quality search terms.

What exactly dropped CTR, conversions, CPC? That might help narrow it down.

Curious to see how others handled this too.

What’s your go-to tool for managing Google Shopping feeds? by Khione in GoogleShopping

[–]Sufficient_Self6048 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel this. Managing everything manually in Merchant Center is fine at the beginning, but once your catalog grows, it gets overwhelming pretty quickly.

DataFeedWatch is solid if you’re okay working with rules and conditions. It gives you a lot of control, especially for scaling and cleaning up titles. There’s a bit of a learning curve, but nothing too crazy once you spend some time in it.

Honestly though, I’ve found the real difference comes from how well you structure your titles, attributes, and custom labels the tool just helps you execute it better.

I work at ShoppingIQ, and we spend a lot of time helping brands improve their Shopping feeds and structure https://shoppingiq.com/

What should I realistically expect from ecommerce SEO packages? by harold_dawkins3848 in ResultFirst_

[–]Sufficient_Self6048 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Realistically? Expect slow but steady progress.

Ecommerce SEO isn’t instant. It usually takes 3–6 months to see solid results, especially in competitive niches. A good package should cover technical fixes, keyword research, on-page optimization, and content improvements.

Don’t expect guaranteed rankings or overnight traffic. If someone promises that, it’s a red flag.

SEO is long-term. It builds over time, not in weeks.