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Run 2026-03-26-030104-e98d9e29Mode llmStatus unknownQA completed37,220 est. tokens$0.2171 est. cost

Saved: 2026-03-26T03:01:04.734936+00:00
Model: gpt-5.4
Estimated input/output tokens: 27,293 / 9,927

No status detail.

Processed files

Agent 1 — Intake handoff

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

PROVIDED EVIDENCE
1) Landing page report CSV
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Fields include: Landing page, Selected by, Clicks, Impr., CTR, Avg. CPC, Cost, Conversions
- Includes totals by account and by network

2) Channel Performance / Search terms insight report CSV
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Fields include: Channels, Status, Campaigns, Impr., Clicks, Interactions, Conversions, Conv. value, Cost, Results, Results value
- Despite filename, this is channel/campaign performance by channel placement, not actual search terms
- Includes active and paused campaigns

3) Search terms report CSV
- Date range: September 25, 2025 - March 23, 2026
- Fields include: Search term, Match type, Added/Excluded, Campaign, Ad group, Avg. CPM, Clicks, Impr., CTR, Avg. CPC, Cost, Campaign type, Conv. rate, Conversions, Cost / conv.
- Data shown is truncated; not full report visible in prompt

EXTRACTED FACTS
- Primary optimization objective: reduce CPA on purchase conversion, not traffic or page views.
- Account totals from landing page report:
  - Account: 3,343 clicks, 147,440 impressions, 2.27% CTR, avg CPC $2.97, cost $9,928.11, conversions 351.49
  - Landing pages subtotal: 3,120 clicks, 147,440 impressions, 2.12% CTR, avg CPC $2.88, cost $8,984.10, conversions 351.49
  - Search total: 2,844 clicks, 117,027 impressions, avg CPC $3.35, cost $9,536.20, conversions 350.49
  - Performance Max total: 499 clicks, 30,413 impressions, avg CPC $0.79, cost $391.91, conversions 1.00
- Strong contradiction:
  - Landing page report says PMax delivered only 1.00 conversion total.
  - Channel report shows active/paused PMax-linked campaigns with many conversions on Google Search surfaces (e.g. 94.88, 28.44, 1.01, 1.00).
  - Suggests inconsistent attribution/reporting scope, campaign naming confusion, or that “channel performance” is aggregating mixed campaign types/results not aligned with purchase-only conversion.
- Another major issue:
  - Multiple reports include non-purchase actions in “Conversions/Results” or at least in “Results,” such as Add to cart, Begin checkout, Page View.
  - Client goal is purchase CPA, but several rows mix purchases with micro-conversions.
  - Search terms report contains impossible-looking conversion rates and counts for some brand terms (e.g. “sipjeng” 2 clicks, 14 conversions, 700% conv rate, cost/conv $0.02), implying non-purchase conversions are likely included in the Conversions column or fractional/modeled conversions.
- Best landing pages by volume and conversion efficiency visible:
  - https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER): 791 clicks, 55,088 impr, 1.44% CTR, $1.20 CPC, $951.15 cost, 207.65 conv
  - https://shop.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER): 438 clicks, 17,308 impr, 2.53% CTR, $3.30 CPC, $1,444.84 cost, 38.50 conv
  - https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ (ADVERTISER): 872 clicks, 68,994 impr, 1.26% CTR, $3.71 CPC, $3,231.88 cost, 29.33 conv
  - https://try.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER): 728 clicks, 21,337 impr, 3.41% CTR, $3.85 CPC, $2,802.50 cost, 44.00 conv
- Calculated rough CPA by landing page using visible cost/conversions:
  - /collections/best-sellers: ~$4.58/conv
  - /shop/ homepage: ~$37.53/conv
  - /shop/shop/: ~$110.16/conv
  - /try.sipjeng.com/: ~$63.69/conv
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: $116.05 / 6.00 = ~$19.34/conv
  - /products/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER on shop domain): $99.65 / 4 = ~$24.91/conv
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: $58.71 / 4 = ~$14.68/conv
  - /pages/about (AUTOMATIC): $33.15 / 2 = ~$16.58/conv
  - homepage / (AUTOMATIC): $50.45 / 2 = ~$25.23/conv
  - /blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025: $423.97 / 10 = ~$42.40/conv
- High-spend landing pages with zero conversions:
  - /products/thc-infused-paloma (AUTOMATIC): 8 clicks, $61.39, 0 conv
  - /collections/cbd-infused-drinks (AUTOMATIC): 20 clicks, $77.91, 0 conv
  - /blogs/news/meet-jeng...: 6 clicks, $37.63, 0 conv
  - /collections/functional-beverages: 6 clicks, $35.39, 0 conv
  - /about/ on shop subdomain (ADVERTISER): 3 clicks, $24.38, 0 conv
  - /contact/ on shop subdomain (ADVERTISER): 5 clicks, $20.05, 0 conv
  - /product/summer-starter-pack/ (ADVERTISER): 1 click, $16.61, 0 conv
  - /products/thc-infused-rhubarb-cucumber-spritz: 1 click, $14.21, 0 conv
  - /low-sugar-cocktails: 2 clicks, $15.34, 0 conv
  - blog/article LPs mostly non-converting
- Search seems to drive almost all conversions in landing page totals:
  - Search: 350.49 conversions on $9,536.20 spend
  - PMax: 1 conversion on $391.91 spend
- Channel report totals:
  - All channels total: 556,348 impressions, 3,973 clicks, 69,895 interactions, 126.33 conversions, conv value $10,027.42, cost $8,347.53
  - Google Search total: 214,867 impressions, 1,877 clicks, 126.33 conversions, cost $7,309.65
  - 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
  - Search partners total: 222 impressions, 5 clicks, 0 conversions, cost $3.31
- In channel report, only Google Search rows show conversions; GDN/YouTube/Gmail/Discover/Maps show 0 conversions.
- Active campaign in channel report:
  - Cube | New Pmax
    - Google Search: 1,618 impr, 63 clicks, 1.00 conv, conv value $23.09, cost $198.46
    - Search partners: 59 impr, 2 clicks, 0 conv, cost $2.26
    - YouTube: 4,107 impr, 5 clicks, 0 conv, cost $36.98
    - GDN: 24,629 impr, 429 clicks, 0 conv, cost $154.22
- Paused campaigns with meaningful historical purchase volume:
  - Cube_Catch All_OCT on Google Search: 135,613 impr, 1,418 clicks, 94.88 conv, conv value $9,153.13, cost $5,334.65
  - Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search: 72,373 impr, 300 clicks, 28.44 conv, conv value $715.66, cost $1,251.03
  - Cube | PMax - Website Traffic on Google Search: 1,554 impr, 11 clicks, 1.01 conv, cost $30.16
  - Cube_Pmax on Google Search: 2,661 impr, 81 clicks, 1.00 conv, cost $481.72
- Search term findings from visible rows:
  - Brand/cross-brand leakage appears significant in Brand and NonBrand campaigns:
    - brand/competitor terms present: shimmerwood beverages, gaba spirits, melati drinks, wunder drink, cycling frog drinks, sixsip drink, grove drinks, little saints negroni, seth rogen seltzer, where to buy de soi, etc.
  - Broad match and AI Max are present heavily.
  - Query intent mismatch examples:
    - discount code queries for competitor/other brands (“tost discount code”, “wims discount code first order”)
    - recipe/info queries (“valentines cocktail recipes”, “drink recipes non alcoholic”, “making a mocktail”, “moscow mule specs”)
    - near me/retail intent for competitors (“nowadays drink near me”, “where to buy ohho drinks”)
  - Visible converting terms:
    - “mocktails” broad match: 1 click, 36 impr, CPC $0.85, 1 conv, cost/conv $0.85
    - “sipjeng” phrase close variant in Cube_Search_W: 2 clicks, 2 impr, CPC $0.17, 14 conv, cost/conv $0.02 (likely not purchase-only, likely contaminated by micro-conversions)
  - Visible non-converting but costly terms:
    - “cbd drinks 50 mg”: 1 click, $10.35, 0 conv
    - “tost discount code”: 1 click, $7.43, 0 conv
    - “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol”: 4 clicks, $9.03, 0 conv
    - “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol”: 1 click, $3.75, 0 conv
    - “hemp infused seltzer”: 1 click, $3.46, 0 conv

OBSERVED METRICS
Calculated from landing page data:
- Account rough CPA = $9,928.11 / 351.49 = ~$28.25 per conversion
- Search rough CPA = $9,536.20 / 350.49 = ~$27.21 per conversion
- PMax rough CPA from landing page total = $391.91 / 1.00 = $391.91 per conversion
- Landing page-level rough CPA:
  - /collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER): ~$4.58
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: ~$14.68
  - /pages/about (AUTO): ~$16.58
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: ~$19.34
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER): ~$24.91
  - /sipjeng.com/ homepage (AUTO): ~$25.23
  - /blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025: ~$42.40
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/: ~$37.53
  - /try.sipjeng.com/: ~$63.69
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/: ~$110.16
- Channel-level rough CPA from channel report:
  - Google Search total: $7,309.65 / 126.33 = ~$57.86 per reported conversion
  - All channels: $8,347.53 / 126.33 = ~$66.08 per reported conversion
- These CPAs do not reconcile with landing page report due to conversion-definition inconsistency.

GAPS/UNCERTAINTY
- No screenshots were actually provided; only CSV text exports.
- User mentioned 3 reports; all were text CSV, not visual dashboards.
- Search terms report is truncated in the prompt, so full query analysis is not possible.
- No campaign-level Search campaign report for currently active Search campaigns was provided; difficult to isolate what is live now besides “Cube | New Pmax.”
- No device, geo, audience, asset group, ad copy, bidding strategy, budget, impression share, or product feed data.
- No explicit confirmation whether “Conversions” in landing page report equals purchases only.
- Channel report clearly mixes “Results” including page views/add to carts/begin checkouts, and its conversion totals conflict with landing page totals.
- PMax attribution/reporting is inconsistent across reports; cannot confidently recommend aggressive PMax changes without caveat.
- No revenue/ROAS target requested; only CPA goal, but conversion value fields exist and may not align.
- No website URL details beyond LPs found in CSV; no landing page UX evidence except URLs.
- Fractional conversions suggest data-driven attribution or modeled conversions; this should be acknowledged.

RECOMMENDED ANALYSIS ANGLE
1) Lead with a data-quality caveat:
- Recommend optimizations using strongest directional evidence only because reports do not reconcile on conversion counts and likely mix purchase with micro-conversions.

2) Prioritize purchase-efficiency optimization around landing pages:
- Shift spend toward LPs with strongest visible CPA and meaningful volume:
  - /collections/best-sellers
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic
  - possibly /product/collection-sampler-6-pack
- Reduce or exclude low-efficiency/high-spend destinations:
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/
  - /try.sipjeng.com/ if judged against lower-CPA alternatives
  - blog/article LPs with spend and little/no conversion
  - informational/contact/about/store locator pages unless intentionally part of upper funnel

3) Push hard against broad/irrelevant search traffic:
- Add negatives for competitor brands, discount code, recipe, near me, informational/research queries, and irrelevant beverages.
- Tighten broad/AI Max query matching, especially in nonbrand.
- Separate brand vs nonbrand vs competitor intent.

4) Recommend channel pruning for lowest CPA:
- Search is the only clearly converting channel in channel report.
- GDN/YouTube show spend with 0 conversions in the provided period.
- Suggest reducing/excluding non-search inventory in PMax or shifting budget away from PMax/display-heavy campaigns toward Search if purchase CPA is sole KPI.

5) Mention active campaign issue:
- Active “Cube | New Pmax” is spending on GDN and YouTube with 0 conversions; only Google Search within that campaign shows 1 conversion on $198.46.
- Suggest budget control / asset-group cleanup / URL expansion restrictions / campaign replacement with standard Search where possible.

6) Emphasize conversion tracking fix as a prerequisite:
- Audit primary conversion action so optimization uses Purchase only.
- Demote page view/add to cart/begin checkout to secondary if not already.
- Reconcile why landing page report shows 351.49 conv while channel report shows 126.33.

7) Suggested operator-style framing for Agent 2:
- “Do more of X, cut Y, block Z, fix tracking first.”
- Base recommendations on concrete LPs and query examples above, while explicitly caveating report inconsistency.

Agent 2 — Client output

Executive diagnosis

Your stated goal is lowest CPA for purchase conversion. Based on the three exports, the account is directionally telling us to concentrate on Search traffic and on a short list of landing pages, while cutting loose broad/irrelevant query coverage and non-search inventory that is not showing purchases in the provided data.

The biggest complication: the reports do not reconcile cleanly, and at least some of the visible conversion columns are mixing purchases with non-purchase actions. That means I can give you strong operator actions where the evidence is clear, but I would not treat every reported “conversion” as purchase proof yet.

Two examples of the mismatch:

  • Landing page report shows Search = 350.49 conversions on $9,536.20, or about $27.21 per reported conversion, while Performance Max = 1.00 conversion on $391.91, or about $391.91 per reported conversion.
  • Channel report shows Google Search total = 126.33 conversions on $7,309.65, or about $57.86 per reported conversion. That is far away from the landing-page totals, so conversion definition/scope is not consistent across reports.

So the operating stance should be:

  • High-confidence Cut obvious waste in query intent and weak landing pages.
  • High-confidence Bias budget toward Search and toward the few pages with materially lower reported CPA.
  • High-confidence Audit conversion setup immediately so bidding is truly optimized to purchase only.
  • Medium-confidence Contain or restrict PMax rather than scale it, because the reports conflict badly on PMax purchase contribution.

Biggest waste to cut

1) Non-search inventory spending without reported purchases in the channel report

In the channel export, only Google Search shows conversions. The other visible channels show spend with zero conversions:

  • Google Display Network: $492.40 spend, 0 conversions
  • YouTube: $540.58 spend, 0 conversions
  • Search partners: $3.31 spend, 0 conversions

Within the only active campaign shown, Cube | New Pmax:

  • Google Search: $198.46 / 1.00 conversion ≈ $198.46 CPA
  • GDN: $154.22 / 0 conversions
  • YouTube: $36.98 / 0 conversions
  • Search partners: $2.26 / 0 conversions

For a lowest-CPA purchase goal, the clear waste cut is non-search PMax inventory unless separate purchase-only reporting proves otherwise.

2) Search traffic going to weak or irrelevant landing pages

The landing page report gives the clearest operator signal. A few destinations absorb spend at much worse implied CPA than the better pages.

  • https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/: $3,231.88 / 29.33 ≈ $110.16 per reported conversion
  • https://try.sipjeng.com/: $2,802.50 / 44.00 ≈ $63.69 per reported conversion
  • https://shop.sipjeng.com/: $1,444.84 / 38.50 ≈ $37.53 per reported conversion
  • https://sipjeng.com/blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025: $423.97 / 10.00 ≈ $42.40 per reported conversion

Against those, the strongest visible pages are much better:

  • https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers: $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58 per reported conversion
  • https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: $58.71 / 4.00 ≈ $14.68
  • https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: $116.05 / 6.00 ≈ $19.34
  • https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/: $99.65 / 4.00 ≈ $24.91

Even allowing for mixed conversion definitions, the spread is too large to ignore. The account is over-sending traffic to broad shop/home destinations relative to the best-sellers and category/product pages.

3) Broad/AI Max query leakage into low-intent and competitor intent

The search term export is truncated, but the visible rows already show leakage that should be cut for a lowest-CPA purchase objective:

  • Discount-code intent: “tost discount code”, “wims discount code first order”
  • Recipe/info intent: “valentines cocktail recipes”, “moscow mule specs”, “making a mocktail” bucket, “drink recipes non alcoholic” bucket
  • Competitor brand intent: “shimmerwood beverages”, “gaba spirits”, “melati drinks”, “wunder drink”, “cycling frog drinks”, “little saints negroni”, “seth rogen seltzer”, “where to buy de soi” bucket
  • Retail locator competitor intent: “where to buy…” and “near me” type competitor searches

Visible examples with spend and no reported conversions:

  • “cbd drinks 50 mg”: $10.35, 0 conversions
  • “tost discount code”: $7.43, 0 conversions
  • “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol”: $9.03, 0 conversions
  • “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol”: $3.75, 0 conversions
  • “hemp infused seltzer”: $3.46, 0 conversions

Individually those are small, but they are direct proof that broad/AI Max matching is allowing irrelevant traffic through.

Scale opportunities

High-confidence opportunities

  • Send more paid traffic to /collections/best-sellers. It has the strongest volume and by far the best visible implied CPA: $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58. That is dramatically better than /shop/, the homepage, and try.sipjeng.com.
  • Test more traffic to /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks. Small sample, but $58.71 / 4 = $14.68 is much better than the broad shop pages.
  • Test more traffic to /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic. With $116.05 / 6 = $19.34, this page is materially better than /try.sipjeng.com/ and /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/.
  • Keep /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ in the testing mix. $99.65 / 4 = $24.91 is still better than the broad shop and try paths.

Medium-confidence opportunities

  • Use tighter Search coverage around high-intent nonbrand themes already hinted by converting pages, such as best sellers, non-alcoholic THC drinks, and the product/category themes tied to those pages. I am keeping this phrased carefully because the full keyword report was not provided.
  • Preserve “mocktails” as a positive signal, not a scale-ready winner. The visible row is 1 click, 1 reported conversion, $0.85 cost/conv. That is encouraging, but one click is not enough evidence to scale aggressively.

Low-confidence or measurement-gated opportunities

  • Brand scaling based on “sipjeng” search term data is not reliable yet. The visible row shows 2 clicks and 14 conversions with 700% conv rate. That is not usable as purchase evidence and strongly suggests mixed micro-conversions or attribution artifacts.
  • Reactivating paused PMax/catch-all campaigns should wait until purchase-only measurement is validated. Some paused campaigns show meaningful Google Search purchase rows, but the totals conflict with the landing page report.

Campaign-level changes

High-confidence actions

  • Reduce or contain active PMax spend immediately. In the provided active setup, Cube | New Pmax is spending across Search, GDN, and YouTube, but only the Google Search row shows 1 conversion, at about $198.46 CPA. For a lowest-CPA purchase goal, that is not scale-ready.
  • Shift budget priority toward standard Search coverage if that option exists in the live account. The evidence across both the landing-page and channel reports is that Search is the only channel consistently associated with reported purchases/conversions.
  • If PMax must stay live, restrict it as much as settings allow. Specifically verify final URL expansion behavior and whether low-intent URLs can be excluded. This is a conditional recommendation because the export does not show the actual setting state.
  • Do not send PMax/search traffic broadly to /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ by default. At $110.16 per reported conversion, it is one of the weakest high-spend destinations in the export.

Medium-confidence actions

  • Separate brand, nonbrand, and competitor intent cleanly. The visible search term rows show competitor queries appearing in both brand and nonbrand campaign contexts. That usually inflates waste and muddies bidding.
  • Audit whether broad match and AI Max are overused in nonbrand. The report clearly shows both are present. If purchase CPA is the KPI, broad/AI Max should not stay unrestricted while query quality is this loose.

Low-confidence or measurement-gated actions

  • Do not use conversion value in this review for budget decisions. The value fields are clearly mixed across actions in the channel report, so purchase-value interpretation is not clean enough from these exports alone.

Ad group/keyword/search-term changes

High-confidence actions

  • Add negatives for discount-code intent across nonbrand and any catch-all structures:
    • discount code
    • promo code
    • coupon
    • first order discount
  • Add negatives for competitor retail-locator intent where the query includes competitor names plus:
    • where to buy
    • near me
    • stockists
    • retailer
  • Add negatives for recipe/spec/info intent where purchase intent is weak:
    • recipe
    • recipes
    • specs
    • how to make
    • making a
  • Add competitor-brand negatives to brand campaigns. The visible brand campaign terms include competitor names such as:
    • shimmerwood beverages
    • gaba spirits
    • melati drinks
    • wunder drink
    • cycling frog drinks
    Those should not be matched inside a SipJeng brand campaign.
  • Exclude visible zero-conversion terms with spend from nonbrand/catch-all structures unless you intentionally want research traffic:
    • cbd drinks 50 mg
    • tost discount code
    • nootropic drinks to replace alcohol
    • relaxing drinks instead of alcohol
    • hemp infused seltzer

Medium-confidence tests

  • Move broad/AI Max nonbrand themes into tighter phrase/exact variants where possible. The visible leakage is enough to justify tightening match types, but the search-term export is truncated, so I cannot name the full set of keywords to rebuild.
  • Isolate competitor terms into their own contained campaign only if you intentionally want that traffic. If not, block them outright. Right now they are appearing as leakage, not as a controlled competitor strategy.
  • Keep brand isolated with exact and phrase coverage for SipJeng terms only. Because the visible “sipjeng” row is anomalous, treat brand as a protection layer, not as proof of stellar purchase CPA until tracking is cleaned up.

Low-confidence items

  • Do not scale “mocktails” aggressively off one click. Keep it active as a positive signal, but it needs volume before budget expansion.

Landing-page changes

High-confidence actions

  • Prioritize these destinations in ads and any URL-routing controls:
    • https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers
    • https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks
    • https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic
    • https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/
  • Reduce traffic to broad shop pages with weak implied CPA:
    • https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/
    • https://shop.sipjeng.com/
    • https://try.sipjeng.com/
    Based on the visible numbers, these are substantially less efficient than best-sellers and the stronger category/product pages.
  • Stop using blog URLs as paid search destinations unless they are intentionally upper funnel and separately measured. The visible blog page with the most volume, /blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025, comes in at about $42.40 per reported conversion, much worse than your best-selling collection page. Other blog/article pages spent and showed 0 conversions.
  • Exclude low-intent site pages from automatic expansion/routing if those controls are active:
    • /about
    • /contact
    • /pages/store-locator
    • blog/article pages
    This is especially relevant because several rows are marked AUTOMATIC, which suggests Google-selected landing pages were in play at least for some traffic.

Medium-confidence tests

  • Test whether the best-sellers collection can replace the current default landing page in nonbrand traffic. The implied CPA gap is so large that this is the clearest routing test in the dataset.
  • Match ad intent to page intent. Category-intent queries should go to category pages, not to generic shop or informational pages. Product-intent queries should go to the exact product page when that page has at least some conversion history.

Measurement caveats

This section matters because your goal is purchase CPA, and the exports do not cleanly support purchase-only conclusions everywhere.

  • The reports conflict materially. Landing page totals show 351.49 conversions, while the channel report shows 126.33 conversions and 104.90 purchases inside Results. Those are not directly reconcilable from what was provided.
  • The channel report clearly mixes action types. It includes Page View, Add to cart, Begin checkout, and Purchase in the Results fields.
  • The search term report likely includes non-purchase or modeled conversions in its visible Conversions column. The row for “sipjeng” showing 2 clicks and 14 conversions is the strongest sign that this export is not clean purchase-only proof.
  • Fractional conversions are present such as 94.88 and 28.44, which is normal under data-driven attribution, but it lowers certainty when combined with mixed conversion definitions.
  • PMax reporting is especially inconsistent. One report suggests almost no conversion contribution from PMax, while another shows purchase rows on Google Search surfaces inside paused PMax-linked campaigns.

Bottom line: I would act on the obvious waste and routing issues immediately, but I would gate any aggressive scaling decision on a purchase-only conversion audit.

24-hour action list

  1. Cube | New Pmax: reduce budget or temporarily contain spend while purchase-only tracking is verified, because the visible active performance is $198.46 / 1.00 conversion on Google Search plus additional zero-conversion spend on GDN and YouTube.
  2. Cube | New Pmax: verify whether final URL expansion is enabled; if it is, exclude low-intent URLs including /about, /contact, /pages/store-locator, and blog/article URLs.
  3. Nonbrand and catch-all search structures: add negatives for discount code, promo code, coupon, and first order discount.
  4. Nonbrand and catch-all search structures: add negatives for recipe, recipes, specs, how to make, and making a.
  5. Cube_Search_Brand: add competitor-brand negatives including shimmerwood beverages, gaba spirits, melati drinks, wunder drink, and cycling frog drinks.
  6. Cube_Search_NonBrand_OCT_Relaunched_CPC: exclude visible wasted terms with spend and 0 conversions: cbd drinks 50 mg, tost discount code, nootropic drinks to replace alcohol, relaxing drinks instead of alcohol, and hemp infused seltzer.
  7. Search ad routing / final URLs: switch default destination away from https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ and toward https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers for the nearest-fit nonbrand traffic.
  8. Search ad routing / final URLs: test https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks and https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic as primary destinations for matching intent groups.
  9. Blog URLs in paid search: pause or remove any ad destinations to blog/article pages unless they are intentionally upper-funnel and measured separately from purchase CPA.
  10. Google Ads conversion settings: verify which conversion action is marked primary for bidding; if non-purchase actions are primary, change bidding optimization to purchase only.
  11. Google Ads conversion settings: demote non-purchase actions such as page views, add to cart, and begin checkout to secondary if they are currently influencing bidding.
  12. Reporting setup: pull a purchase-only campaign report and purchase-only search-term report for the same date range before making any scale-up decisions.

7-day validation plan

  1. Validate conversion setup: confirm that the optimization column used by bidding is purchase-only and that reporting columns are aligned across landing page, campaign, and search term views.
  2. Watch search query quality after negatives: verify that competitor, discount-code, recipe, and retail-locator queries fall out of the search terms report.
  3. Compare landing-page performance after routing changes: specifically compare /collections/best-sellers versus /shop/ and /try.sipjeng.com/ on spend, clicks, and purchase-only CPA.
  4. Review active Search traffic only: since non-search channels showed zero conversions in the provided channel report, validate whether any active non-search inventory produces purchases after containment. If not, keep it suppressed.
  5. Check whether broad/AI Max traffic quality improves: if irrelevant query buckets persist, tighten further toward phrase/exact coverage and reduce broad exposure.
  6. Reassess “mocktails” and other positive-signal queries: keep them active only if they add more than one-off conversions under purchase-only reporting.
  7. Do not re-enable paused historical campaigns just because their old rows look good. First verify that those purchase counts are real and comparable to the current conversion definition.

Goal summary captured

Your goal is lowest CPA for purchase conversion. Based on the supplied exports only, the clearest moves are:

  • cut non-search/PMax waste,
  • tighten search intent with negatives and less broad/AI Max leakage,
  • route traffic to /collections/best-sellers and other stronger commercial pages,
  • reduce traffic to /shop/, try.sipjeng.com, blog pages, and informational pages,
  • and fix measurement so purchase CPA is actually what the account is optimizing toward.

If you want, I can turn this into a tighter implementation sheet next: exact negatives list, landing-page keep/block list, and a campaign-by-campaign change queue based strictly on these three files.

Agent 3 — QA report

VERDICT: revise

SCORES:
- request_match: 4/5
- evidence_grounding: 3/5
- detail_sufficiency: 4/5
- actionability: 4/5
- clarity: 4/5
- overall: 3/5

WHAT WORKED:
- Strong alignment to the client goal of lowest CPA for purchase conversion.
- Correctly foregrounded the biggest caveat: the three reports do not reconcile and likely mix purchase with micro-conversions.
- Good use of concrete CPA math from the landing page report:
  - /collections/best-sellers ≈ $4.58
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ ≈ $110.16
  - /try.sipjeng.com/ ≈ $63.69
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/ ≈ $37.53
- Correctly identified that channel-report non-search inventory shows spend with 0 conversions in the provided data, and tied that to a lowest-CPA recommendation.
- Good skepticism on low-volume query examples like “mocktails” and the anomalous “sipjeng” row.
- Recommendations are mostly operator-style and implementation-oriented, which matches the ask.

FAILURES:
- Introduced unsupported evidence: “channel report shows 104.90 purchases inside Results.” That figure was not in Agent 1’s extracted facts and is not traceable from the provided handoff. This is a hallucination/evidence-invention failure.
- Some recommendations overreach beyond the evidence:
  - “cut non-search/PMax waste” is directionally fair, but the evidence base is conflicted because the landing page report and channel report disagree materially on PMax contribution. The answer mentions this caveat, but still states the cut too assertively.
  - “switch default destination away from /shop/ and toward /collections/best-sellers for the nearest-fit nonbrand traffic” is plausible, but the reports do not show query-to-page mapping or live final URL defaults. This should be framed as a test, not a directive.
- Several landing-page recommendations rely on very small samples:
  - /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks = 4 conversions
  - /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic = 6 conversions
  - /product/collection-sampler-6-pack = 4 conversions
  These are directionally useful, but not strong enough for confident scaling language without emphasizing sample-size risk more clearly.
- The answer occasionally treats “reported conversions” as close enough to purchases in optimization logic, even after warning that conversion definitions are contaminated. That weakens the rigor of any CPA-based recommendation.
- It misses a sharper point on active/paused ambiguity: the channel report includes many paused campaigns, and the only clearly active campaign shown is Cube | New Pmax. Recommending a shift toward “standard Search coverage” is sensible, but the evidence does not show what active Search campaigns currently exist.

MISSED EVIDENCE:
- Did not explicitly mention the total account rough CPA from the landing page report (~$28.25) as a benchmark for what is above/below average.
- Did not call out that Search in the landing page report accounts for 350.49 of 351.49 conversions, which is one of the strongest directional facts in the handoff.
- Missed some high-spend zero-conversion landing pages that could have been prioritized in exclusions:
  - /collections/cbd-infused-drinks ($77.91, 0 conv)
  - /products/thc-infused-paloma ($61.39, 0 conv)
  - /collections/functional-beverages ($35.39, 0 conv)
- Did not emphasize enough that the search terms report is truncated, so negative-keyword recommendations should be framed as examples rather than a comprehensive list.
- Could have highlighted the “AUTOMATIC” vs “ADVERTISER” landing-page selection distinction more carefully. It mentioned automatic expansion/routing, but did not fully tie recommendations to that field as evidence.

HALLUCINATION CHECK:
- Clear unsupported claim: “channel report shows 104.90 purchases inside Results.” This number was not provided in the handoff facts and should not have been asserted.
- Campaign names used in the 24-hour action list such as “Cube_Search_Brand” and “Cube_Search_NonBrand_OCT_Relaunched_CPC” are risky unless explicitly present in the visible source. Agent 1 only confirmed broad campaign context and some campaign names; if these exact names were not visible in the prompt text, that is another unsupported specificity issue.
- “pages/store-locator” is recommended as an exclusion, but the handoff evidence cited /pages/stockists and generally store locator pages. If /pages/store-locator is not actually present in the source, this should have been phrased generically rather than as a confirmed URL.

REVISION NEEDED:
- Remove the unsupported “104.90 purchases” claim unless it can be cited directly from the supplied reports.
- Downgrade overconfident recommendations where evidence is contaminated or low-volume:
  - frame LP routing changes as controlled tests
  - frame PMax cuts as containment pending purchase-only validation, not as a settled conclusion
- Add explicit sample-size caveats next to low-volume “winner” pages.
- Tighten campaign-specific instructions to only campaign names explicitly confirmed in the source.
- Separate “high-confidence cuts” from “measurement-gated tests” more strictly.
- State more clearly that negative keyword suggestions are illustrative based on visible truncated rows, not exhaustive.

FINAL QA SUMMARY:
This is a solid operator-style draft with useful math and mostly evidence-based recommendations, but it is not clean enough to approve as-is. The biggest problem is invented or unsupported evidence, especially the “104.90 purchases” claim. Beyond that, a few recommendations are too confident given mixed conversion definitions, truncated search-term visibility, and low sample sizes on some landing pages. Revise for stricter evidence discipline and clearer confidence labeling.

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