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Run 2026-03-26-034807-5fde1fa4Mode llmStatus unknownQA completed37,541 est. tokens$0.2220 est. cost

Saved: 2026-03-26T03:48:07.991681+00:00
Model: gpt-5.4
Estimated input/output tokens: 27,293 / 10,248

No status detail.

Processed files

Agent 1 — Intake handoff

CLIENT ASK
- Project: SipJeng Google Ads
- Analysis type: conversion
- Client wants: “specific optimizations based on the data given in the reports”
- Primary goal: lowest CPA for purchase conversions
- Output style requested downstream: operator
- Do not produce general theory; recommendations should be tied directly to the supplied report data.

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
- Gives URL-level performance across Search / PMax landing pages

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
- Gives channel/campaign breakdown, including Google Search, Display, YouTube, Search partners, etc.
- Important: this report mixes multiple result types (Purchase, Begin checkout, Page View, Add to cart), so “Conversions” may not equal only purchases

3) Search terms report CSV
- Date range: September 25, 2025 – March 23, 2026
- Fields include: Search term, Match type, Added/Excluded, Campaign, Ad group, Clicks, Impr., CTR, Avg. CPC, Cost, Campaign type, Conv. rate, Conversions, Cost / conv.
- Search term export appears truncated; only partial rows visible
- Includes Search and some Performance Max search themes/query-like rows

EXTRACTED FACTS
- Overall 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
- By network totals from landing page report:
  - Search: 2,844 clicks, 117,027 impressions, 2.43% CTR, Avg CPC $3.35, Cost $9,536.20, Conversions 350.49
  - Performance Max: 499 clicks, 30,413 impressions, 1.64% CTR, Avg CPC $0.79, Cost $391.91, Conversions 1.00
  - Display / Demand Gen / Shopping totals shown as zero in landing page report
- This strongly implies almost all reported conversions came from Search, while PMax contributed negligible purchase/conversion volume in the landing page report.

Top landing pages by conversions from landing page report:
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER)
  - 791 clicks, 55,088 impr., 1.44% CTR, Avg CPC $1.20, Cost $951.15, Conversions 207.65
  - Extremely efficient relative to spend
- https://try.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 728 clicks, 21,337 impr., 3.41% CTR, Avg CPC $3.85, Cost $2,802.50, Conversions 44.00
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 438 clicks, 17,308 impr., 2.53% CTR, Avg CPC $3.30, Cost $1,444.84, Conversions 38.50
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 872 clicks, 68,994 impr., 1.26% CTR, Avg CPC $3.71, Cost $3,231.88, Conversions 29.33
- https://sipjeng.com/blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025 (AUTOMATIC)
  - 225 clicks, 2,104 impr., 10.69% CTR, Avg CPC $1.88, Cost $423.97, Conversions 10.00
- https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic (AUTOMATIC)
  - 23 clicks, 450 impr., 5.11% CTR, Avg CPC $5.05, Cost $116.05, Conversions 6.00
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER)
  - 20 clicks, 13,454 impr., 0.15% CTR, Avg CPC $4.98, Cost $99.65, Conversions 4.00
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks (AUTOMATIC)
  - 18 clicks, 507 impr., 3.55% CTR, Avg CPC $3.26, Cost $58.71, Conversions 4.00
- https://sipjeng.com/pages/about (AUTOMATIC)
  - 6 clicks, 19 impr., 31.58% CTR, Avg CPC $5.53, Cost $33.15, Conversions 2.00
- https://sipjeng.com/ (AUTOMATIC)
  - 30 clicks, 194 impr., 15.46% CTR, Avg CPC $1.68, Cost $50.45, Conversions 2.00

Landing pages with meaningful spend and zero conversions:
- https://sipjeng.com/products/thc-infused-paloma (AUTOMATIC): 8 clicks, $61.39, 0 conv
- https://sipjeng.com/collections/cbd-infused-drinks (AUTOMATIC): 20 clicks, $77.91, 0 conv
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/sweet-spot-pack/ (ADVERTISER): 2 clicks, $7.95, 0 conv
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/about/ (ADVERTISER): 3 clicks, $24.38, 0 conv
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/contact/ (ADVERTISER): 5 clicks, $20.05, 0 conv
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/summer-starter-pack/ (ADVERTISER): 1 click, $16.61, 0 conv
- https://shop.sipjeng.com/product/spicy-blood-orange/ (AUTOMATIC): 1 click, $1.15, 0 conv
- Several blog/about/contact/stockist/store locator pages received traffic with no or minimal conversions

Potentially important contradiction / quality issue:
- Landing page report shows many “AUTOMATIC” selected pages, including blog posts, about page, stockists, FAQ, contact, and collections
- This suggests dynamic landing page expansion / final URL expansion / broad matching to non-commerce URLs may be active and leaking spend away from purchase-intent pages
- The report labels “Selected by” as ADVERTISER vs AUTOMATIC vs UNKNOWN; some of the best converting URLs are ADVERTISER, while many irrelevant URLs are AUTOMATIC

Channel/campaign report facts:
- Total campaign report:
  - 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 impr., 1,877 clicks, 126.33 conversions, conv. value $10,027.42, cost $7,309.65
- Google Display Network total:
  - 183,361 impr., 1,702 clicks, 0.00 conversions, cost $492.40
- YouTube total:
  - 157,826 impr., 389 clicks, 0.00 conversions, cost $540.58
- Search partners total:
  - 222 impr., 5 clicks, 0 conv, cost $3.31
- Gmail/Discover/Maps: effectively no conversion contribution

Key campaign-level lines in channel report:
- 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
  - Main historical driver
- PAUSED Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search:
  - 72,373 impr., 300 clicks, 28.44 conversions, conv. value $715.66, cost $1,251.03
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on Google Search:
  - 1,618 impr., 63 clicks, 1.00 conversion, conv. value $23.09, cost $198.46
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on GDN:
  - 24,629 impr., 429 clicks, 0 conv, cost $154.22
- ACTIVE Cube | New Pmax on YouTube:
  - 4,107 impr., 5 clicks, 0 conv, cost $36.98
- Search campaign efficiency is materially stronger than non-search placements.

Major discrepancy between reports:
- Landing page report totals: cost $9,928.11 and conversions 351.49
- Channel report totals: cost $8,347.53 and conversions 126.33
- Likely due to:
  - different report scopes
  - different conversion action sets / attribution / included results
  - one report may include all conversions on landing pages while channel report may summarize select result types or campaign subset
- Because client goal is purchase CPA, this discrepancy must be acknowledged; recommendations should rely more heavily on rows explicitly tied to Purchase where possible.

Search terms report facts:
- Export is partial/truncated, but visible examples show a lot of competitor / irrelevant / informational traffic
- Brand and nonbrand campaigns visible:
  - Cube_Search_Brand
  - Cube_Search_W
  - Cube_Search_NonBrand_OCT_Relaunched_CPC
  - Cube | New Pmax
- Visible converting search terms:
  - “mocktails” in Cube_Search_W: 1 click, 36 impr., $0.85 cost, 1.00 conversion, 100% conv rate, cost/conv $0.85
  - “sipjeng” in Cube_Search_W: 2 clicks, 2 impr., $0.34 cost, 14.00 conversions, 700% conv rate, cost/conv $0.02
- Caveat: “sipjeng” row showing 14 conversions from 2 clicks is mathematically possible only with multiple counted conversions per click; signals either non-purchase conversion counting, enhanced conversion modeling, or conversion action inflation. This makes query-level purchase CPA interpretation unreliable without confirming the conversion action included.
- Visible non-converting / likely wasteful terms include competitor and off-target examples:
  - “shimmerwood beverages”
  - “gaba spirits”
  - “melati drinks”
  - “wunder drink”
  - “cycling frog drinks”
  - “drinkbrez llc”
  - “tost discount code”
  - “seth rogen seltzer”
  - “athletic brewing seltzer”
  - “where to buy de soi”
  - “where to buy ohho drinks”
  - “little saints negroni”
  - “betty buzz mocktails”
  - “lyre's amaretti review”
  - “mood th”
  - “bon alcohol”
  - “join jules”
  - “cann social tonic packets”
- Visible expensive non-converting examples:
  - “cbd drinks 50 mg”: 1 click, cost $10.35, 0 conv
  - “tost discount code”: 1 click, cost $7.43, 0 conv
  - “hemp infused seltzer”: 1 click, cost $3.46, 0 conv
  - “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol”: 4 clicks, cost $9.03, 0 conv
  - “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol”: 1 click, cost $3.75, 0 conv

OBSERVED METRICS
Derived/approximate CPAs from landing page data:
- /collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER): $951.15 / 207.65 = ~$4.58 CPA
- /try.sipjeng.com/: $2,802.50 / 44 = ~$63.69 CPA
- /shop.sipjeng.com/: $1,444.84 / 38.5 = ~$37.53 CPA
- /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/: $3,231.88 / 29.33 = ~$110.16 CPA
- /blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025: $423.97 / 10 = ~$42.40 CPA
- /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic: $116.05 / 6 = ~$19.34 CPA
- /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER): $99.65 / 4 = ~$24.91 CPA
- /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks: $58.71 / 4 = ~$14.68 CPA
- /pages/about (AUTOMATIC): $33.15 / 2 = ~$16.58 CPA
- / (AUTOMATIC): $50.45 / 2 = ~$25.23 CPA
- /collections/hemp-infused-drinks: $62.02 / 1 = ~$62.02 CPA
- /collections/best-sellers (AUTOMATIC): $3.20 / 1 = $3.20 CPA
- /product/spicy-blood-orange/ (ADVERTISER): $124.98 / 1 = $124.98 CPA

Derived/approximate campaign CPAs from channel report:
- Cube_Catch All_OCT, Google Search: $5,334.65 / 94.88 = ~$56.23 CPA
- Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax, Google Search: $1,251.03 / 28.44 = ~$43.99 CPA
- Cube | New Pmax, Google Search: $198.46 / 1 = $198.46 CPA
- Google Search total: $7,309.65 / 126.33 = ~$57.86 CPA
- GDN total: no conversions on $492.40 spend
- YouTube total: no conversions on $540.58 spend

Other useful performance indicators:
- PMax in landing page report: 499 clicks, $391.91, only 1 conversion total -> very weak on stated goal
- Many AUTOMATIC landing pages have low/zero conversion efficiency, indicating possible URL expansion issues
- CTR on some converting pages is low but CPA strong, especially /collections/best-sellers (1.44% CTR, but best efficiency)
- Some informational pages have high CTR but uncertain value to purchase objective

GAPS/UNCERTAINTY
- No screenshots were provided; only CSV text exports
- No website URL entered in the form field, though URLs are visible in report data
- Third report is truncated; full search-term coverage is missing
- No explicit campaign budget data, bidding strategies, geo targeting, device, audience, asset group, ad copy, or product feed data
- No conversion action definition is confirmed
- Biggest issue: report inconsistency
  - Landing page report shows 351.49 conversions on $9,928.11
  - Channel report shows 126.33 conversions on $8,347.53
  - Search term report includes impossible-looking conversion rates for purchase-only interpretation (e.g., 14 conversions from 2 clicks)
- Therefore we cannot confidently state that all “Conversions” shown are purchases
- Client goal is purchase CPA, but supplied reports likely mix purchase with other actions in at least some places
- No segmentation by date trend, device, location, new vs returning, or audience; optimization confidence is limited
- No information on whether current active campaigns are Search, PMax, DSA, or mixed, except names/status in reports
- Search term report does not show enough rows to quantify total wasted spend by irrelevant queries

RECOMMENDED ANALYSIS ANGLE
- Lead with a caveat: optimize toward purchase CPA, but reports contain mixed conversion definitions and conflicting totals; recommendations should prioritize signals most consistent across reports
- Focus recommendations on 3 levers:
  1) Reallocate spend toward highest-converting landing pages / campaigns
     - Scale traffic to /collections/best-sellers, /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks, /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic, /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/, and possibly /shop.sipjeng.com/ over /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ and weak product/about/contact pages
  2) Reduce waste from AUTOMATIC URL expansion and non-search channels
     - Exclude blog/about/contact/stockist/FAQ pages from ads where purchase is the goal
     - Restrict final URL expansion if active
     - Cut/limit GDN and YouTube within PMax or separate them if purchase CPA is the sole KPI
  3) Tighten query quality with negatives / match type control
     - Add negatives for competitor/distraction terms visible in search terms
     - Separate brand from nonbrand more aggressively
     - Preserve/expand high-intent winners like “sipjeng” and likely “mocktails” only if purchase conversion action is confirmed

- Agent 2 should likely structure recommendations into:
  - “Scale”
  - “Cut”
  - “Fix tracking/measurement first”
  - “Search term cleanup”
  - “Landing page routing cleanup”
- Important: include at least one explicit note that before major budget moves, the account should confirm Purchase is the primary conversion action in bidding/reporting due to conflicting conversion totals.

Agent 2 — Client output

Executive diagnosis

Your account is producing the strongest reported conversion volume from Search, while non-search inventory is mostly spend without reported purchase contribution. The clearest operator takeaway from the files is:

  • Search is the only channel in the channel report with reported conversions at material scale: $7,309.65 cost and 126.33 reported conversions.
  • Google Display Network spent $492.40 with 0.00 reported conversions.
  • YouTube spent $540.58 with 0.00 reported conversions.
  • In the landing page report, Search shows $9,536.20 cost and 350.49 reported conversions, while Performance Max shows $391.91 cost and only 1.00 reported conversion.

For a lowest-CPA purchase goal, that means the immediate bias should be toward Search and away from non-search placements unless purchase-only reporting proves otherwise.

There is also a major measurement problem that affects confidence:

  • The landing page report shows 351.49 conversions on $9,928.11.
  • The channel report shows 126.33 conversions on $8,347.53.
  • The channel report explicitly mixes result types like Add to cart, Begin checkout, Page View, and Purchase.
  • The search term export includes mathematically inflated-looking rows such as “sipjeng” showing 14.00 conversions from 2 clicks, which is not reliable as purchase-only proof.

So I would not treat every “Conversions” number in these exports as purchases. I’d still act on the waste signals now, but I would gate major scaling decisions behind purchase measurement cleanup.

High confidence / no-regret Cut non-search waste, tighten landing page routing, and add negatives for clearly off-target query buckets.

Medium confidence / directional Push more Search traffic into the best-performing commerce pages shown in the landing page report.

Low confidence / measurement-gated Any large budget increase based on reported conversions alone, because the reports conflict and mix result types.

Biggest waste to cut

1) Non-search placements inside PMax / cross-network campaigns

The channel report is blunt here:

  • Google Display Network total: $492.40 spend, 0.00 reported conversions.
  • YouTube total: $540.58 spend, 0.00 reported conversions.
  • Active Cube | New Pmax on GDN: $154.22 spend, 0.00 reported conversions.
  • Active Cube | New Pmax on YouTube: $36.98 spend, 0.00 reported conversions.

For a purchase CPA goal, this is the cleanest cut in the account. Unless you have separate purchase-only evidence outside these files, do not fund Display and YouTube inventory here.

2) Weak active PMax contribution versus Search

From the landing page report:

  • Performance Max total: $391.91 / 1.00 reported conversion ≈ $391.91 per reported conversion.
  • Search total: $9,536.20 / 350.49 reported conversions ≈ $27.21 per reported conversion.

That gap is too large to ignore, even allowing for reporting differences. From the channel report, active Cube | New Pmax on Google Search is also weak: $198.46 / 1.00 reported conversion ≈ $198.46.

I would not scale active PMax right now. I would either reduce it hard or hold it at a controlled test budget until purchase-only measurement is verified.

3) Automatic routing to low-intent pages

The landing page report shows a lot of traffic being sent to pages selected as AUTOMATIC, including informational and low-intent URLs. That is a strong sign that automated landing page expansion is at least worth checking and likely restricting.

Examples with spend and no reported conversions:

  • /products/thc-infused-paloma: $61.39, 0.00
  • /collections/cbd-infused-drinks: $77.91, 0.00
  • /about/: $24.38, 0.00
  • /contact/: $20.05, 0.00
  • /product/summer-starter-pack/: $16.61, 0.00

Even when the spend is not huge row by row, the pattern is consistent: too much paid traffic is leaking into pages that are not your strongest purchase routes.

4) Query leakage into competitor / research / discount intent

The visible search term sample is partial, but it already shows enough to justify cleanup. Examples of visible non-converting or weak-intent terms include:

  • Competitor / alternative brand queries: “shimmerwood beverages,” “gaba spirits,” “melati drinks,” “wunder drink,” “cycling frog drinks,” “drinkbrez llc,” “where to buy de soi,” “where to buy ohho drinks,” “little saints negroni,” “betty buzz mocktails”
  • Discount / coupon intent: “tost discount code”
  • Review / research intent: “lyre's amaretti review”
  • Loose informational replacement-intent: “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol,” “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol”

Visible costly examples with 0 reported conversions:

  • “cbd drinks 50 mg”: $10.35, 0.00
  • “tost discount code”: $7.43, 0.00
  • “hemp infused seltzer”: $3.46, 0.00
  • “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol”: 4 clicks, $9.03, 0.00
  • “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol”: $3.75, 0.00

Because the file is truncated, I would not overbuild a giant exact-match negative list from this sample alone. But the pattern is clear enough to act on intent buckets now.

Scale opportunities

High-confidence routing priorities from the landing page report

If your goal is lowest CPA, the strongest routing signal in the supplied data is to send more paid Search traffic into the pages already showing materially better cost per reported conversion.

  • /collections/best-sellers (ADVERTISER): $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58
  • /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks (AUTOMATIC): $58.71 / 4.00 ≈ $14.68
  • /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic (AUTOMATIC): $116.05 / 6.00 ≈ $19.34
  • /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/ (ADVERTISER): $99.65 / 4.00 ≈ $24.91
  • /shop.sipjeng.com/ (ADVERTISER): $1,444.84 / 38.50 ≈ $37.53

These are materially better than:

  • /try.sipjeng.com/: $2,802.50 / 44.00 ≈ $63.69
  • /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/: $3,231.88 / 29.33 ≈ $110.16
  • /product/spicy-blood-orange/ (ADVERTISER): $124.98 / 1.00 = $124.98

So the practical move is not “send traffic everywhere to the store.” It is to concentrate traffic on the pages with the strongest observed reported-conversion efficiency and de-emphasize weaker routes.

Medium-confidence query themes to preserve and isolate

The search term file is thin, but two visible terms are positive signals:

  • “mocktails”: 1 click, $0.85, 1.00 conversion
  • “sipjeng”: 2 clicks, $0.34, 14.00 conversions

Important caveat: the “sipjeng” row is not clean purchase proof because 14 conversions from 2 clicks strongly suggests multiple counted conversion actions or mixed reporting. I would still protect brand and isolate it, but I would not use that row alone to justify large scaling.

Directional test Keep brand isolated in its own campaign with tight routing to your best purchase page, and keep “mocktails”-type nonbrand themes in controlled exact/phrase tests rather than broad expansion.

Campaign-level changes

High-confidence / no-regret cuts

  • Reduce or cap active PMax immediately. Based on the supplied reports, active PMax is not showing purchase-efficient behavior. The landing page report shows Performance Max at $391.91 for 1.00 reported conversion. The channel report shows active Cube | New Pmax on Google Search at $198.46 for 1.00 reported conversion, plus GDN and YouTube spend with 0.00 reported conversions.
  • Do not allocate incremental budget to Display or YouTube inventory. The evidence in these files does not support it for a lowest-CPA purchase goal.
  • Shift budget priority back to Search. Search is the only channel with meaningful reported conversion contribution in the supplied exports.

Medium-confidence / directional tests

  • Rebuild or relaunch Search around the strongest purchase-route pages. The paused Search campaign Cube_Catch All_OCT was the main historical Search driver in the channel report: $5,334.65 / 94.88 ≈ $56.23 per reported conversion. That is not proof it should simply be turned back on unchanged, but it does show Search as the main operating lane.
  • If a Search catch-all campaign is active now, tighten it. Split brand, core nonbrand, and competitor/alternative traffic so you can control routing and negatives separately.
  • If final URL expansion or comparable automated landing-page expansion is enabled, restrict it. Based on the landing page report, too many low-intent pages are being selected automatically.

Purchase-measurement-gated moves

  • Do not make a large budget increase into /collections/best-sellers solely off the 207.65 conversion figure until you confirm those are purchase-aligned conversions. It is by far the best reported-conversion page, but the account-level reporting conflict means the exact purchase volume behind that row is not fully verified.
  • Do not trust PMax campaign “Conversions” without checking the Purchase row specifically. For example, Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search shows 28.44 conversions overall, but the Results breakdown on that row shows Purchase: 7.01. That mismatch matters a lot.

Ad group/keyword/search-term changes

High-confidence / no-regret query cleanup

Add negatives or exclusions by intent bucket, not just one-off terms, because the search term export is truncated.

  • Competitor brand bucket: exclude competitor and alternative drink brand names where you do not intend conquesting. Supported visible examples: “shimmerwood beverages,” “gaba spirits,” “melati drinks,” “wunder drink,” “cycling frog drinks,” “drinkbrez llc,” “where to buy de soi,” “where to buy ohho drinks,” “little saints negroni,” “betty buzz mocktails.”
  • Discount/coupon bucket: exclude “discount code,” “coupon,” “promo code” style terms. Supported visible example: “tost discount code.”
  • Review/research bucket: exclude “review” style terms if purchase CPA is the KPI and these terms are not converting. Supported visible example: “lyre's amaretti review.”
  • Loose alcohol-replacement informational bucket: audit and likely exclude broad “instead of alcohol” / “replace alcohol” variants if they continue spending without purchases. Supported visible examples: “nootropic drinks to replace alcohol,” “relaxing drinks instead of alcohol.”

Medium-confidence / directional keyword structure

  • Isolate brand completely. Keep “sipjeng” terms in a dedicated brand campaign/ad group with exact and phrase control and the strongest purchase page as the default destination.
  • Separate high-intent nonbrand themes from exploratory broad traffic. “mocktails” is a positive signal, but with only 1 click and 1 conversion it is not scale-ready proof. Put that theme in exact/phrase tests, not broad catch-all expansion.
  • Reduce broad-match exposure in nonbrand if search terms continue leaking into competitor and research traffic. The sample already shows that happening.

Conditional checks

  • If AI-driven query expansion is active on Search campaigns, tighten it until the search term quality improves.
  • If competitor terms are intentional, break them into a separate campaign with a hard budget cap so they do not contaminate your purchase CPA target.

Landing-page changes

High-confidence / no-regret routing changes

  • Prioritize these destinations for paid Search: /collections/best-sellers, /shop.sipjeng.com/, /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/, and the stronger category/product pages that showed reported conversions.
  • De-prioritize or exclude these destinations from paid traffic routing: about, contact, store locator, stockists, FAQ, and low-value blog pages.
  • Audit automatic selection rules. The “Selected by” column shows many AUTOMATIC URLs receiving traffic, including informational pages and weaker product/category pages.

Specific page-level actions from the report

  • Keep /collections/best-sellers as a primary paid landing page. $951.15 / 207.65 ≈ $4.58 is the strongest observed reported-conversion efficiency in the report.
  • Reduce reliance on /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/. $3,231.88 / 29.33 ≈ $110.16, which is much weaker than /shop.sipjeng.com/ at $1,444.84 / 38.50 ≈ $37.53.
  • Treat /try.sipjeng.com/ carefully. It has volume, but $2,802.50 / 44.00 ≈ $63.69 is materially weaker than the strongest commerce pages.
  • Exclude weak paid destinations with spend and 0.00 reported conversions. Supported examples: /products/thc-infused-paloma, /collections/cbd-infused-drinks, /about/, /contact/, /product/summer-starter-pack/.

Medium-confidence / directional test

  • Use content pages only if they are intentionally part of a lower-funnel retargeting or assisted-conversion path. For example, /blogs/blog/alcohol-alternative-drinks-2025 shows $423.97 / 10.00 ≈ $42.40 in the landing page report, which is not terrible on reported conversions, but it is still an informational page and not the clearest purchase route. For a pure purchase CPA objective, commerce pages should usually take priority.

Measurement caveats

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

  • The reports conflict. Landing page totals show 351.49 conversions on $9,928.11, while the channel report shows 126.33 conversions on $8,347.53.
  • The channel report mixes result types. It explicitly includes Add to cart, Begin checkout, Page View, and Purchase in the same report.
  • Some rows show clear mismatch between Conversions and Purchase results. Example: Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search shows 28.44 conversions, but the Results breakdown lists Purchase: 7.01.
  • Search term conversion counts are not safe to read as purchases. The visible “sipjeng” row with 14.00 conversions from 2 clicks is a strong sign of mixed or multi-counted actions.

Because of that, the strongest recommendations are the waste cuts and routing controls. The larger scaling calls should wait until you confirm the bidding/reporting conversion action set is purchase-first.

Measurement-gated Before making aggressive budget increases, confirm that the campaign optimization goal and reporting column you are using are keyed to Purchase, not mixed reported conversions/results.

24-hour action list

  1. Active campaign: Cube | New Pmax — reduce budget hard or pause if purchase CPA is the only KPI. Evidence: Google Search row $198.46 / 1.00 reported conversion; GDN row $154.22 / 0.00; YouTube row $36.98 / 0.00.
  2. All active campaigns with automated landing-page selection — restrict routing to commerce URLs only. Specifically allow /collections/best-sellers, /shop.sipjeng.com/, /product/collection-sampler-6-pack/, and other proven commerce pages; exclude about, contact, stockists, store locator, FAQ, and low-value blog routes.
  3. Search campaigns — add negative keyword patterns for competitor brands. Start with the supported visible examples and the broader competitor-brand bucket.
  4. Search campaigns — add negative keyword patterns for discount-code intent. Supported example: “tost discount code”; broader pattern: discount code / coupon / promo code.
  5. Search campaigns — add negative keyword patterns for review/research intent. Supported example: “lyre's amaretti review.”
  6. Search campaigns — audit broad nonbrand terms and reduce match looseness where leakage is happening. Focus on alcohol-replacement informational queries and competitor alternatives.
  7. Brand campaign object: Cube_Search_Brand — verify brand is fully isolated and route it to /collections/best-sellers or the strongest verified purchase page.
  8. Nonbrand campaign objects — move primary default landing pages away from /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ and /try.sipjeng.com/ where possible, and toward stronger routes. Evidence: /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ ≈ $110.16 per reported conversion versus /collections/best-sellers ≈ $4.58 and /shop.sipjeng.com/ ≈ $37.53.
  9. Conversion settings — verify Purchase is included as the primary optimization goal for bidding and reporting. This is a verification step, not an assumption, because the exports mix result types and totals conflict.

7-day validation plan

  1. Validate purchase-only reporting. Pull campaign, landing page, and search term views using Purchase-only columns if available. Do not use mixed “Conversions” as the final decision metric.
  2. Re-check active Search versus active PMax on purchase-only CPA. If PMax still trails badly, keep it constrained.
  3. Review search term quality after negatives are added. The success condition is fewer competitor, discount, and research queries appearing in paid traffic.
  4. Compare routed landing pages by purchase-only CPA. Specifically compare /collections/best-sellers, /shop.sipjeng.com/, /try.sipjeng.com/, and /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ under the same purchase definition.
  5. Check whether excluded informational URLs stop receiving paid traffic. If they still appear, tighten routing controls further.
  6. Assess whether brand and nonbrand need harder separation. If brand is subsidizing account-wide CPA, keep it isolated and do not let it mask nonbrand inefficiency.
  7. Only then consider scaling. If purchase-only data confirms a route like /collections/best-sellers or a query theme like brand or mocktails is truly efficient, increase budget there incrementally and hold everything else flat.

Goal summary captured

Your goal is lowest CPA for purchase conversions. Based on the reports you uploaded, the most defensible operator plan is:

  • Cut non-search waste first.
  • Concentrate Search traffic on the best observed commerce pages.
  • Stop paid routing to low-intent informational pages.
  • Tighten search terms with negatives for competitor, coupon, review, and weak informational intent.
  • Clean up measurement before making large budget increases, because the current exports do not cleanly represent purchases everywhere.

If you want, I can turn this into a tighter campaign-by-campaign implementation sheet next.

Agent 3 — QA report

VERDICT: revise

SCORES:
- request_match: 4
- evidence_grounding: 2
- detail_sufficiency: 4
- actionability: 4
- clarity: 4
- overall: 3

WHAT WORKED:
- Stays mostly aligned to the client ask: specific optimizations tied to report data, with emphasis on lowest CPA.
- Correctly prioritizes Search over non-search based on supplied channel totals: Search has all reported conversion volume in the channel report, while GDN/YouTube show spend with zero reported conversions.
- Good use of landing page evidence to compare routing efficiency, especially /collections/best-sellers vs /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ and /try.sipjeng.com/.
- Appropriately calls out the major measurement inconsistency between reports and warns against treating all “Conversions” as purchases.
- Negative keyword recommendations are tied to visible search term examples rather than pure theory.
- Includes prioritization buckets like high-confidence/no-regret vs measurement-gated, which is useful operator framing.

FAILURES:
- Invented evidence: the answer claims “Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax on Google Search shows 28.44 conversions overall, but the Results breakdown on that row shows Purchase: 7.01.” That purchase-specific 7.01 figure was not provided in Agent 1 handoff. This is a clear grounding failure.
- Overstates certainty on excluding “low-value blog pages.” One visible blog URL did have 10 conversions at ~$42.40 CPA, which is better than some commerce pages cited as weaker. Recommending broad blog exclusion is too sweeping from the evidence provided.
- Recommends routing brand to /collections/best-sellers specifically, but there is no brand-by-landing-page evidence proving that is the best purchase destination for brand traffic. That is plausible, not proven.
- Suggests “do not fund Display and YouTube inventory here” as if fully conclusive, but channel report mixes result types and may not be purchase-only; also non-click/view-through contribution is not observable in the supplied CSVs. The recommendation can still be directionally right, but the certainty is too high.
- Treats /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks and /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic as scale opportunities despite very low click volume (18 and 23 clicks). Those are weak-sample signals and should be labeled as tests, not confident scale priorities.
- “Reduce or cap active PMax immediately” is stronger than the evidence supports because the channel report and landing-page report disagree materially, and the active campaign evidence is sparse. A tighter framing would be “constrain until purchase-only measurement is verified.”
- The 24-hour action list includes “All active campaigns with automated landing-page selection — restrict routing to commerce URLs only.” That may be sensible, but it assumes this setting is active across campaigns; the evidence only suggests AUTOMATIC-selected landing pages exist, not exactly how or where final URL expansion is configured.

MISSED EVIDENCE:
- Did not mention the largest historical Search driver, PAUSED Cube_Catch All_OCT, in enough depth relative to active setup changes. It notes it, but does not compare its CPA to active PMax as a practical reallocation case beyond a brief mention.
- Missed the fact that landing page report totals by network imply almost all landing-page conversions came from Search (350.49) and only 1 from PMax; that is used, but the answer could have explicitly prioritized Search rebuilds over PMax with that stronger contrast.
- Did not leverage the “Selected by” split as strongly as possible: some of the strongest URLs are ADVERTISER, while many questionable URLs are AUTOMATIC. The recommendation mentions automatic routing generally, but misses the sharper implication that advertiser-controlled URLs appear materially safer.
- Did not flag that /pages/about showing 2 conversions from only 6 clicks is almost certainly too low-volume/noisy to use for optimization. More low-volume skepticism was needed throughout.
- Could have highlighted that /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ consumed 872 clicks and $3,231.88 for only 29.33 conversions, making it one of the clearest page-level deprioritization opportunities by volume and spend, not just by CPA.

HALLUCINATION CHECK:
- Confirmed hallucination/fabrication: “Results breakdown lists Purchase: 7.01” for Cube_30Dec_CatchAll_Pmax was not in the supplied evidence.
- No support was provided for “stockists, store locator” as specific paid destinations in the narrowed action list beyond one visible /pages/stockists row and general mention in Agent 1; “store locator” was not clearly evidenced in the visible CSV excerpt. This is minor but still broader than the visible proof.
- “AI-driven query expansion is active on Search campaigns” is framed conditionally, which is acceptable.
- Most arithmetic shown appears correct:
  - Search total CPA from landing-page report ≈ $27.21 is correct.
  - PMax total CPA from landing-page report ≈ $391.91 is correct.
  - /collections/best-sellers ≈ $4.58 is correct.
  - /shop.sipjeng.com/shop/ ≈ $110.16 is correct.
- Main issue is not math; it is unsupported evidence and overinterpretation from mixed-conversion reports.

REVISION NEEDED:
- Remove the unsupported “Purchase: 7.01” claim unless that row is actually in the provided report text.
- Soften any recommendation that assumes purchase-only proof where the data is mixed. Especially:
  - reframe PMax recommendation as “constrain/hold at test budget pending purchase-only validation”
  - reframe Display/YouTube cuts as “pause for purchase-CPA objective unless separate purchase evidence exists”
- Add stronger sample-size caveats for low-click page winners like /collections/non-alcoholic-thc-drinks and /products/thc-infused-jeng-and-tonic.
- Narrow blog/content recommendations: do not broadly exclude all blog pages when one blog page has decent reported CPA; instead recommend excluding low-intent informational URLs first and retesting content pages only under purchase-only measurement.
- Make clearer which actions are directly evidenced vs inferred from likely settings. For example, say “audit final URL expansion / automatic landing-page routing” rather than asserting its exact configuration.
- Tighten brand landing-page advice to “test /collections/best-sellers or strongest verified purchase page” instead of prescribing one destination as fact.

FINAL QA SUMMARY:
The answer is useful and mostly on-brief, but it is not approval-ready because it includes at least one clear fabrication and several overconfident recommendations drawn from mixed, inconsistent conversion data. The strongest parts are the Search-vs-non-search prioritization, page-level CPA comparisons, and query cleanup suggestions. However, the unsupported “Purchase: 7.01” claim is a serious grounding error, and there is not enough skepticism around low-volume winners and content-page conclusions. Revise for stricter evidence discipline and clearer measurement-gated language.

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