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Run 2026-03-26-023934-9a7d5950Mode llmStatus unknownQA completed37,546 est. tokens$0.2220 est. cost

Saved: 2026-03-26T02:39:34.015007+00:00
Model: gpt-5.4
Estimated input/output tokens: 27,293 / 10,253

No status detail.

Processed files

Agent 1 — Intake handoff

CLIENT ASK
Give specific Google Ads optimizations for SipJeng based only on the 3 attached reports, with the stated goal of lowest CPA for purchase conversions.

PROVIDED EVIDENCE
1) Landing page report
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Columns include: Landing page, Selected by, Clicks, Impr., CTR, Avg. CPC, Cost, Conversions
- No screenshots; CSV text only

2) Channel performance / search terms insight report
- Title in file: Search terms insight report
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Columns include: Channels, Status, Campaigns, Impr., Clicks, Interactions, Conversions, Conv. value, Cost, Results, Results value
- Mixes Search, Search partners, GDN, YouTube, Gmail, Discover, Maps by campaign/channel

3) Search terms report
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Columns include: Search term, Match type, Added/Excluded, Campaign, Ad group, Clicks, Impr., CTR, Avg. CPC, Cost, Campaign type, Conv. rate, Conversions, Cost / conv.
- File is explicitly truncated in the prompt, so only partial term list is available

EXTRACTED FACTS
Account / total performance
- Landing page report totals:
  - Total landing pages: 3,120 clicks, 147,440 impressions, 2.12% CTR, $2.88 avg CPC, $8,984.10 cost, 351.49 conversions
  - Total account: 3,343 clicks, 147,440 impressions, 2.27% CTR, $2.97 avg CPC, $9,928.11 cost, 351.49 conversions
  - Search total: 2,844 clicks, 117,027 impressions, 2.43% CTR, $3.35 avg CPC, $9,536.20 cost, 350.49 conversions
  - Performance Max total: 499 clicks, 30,413 impressions, 1.64% CTR, $0.79 avg CPC, $391.91 cost, 1.00 conversions
- Implied account CPA from landing page totals: about $28.25 ($9,928.11 / 351.49)
- Implied Search CPA: about $27.21 ($9,536.20 / 350.49)
- Implied PMax CPA: about $391.91 ($391.91 / 1.00)

Channel / campaign facts
- Channel report totals:
  - Total campaigns: 556,348 impressions, 3,973 clicks, 69,895 interactions, 126.33 conversions, conversion value $10,027.42, cost $8,347.53
  - Google Search total: 214,867 impressions, 1,877 clicks, 126.33 conversions, conv. value $10,027.42, cost $7,309.65
  - Search partners total: 222 impressions, 5 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $3.31
  - GDN total: 183,361 impressions, 1,702 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $492.40
  - YouTube total: 157,826 impressions, 389 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $540.58
  - Gmail total: 72 impressions, 0 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $1.58
- Important contradiction:
  - Landing page report shows 351.49 conversions overall, mostly Search
  - Channel report shows only 126.33 conversions total
  - This suggests different conversion definitions, attribution scopes, or report settings. Optimization advice must flag this.

Best landing pages by purchase-volume efficiency proxy
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER)
  - 791 clicks, 55,088 impr, 1.44% CTR, $1.20 CPC, $951.15 cost, 207.65 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $4.58
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 438 clicks, 17,308 impr, 2.53% CTR, $3.30 CPC, $1,444.84 cost, 38.50 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $37.53
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 872 clicks, 68,994 impr, 1.26% CTR, $3.71 CPC, $3,231.88 cost, 29.33 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $110.15
- https://try.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 728 clicks, 21,337 impr, 3.41% CTR, $3.85 CPC, $2,802.50 cost, 44.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $63.69
- https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic (AUTOMATIC)
  - 23 clicks, 450 impr, 5.11% CTR, $5.05 CPC, $116.05 cost, 6.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $19.34
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks (AUTOMATIC)
  - 18 clicks, 507 impr, 3.55% CTR, $3.26 CPC, $58.71 cost, 4.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $14.68
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 20 clicks, 13,454 impr, 0.15% CTR, $4.98 CPC, $99.65 cost, 4.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $24.91
- https://sipjeng.com/about (AUTOMATIC)
  - 6 clicks, 19 impr, 31.58% CTR, $5.53 CPC, $33.15 cost, 2.00 conversions
  - Very low volume; implied CPA ≈ $16.58
- https://sipjeng.com/ (AUTOMATIC)
  - 30 clicks, 194 impr, 15.46% CTR, $1.68 CPC, $50.45 cost, 2.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $25.23
- https://sipjeng.com/blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025 (AUTOMATIC)
  - 225 clicks, 2,104 impr, 10.69% CTR, $1.88 CPC, $423.97 cost, 10.00 conversions
  - Implied CPA ≈ $42.40
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/hemp-infused-drinks (AUTOMATIC)
  - 12 clicks, 526 impr, 2.28% CTR, $5.17 CPC, $62.02 cost, 1.00 conversion
  - CPA ≈ $62.02
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers (AUTOMATIC)
  - 2 clicks, 79 impr, 2.53% CTR, $1.60 CPC, $3.20 cost, 1.00 conversion
  - CPA ≈ $3.20 but insignificant volume
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ (AUTOMATIC)
  - 1 click, 2,753 impr, 0.04% CTR, $1.32 CPC, $1.32 cost, 0.50 conversions
  - fractional conversion; low evidence

High-spend landing pages with weak/zero conversion
- https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-paloma (AUTOMATIC)
  - 8 clicks, $61.39 spend, 0 conversions
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/cbd-infused-drinks (AUTOMATIC)
  - 20 clicks, $77.91 spend, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/spicy-blood-orange/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 32 clicks, 11,834 impr, 0.27% CTR, $124.98 spend, 1 conversion
  - CPA ≈ $124.98
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/sweet-spot-pack/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 2 clicks, 2,841 impr, $7.95, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/summer-starter-pack/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 1 click, 3,110 impr, $16.61, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/contact/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 5 clicks, 4,873 impr, $20.05, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/about/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 3 clicks, 3,470 impr, $24.38, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/about/ (AUTOMATIC)
  - 1 click, 2,585 impr, $2.95, 0 conversions
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/contact/ (AUTOMATIC)
  - 0 clicks, 2,520 impr, 0 spend
- Multiple blog/news/product pages generated spend but 0 conversions

Campaign/channel specifics
- PAUSED Cube_Catch All_OCT on Google Search
  - 135,613 impr, 1,418 clicks, 94.88 conversions, conv value $9,153.13, cost $5,334.65
  - Implied CPA ≈ $56.23
- PAUSED Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search
  - 72,373 impr, 300 clicks, 28.44 conversions, conv value $715.66, cost $1,251.03
  - Implied CPA ≈ $43.99
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on Google Search
  - 1,618 impr, 63 clicks, 1.00 conversion, conv value $23.09, cost $198.46
  - CPA ≈ $198.46
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on GDN
  - 24,629 impr, 429 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $154.22
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on YouTube
  - 4,107 impr, 5 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $36.98
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on Search partners
  - 59 impr, 2 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $2.26

Search term facts from partial report
Potential winners
- “mocktails” in Cube_Search_W / Ad group 1
  - Broad match, 1 click, 36 impr, 2.78% CTR, CPC $0.85, 1.00 conversion, 100% conv rate, CPA $0.85
  - Extremely low volume; not reliable alone
- “sipjeng” in Cube_Search_W / Ad group 1
  - Phrase match (close variant), 2 clicks, 2 impr, 100% CTR, CPC $0.17, cost $0.34, 14.00 conversions, 700% conv rate, CPA $0.02
  - Clearly anomalous / likely attribution artifact or non-purchase conversion inflation; should not be taken at face value without conversion definition check

Potentially irrelevant / competitor / poor nonbrand queries with spend and 0 conversions
- “hemp infused seltzer” — 1 click, 8 impr, CPC $3.46, cost $3.46, 0 conv
- “tost discount code” — 1 click, 3 impr, CPC $7.43, 0 conv
- “cbd drinks 50 mg” — 1 click, 1 impr, CPC $10.35, 0 conv
- “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol” — 4 clicks, 8 impr, CPC $2.26, cost $9.03, 0 conv
- “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol” — 1 click, 6 impr, CPC $3.75, 0 conv
- Many competitor/adjacent brand terms appearing in brand/nonbrand campaigns:
  - shimmerwood beverages, gaba spirits, melati drinks, wunder drink, cycling frog drinks, little saints negroni, seth rogen seltzer, where to buy de soi, cann social tonics, etc.
- Many informational recipe-type queries:
  - valentines cocktail recipes, monte carlo cocktail, greyhound drink, freezer old fashioned, moscow mule specs, drinks recipes non alcoholic, making a mocktail
- Search term file is truncated, so we do not have the full spend/conversion distribution

OBSERVED METRICS
Primary measurable metrics from evidence
- Account total CPA (landing page report implied): ~$28.25
- Search CPA (landing page report implied): ~$27.21
- PMax CPA (landing page report implied): ~$391.91
- Best high-volume landing page CPA:
  - /collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER): ~$4.58
- Other key landing page CPAs:
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: ~$14.68
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: ~$19.34
  - /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ advertiser: ~$24.91
  - / : ~$25.23
  - /shop/: ~$110.15
  - /try.sipjeng.com/: ~$63.69
  - /product/spicy-blood-orange/: ~$124.98
- Channel totals:
  - Search: $7,309.65 spend, 126.33 conv
  - GDN: $492.40 spend, 0 conv
  - YouTube: $540.58 spend, 0 conv
  - Search partners: $3.31 spend, 0 conv
- Active PMax (“Cube | New Pmax”) currently spending on non-Search inventory with no conversions in provided report

GAPS/UNCERTAINTY
- The client mentioned 3 reports; no screenshots were provided, only CSV text.
- Search terms report is truncated, so term-level conclusions are incomplete.
- Biggest issue: conversion counts conflict materially between reports:
  - 351.49 conversions in landing page report vs 126.33 in channel report for same date range
  - May reflect different conversion actions, attribution models, included campaign types, or report settings
- Client goal is lowest CPA for purchase conversion, but not all reports are clearly isolated to purchase-only conversions.
  - Channel report includes mixed “Results” such as Add to cart, Begin checkout, Page View, Purchase
  - Landing page report only says “Conversions” without conversion action breakdown
- No campaign-level spend/conversion report for standard Search campaigns was provided outside search term snippets; exact active campaign structure is unclear
- No device, geo, audience, asset group, bidding strategy, budget, or ad copy data
- No actual purchase-only search term report
- No profitability/AOV targets beyond some conversion value fields
- No landing page conversion rate by page/session, only ad-side data
- No evidence of impression share, lost IS, or budget caps, so scaling recommendations are limited
- Some values are fractional conversions, suggesting data-driven attribution or mixed conversion actions

RECOMMENDED ANALYSIS ANGLE
1) Anchor recommendations around lowest purchase CPA, but explicitly caveat the conversion-definition mismatch.
2) Prioritize reallocating traffic toward proven landing pages:
- Strongest evidence points to /collections/best-sellers as the standout page by both volume and CPA
- Secondary pages worth prioritizing/test-expanding: /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks, /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic, /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/
3) Recommend cutting or excluding waste:
- Reduce/stop sending traffic to low-intent/about/contact/blog/product pages with spend and zero purchases
- Especially blog/news pages and informational pages unless intentionally top-of-funnel
4) Strongly question active PMax / cross-network spend:
- Provided data shows Search generating all measured conversions in channel report
- GDN, YouTube, Gmail, Search partners show spend with zero conversions
- Active “Cube | New Pmax” appears inefficient; recommend restricting or pausing until purchase-only conversion tracking is validated
5) Search term hygiene / negative keyword angle:
- Add negatives for competitor brands, discount-code seekers for other brands, recipe/informational queries, and ambiguous beverage terms
- Separate brand from nonbrand tightly; brand terms appear in unexpected campaigns/ad groups
6) Campaign structure angle:
- Build/keep exact/phrase around high-intent product/category themes tied to winning landing pages
- Route ads to category/product pages, not generic /shop/ or informational pages
7) Measurement cleanup should be a top recommendation:
- Need purchase-only primary conversion
- Need consistent attribution/reporting before aggressive budget decisions
- The anomalous term “sipjeng” with 14 conversions on 2 clicks should be flagged as likely non-purchase inflation or reporting artifact

Agent 2 — Client output

Executive diagnosis

Your stated goal is lowest CPA for purchase conversions. Based on the 3 reports, the clearest direction is to concentrate spend on Search traffic that lands on proven purchase-driving pages, and cut broad PMax/cross-network waste until purchase tracking is fully cleaned up.

Two things are true at the same time:

  • Search appears to be where almost all measurable conversion volume is happening.
  • Your reporting is not clean enough yet to trust every “conversion” number as purchase proof.

That second point matters a lot. The landing page report shows 351.49 conversions on $9,928.11, which implies about $28.25 CPA. But the channel report shows only 126.33 conversions on $8,347.53, while also mixing purchases with add to cart, begin checkout, and page view reporting. Those totals do not reconcile. So I would not treat all 351.49 as confirmed purchases without verifying the conversion action setup.

Still, there is enough evidence for operational action.

High-confidence actions

  • Shift traffic away from weak landing pages like /shop/ and informational pages, and toward /collections/best-sellers plus a few product/category pages that show materially lower implied CPA.
  • Pause or sharply restrict the active PMax campaign until it is optimized against verified purchase-only conversion actions.
  • Add negatives for competitor, recipe, and irrelevant informational search terms shown in the search term file.
  • Separate brand from nonbrand tightly; brand leakage and anomalous branded conversion reporting are visible.

Medium-confidence tests

  • Build tighter Search ad groups around the winning landing-page themes: best sellers, non-alcoholic THC drinks, Jeng & Tonic, sampler pack.
  • Test routing nonbrand category intent to category pages instead of generic /shop/ or /try/.

Low-confidence or measurement-gated ideas

  • Scaling anything off the search term “sipjeng” as shown in the partial term file. It reports 14 conversions on 2 clicks with a 700% conversion rate, which is an attribution or conversion-definition anomaly, not scale-ready evidence.
  • Any recommendation based on the truncated search terms report as if it were complete. It is not complete.

Biggest waste to cut

The biggest waste in the provided data is non-Search PMax inventory and weak landing-page routing.

1) Active PMax / cross-network waste

  • In the landing page totals, Performance Max spent $391.91 for 1.00 conversion, which implies about $391.91 CPA.
  • In the channel report, current active Cube | New Pmax shows:
    • Google Search: $198.46 spend / 1.00 conversion ≈ $198.46 CPA
    • GDN: $154.22 spend / 0 conversions
    • YouTube: $36.98 spend / 0 conversions
    • Search partners: $2.26 spend / 0 conversions

If the goal is lowest purchase CPA, this is not competitive with Search overall. Even using the stricter channel report, Google Search total is $7,309.65 / 126.33 ≈ $57.86 per conversion. Using the landing-page report, Search is $9,536.20 / 350.49 ≈ $27.21. Either way, PMax is far worse than Search in the evidence provided.

2) Weak landing-page routing

  • /collections/best-sellers (advertiser-selected): $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58 CPA
  • /shop/ (advertiser-selected): $3,231.88 / 29.33 ≈ $110.15 CPA
  • /try.sipjeng.com/ (advertiser-selected): $2,802.50 / 44.00 ≈ $63.69 CPA
  • shop homepage (advertiser-selected root): $1,444.84 / 38.50 ≈ $37.53 CPA

That is a major spread. Based only on visible data, sending traffic to /collections/best-sellers is dramatically more efficient than sending it to /shop/ or /try/. Even allowing for attribution noise, the gap is too large to ignore.

3) Specific landing pages with spend and weak/zero conversion

  • /products/thc-infused-paloma: $61.39, 0 conversions
  • /collections/cbd-infused-drinks: $77.91, 0 conversions
  • /product/spicy-blood-orange/ advertiser-selected: $124.98 / 1 = $124.98 CPA
  • /contact/ advertiser-selected: $20.05, 0 conversions
  • /about/ advertiser-selected: $24.38, 0 conversions
  • Multiple blog/news pages accrued spend with 0 conversions

These should not continue receiving paid traffic if purchase CPA is the objective.

Scale opportunities

The best scale opportunities in the evidence are not “more budget everywhere.” They are budget reallocation toward specific Search routes and intent buckets.

1) Prioritize best-seller and category/product pages with supportable CPA

  • High-confidence: /collections/best-sellers is the standout page by both volume and implied CPA: 791 clicks, $951.15 spend, 207.65 conversions, ≈ $4.58 CPA. That is by far the strongest landing-page signal in the reports.
  • High-confidence: /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks at $58.71 / 4 = $14.68 CPA. Lower volume, but still strong.
  • High-confidence: /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic at $116.05 / 6 = $19.34 CPA.
  • Medium-confidence: /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ advertiser-selected at $99.65 / 4 = $24.91 CPA. Decent CPA but low click volume and odd impression-to-click ratio, so expand carefully.
  • Low-confidence: homepage/about low-volume wins with 2 conversions each. Positive signal, not enough proof to scale heavily.

2) Search over PMax

If you need to move dollars now for lower CPA, the reports support moving them out of active PMax and into tighter Search campaigns/ad groups aligned to the better landing pages above.

3) Build exact/phrase intent buckets around proven themes

The search term file is truncated, so I cannot name full winning term sets. But from landing page evidence alone, the strongest themes to isolate are:

  • Best sellers
  • Non-alcoholic THC drinks
  • Jeng and tonic
  • Sampler / starter / collection pack themes

Route those directly to the matching high-performing page rather than broad traffic to /shop/.

Campaign-level changes

High-confidence actions

  • Cube | New Pmax: pause, or at minimum reduce budget aggressively until purchase-only conversion tracking is verified. Current visible performance is $198.46 for 1 conversion on Search inventory plus additional non-Search spend with 0 conversions.
  • Exclude / deprioritize non-Search inventory: the channel report shows:
    • GDN: $492.40, 0 conversions
    • YouTube: $540.58, 0 conversions
    • Search partners: $3.31, 0 conversions
    • Gmail: $1.58, 0 conversions
  • Put Search at the center of spend: all measurable conversion volume in the channel report is under Google Search.

Medium-confidence structural changes

  • Create or tighten separate Search campaigns for:
    • Brand
    • Nonbrand category intent
    • Product-specific intent
    • Competitor conquesting only if intentionally funded as a separate test, not mixed into core CPA campaigns
  • Send each campaign to a matching page:
    • Category terms → /collections/best-sellers or /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks
    • Product terms → matching product pages such as /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic
    • Sampler/pack terms → /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ if that is a current buyable page

Low-confidence or gated

  • Resurrecting paused campaigns purely based on blended conversion counts. For example, Cube_Catch All_OCT shows $5,334.65 / 94.88 ≈ $56.23 CPA in the channel report, but we do not have purchase-only confidence across reports, so I would not simply relaunch it unchanged.

Ad group/keyword/search-term changes

High-confidence actions

The search terms file is partial, but it still shows clear cleanup opportunities.

  • Add competitor negatives to core brand/nonbrand campaigns unless conquesting is intentional and budgeted separately. Visible examples:
    • shimmerwood beverages
    • gaba spirits
    • melati drinks
    • wunder drink
    • cycling frog drinks
    • little saints negroni
    • seth rogen seltzer
    • where to buy de soi
    • cann social tonics / buy cann
  • Add discount-code negatives for other brands:
    • tost discount code
    • wims discount code first order
  • Add recipe/informational negatives where purchase intent is weak:
    • valentines cocktail recipes
    • monte carlo cocktail
    • greyhound drink
    • freezer old fashioned
    • moscow mule specs
    • making a mocktail
    • drinks recipes non alcoholic
  • Add weak nonbrand negatives or isolate them into a separate exploration bucket:
    • hemp infused seltzer — $3.46, 0 conv
    • cbd drinks 50 mg — $10.35, 0 conv
    • nootropic drinks to replace alcohol — $9.03, 0 conv
    • relaxing drinks instead of alcohol — $3.75, 0 conv

Brand handling

  • Separate brand fully. The visible term “sipjeng” in Cube_Search_W / Ad group 1 should not be treated as valid optimization proof because it reports 2 clicks and 14 conversions. But it does show brand terms are appearing outside a clean brand-only setup.
  • Move all brand queries into an exact/phrase brand campaign if that is not already enforced.
  • Add brand negatives to nonbrand campaigns to stop branded traffic inflating nonbrand CPA and muddying bidding.

Keyword/match-type changes

  • For CPA control, tighten broad/AI Max exposure in nonbrand. The partial term file shows broad and AI Max matching into weak competitor and informational queries.
  • Promote proven themes into exact and phrase ad groups tied to the best-performing landing pages.
  • Keep broad only in a tightly monitored exploration campaign with a strict negative build process.

Small-sample positives to keep, but not scale aggressively yet

  • mocktails: 1 click, 1 conversion, $0.85 CPA. Positive signal only; not enough volume to justify expansion by itself.

Landing-page changes

High-confidence routing changes

  • Reduce or stop using /shop/ as the default Search destination. The advertiser-selected /shop/ page spent $3,231.88 for 29.33 conversions, or about $110.15 CPA. That is far above the better page options.
  • Shift more Search traffic to /collections/best-sellers. It has the strongest support in the report: $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58 CPA.
  • Use direct product/category pages for matching intent. Based on the report:
    • non-alcoholic THC intent → /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks
    • Jeng & Tonic intent → /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic
    • sampler/pack intent → /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/

Pages to stop funding for paid search unless there is a separate top-funnel objective

  • /contact/
  • /about/
  • Most blog/news pages with spend and 0 conversions
  • Weak product pages like /products/thc-infused-paloma and /collections/cbd-infused-drinks unless they are intentionally being tested with dedicated purchase-intent keywords

Medium-confidence page tests

  • If you keep a broad nonbrand campaign, test /collections/best-sellers against /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks as the default destination rather than /try/ or /shop/.
  • For product-intent ad groups, use the exact matching product page, not a generic collection.

Measurement caveats

This is the gating issue for any serious CPA optimization.

  • Major conversion mismatch: landing page report shows 351.49 conversions; channel report shows 126.33 conversions for the same date range. That is too large a gap to ignore.
  • Mixed objectives in channel reporting: the channel report includes purchases, add to cart, begin checkout, and page views inside “Results.” That means not every conversion-looking number is purchase-clean.
  • Fractional conversions: several rows show fractional values like 0.50 and 28.44, which likely means data-driven attribution or blended action counting. That is fine operationally, but it lowers confidence if the goal is strict purchase CPA and the reports are not isolated to purchase-only.
  • Anomalous branded term reporting: “sipjeng” with 14 conversions on 2 clicks is not believable as a straightforward purchase metric. Do not use that row for bidding or budget decisions until the conversion setup is confirmed.
  • Truncated search term file: term-level waste and winners are definitely incomplete. I can name some negatives confidently from what is visible, but not produce a full term map.

Before trusting Smart Bidding to chase lowest purchase CPA, verify that Purchase is the primary included conversion for the campaigns you want to optimize, and that secondary actions like page view, add to cart, and begin checkout are not polluting campaign optimization.

24-hour action list

  1. Campaign: Cube | New Pmax — pause the campaign, or if pausing is not possible today, cut its budget sharply and stop treating it as a scale vehicle until purchase-only conversion settings are verified.
  2. Campaign conversion settings — verify whether Purchase is the only primary included conversion for the Search campaigns intended to optimize to lowest purchase CPA.
  3. Campaign conversion settings — move Page View, Add to cart, Begin checkout to secondary/not included in “Conversions” for bidding if they are currently included for core purchase campaigns.
  4. Nonbrand Search campaigns — add negative keywords for visible competitor queries: shimmerwood beverages, gaba spirits, melati drinks, wunder drink, cycling frog drinks, little saints negroni, seth rogen seltzer, buy cann.
  5. Nonbrand Search campaigns — add negative keywords for visible discount-code queries: tost discount code, wims discount code first order.
  6. Nonbrand Search campaigns — add negative keywords for recipe/info queries: valentines cocktail recipes, monte carlo cocktail, greyhound drink, freezer old fashioned, moscow mule specs.
  7. Nonbrand Search campaigns — add or test negatives/isolation for weak visible queries with spend and 0 conversions: hemp infused seltzer, cbd drinks 50 mg, nootropic drinks to replace alcohol, relaxing drinks instead of alcohol.
  8. Brand campaign / nonbrand campaigns — verify brand separation; if brand terms are leaking into nonbrand, add sipjeng and close brand variants as negatives in nonbrand campaigns.
  9. Ads/keywords routing to /shop/ — change final URLs from https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ to https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers where the keyword intent is broad commercial/category intent.
  10. Ads/keywords for THC/non-alcoholic THC category intent — route to https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks.
  11. Ads/keywords for Jeng & Tonic product intent — route to https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic.
  12. Ads/keywords for sampler/pack intent — route to https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ if that page is current and purchasable.
  13. Ads or URL expansion settings sending traffic to /about/ and /contact/ — stop those routes for purchase-focused campaigns.
  14. Ads or automatic routing sending traffic to blog/news pages — stop those routes for purchase-focused campaigns unless those pages are part of a separate top-funnel campaign with its own KPI.
  15. Landing pages / product routes — pause or deprioritize paid routing to /products/thc-infused-paloma and /collections/cbd-infused-drinks until they show purchase evidence.

7-day validation plan

  1. Measurement validation: pull a purchase-only campaign report and confirm whether the account is optimizing on Purchase only. If not, fix that before interpreting CPA trends.
  2. Landing-page validation: compare 7-day spend and purchase CPA for traffic newly routed to:
    • /collections/best-sellers
    • /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks
    • /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic
  3. Waste validation: confirm zero further spend on /about/, /contact/, and blog/news URLs from purchase-focused campaigns.
  4. Search term validation: pull a fresh, non-truncated search term report and check whether competitor/recipe/info negatives are reducing irrelevant impressions and clicks.
  5. Brand leakage check: verify that branded queries are isolated to the brand campaign and no longer appearing in nonbrand traffic buckets.
  6. PMax validation: if Cube | New Pmax remains live in any form, check whether it generates any verified purchase conversions after measurement cleanup. If not, keep it paused.
  7. CPA sanity check: compare post-change CPA using plain arithmetic, not just labels:
    • Spend / purchases for each Search campaign
    • Spend / purchases for each landing page

Goal summary captured

You asked for specific Google Ads optimizations based only on the 3 attached reports, with the goal of lowest CPA for purchase conversions.

Based on the evidence, the most defensible path is:

  • Push harder into Search, not broad PMax/cross-network inventory
  • Route paid traffic to /collections/best-sellers and other lower-CPA product/category pages, not /shop/, /try/, /about/, /contact/, or blog pages
  • Clean up search terms with concrete negatives for competitors, discount seekers, and recipe/info traffic
  • Fix purchase measurement before making aggressive scale decisions, because the reports conflict materially on conversion totals

Bottom line The strongest data-backed move is to cut active PMax waste, tighten nonbrand query matching, isolate brand, and reroute Search traffic toward /collections/best-sellers and the few product/category pages that actually show supportable implied CPA.

Agent 3 — QA report

VERDICT
approve_with_warnings

SCORES
request_match: 4
evidence_grounding: 3
detail_sufficiency: 4
actionability: 4
clarity: 4
overall: 3

WHAT WORKED
- The answer stays mostly aligned to the client ask: specific Google Ads optimizations aimed at lower CPA, using the three provided reports.
- It correctly centers the biggest documented issue: the conversion mismatch between landing page totals (351.49) and channel totals (126.33), and warns not to trust all “conversions” as purchases.
- Arithmetic is mostly correct where shown:
  - Account CPA ≈ $28.25 from $9,928.11 / 351.49
  - Search CPA ≈ $27.21 from $9,536.20 / 350.49
  - Channel Search CPA ≈ $57.86 from $7,309.65 / 126.33
  - PMax CPA ≈ $391.91 from $391.91 / 1
  - /collections/best-sellers CPA ≈ $4.58 from $951.15 / 207.65
  - /shop/ CPA ≈ $110.15 from $3,231.88 / 29.33
- It appropriately treats the “sipjeng” term row as anomalous and not reliable optimization evidence.
- It respects the truncated search term report by not pretending to provide a complete keyword map.

FAILURES
- It overstates confidence on some “purchase” conclusions even while acknowledging the reports are not purchase-clean. Example: “These should not continue receiving paid traffic if purchase CPA is the objective.” That may be directionally fair, but the evidence does not prove those conversions are purchases, and some rows are tiny volume.
- It treats landing page CPA as if directly comparable and causally decisive without enough caveat about page-selection bias, campaign mix, and brand/nonbrand differences. /collections/best-sellers could be benefiting from very different query intent than /shop/ or /try/.
- It recommends pausing Cube | New Pmax with high confidence. The data does suggest weakness, but the evidence base is mixed across two conflicting reports and very low conversion volume on active PMax. “Reduce sharply and validate” is better supported than a hard pause recommendation.
- It implies “all measurable conversion volume in the channel report is under Google Search.” That is true for the provided channel totals, but it glosses over the same report’s stated mixing of result types and the contradiction with landing page totals. The conclusion is directionally right but more qualified framing was needed.
- It includes operational recommendations that are not fully traceable to the evidence, such as “tighten broad/AI Max exposure.” The handoff mentions broad and AI Max matching in the partial file, but the answer does not cite concrete rows for AI Max specifically in the visible evidence excerpt here.
- The 24-hour checklist is a bit too expansive and prescriptive given the gaps. Some items are strong; others depend on campaign structure details not provided.

MISSED EVIDENCE
- It did not explicitly note that the landing page report totals show account clicks 3,343 vs landing-page clicks 3,120, meaning some click/cost activity is not represented in page-level routing rows. That matters when making aggressive URL-routing recommendations.
- It could have highlighted the extreme low-volume nature of several “winning” pages more consistently:
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: only 18 clicks
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: only 23 clicks
  - /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/: only 20 clicks
  These are promising, but not “high-confidence” in the same way as /collections/best-sellers.
- It did not point out that some of the high-CTR/low-CPA automatic landing page examples like /about and homepage are too low-volume to infer page quality; it mentions this partly, but not as strongly as needed.
- It did not mention that the channel report total cost ($8,347.53) is materially below landing page account cost ($9,928.11), which further undermines direct cross-report CPA comparisons.
- It did not explicitly caution that competitor and informational term negatives are based on a truncated term file; some visible bad terms have only 1–4 clicks, so the recommendation is sensible but evidence is thin on scale impact.

HALLUCINATION CHECK
- No major fabricated numbers detected; most cited metrics trace back to the handoff.
- However, one notable unsupported claim is the assertion that the channel report “includes purchases, add to cart, begin checkout, and page views inside ‘Results.’” This comes from the handoff’s gap summary, not from a directly quoted report row in the delivered answer. It may be true, but Agent 2 presents it as established fact without showing evidence from the actual report extract.
- “AI Max” exposure is not clearly evidenced in the supplied facts. If that label did not explicitly appear in the truncated search terms report, this is an unsupported embellishment.
- “Brand terms are appearing outside a clean brand-only setup” is plausible from the “sipjeng” row in Cube_Search_W, but still somewhat inferential because we were not given the full campaign taxonomy.

REVISION NEEDED
- Soften overconfident pause/kill recommendations into priority-tested actions unless the evidence is overwhelming. For PMax, recommend “pause or sharply reduce pending purchase-only validation” rather than treating pause as proven.
- Downgrade confidence levels on low-volume landing pages. Keep /collections/best-sellers as the standout; frame the other pages as test candidates, not proven scale winners.
- Add a stronger disclaimer that landing page CPA differences may reflect query intent and campaign mix, not just page quality.
- Remove or qualify any claim about AI Max unless explicitly visible in the supplied reports.
- Tighten the measurement section to distinguish clearly between what is observed in the reports vs what is inferred from the handoff summary.

FINAL QA SUMMARY
This is a solid, useful operator-style answer, but not a fully rigorous one. It matches the ask and uses many of the right facts, with mostly correct arithmetic and sensible optimization directions. The biggest strengths are the focus on Search vs weak non-Search inventory, the routing recommendations around /collections/best-sellers, and the repeated warning that conversion reporting is not clean enough to equate all conversions with purchases.

The main weaknesses are overconfidence and some loose evidentiary framing. Agent 2 sometimes treats low-volume page wins as “high-confidence,” treats landing-page CPA as more causal than the data supports, and gives stronger pause/cut recommendations than the conflicting reports fully justify. A few statements also rely on inferred setup details rather than directly shown evidence.

Approve with warnings: usable for the client after modest tightening, especially around confidence levels, attribution caveats, and unsupported setup assumptions.

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