After you’ve set up conversion tracking, add helpful reporting columns to discover how your ads lead to valuable customer actions.
Columns in your conversion summary provide a variety of information about your account. Your choices vary depending on which columns you’ve added. Choose which columns to display, then rearrange and save them in the order that you prefer.
Below, we’ll explain what these metrics mean and how to add them to your reports.
View “Conversions” and related columnsThe "Conversions" column shows you the number of conversions you've received, across your conversion actions. Conversions are measured with conversion tracking and may include modeled conversions in cases where you are not able to observe all conversions that took place. You can use this column to view how often your ads led customers to actions that you’ve defined as valuable for your business.
You can customize how the data in your "Conversions" column is tracked:
If you're optimizing your bids for conversions through automated or manual bid strategies, the data in the Conversions column is used for your bidding strategies.
Related columnsBesides the main “Conversions” column, there are several related columns that use your “Conversions” data to give you more information:
"All conversions" ("All conv.") shows you data for all primary and secondary conversion actions. It also includes other special conversion sources.
“All conversions” has the same set of related columns as “Conversions,” but with metrics calculated based on your “All conversions” column instead of “Conversions.” These columns include:
The "Cross-device conversions" ("Cross-device conv.") column reports the total number of cross-device conversions across all of your conversion actions. Cross-device conversions start as a click on an ad from one device and end as a conversion on another device (or in a different web browser on the same device). To offer a more complete report of cross-device conversions, we use models based on privacy-safe data from users who have previously signed into Google services; these models predict cross-device conversions that we are unable to observe directly. This allows us to provide reporting on cross-device behavior that combines observed and modeled conversions, without compromising user privacy.
Decimals in conversion dataYou may notice that the numbers in your "Conversions," "All conversions," and "Cross-device conversions" columns have 2 decimal places. This is because some attribution models attribute fractional credit for each conversion across multiple clicks. These fractions are represented as decimals like 0.33 or 0.50. Even without using an attribution model that reports fractional conversions, your conversion data would still show 2 decimals like .00 for accuracy.
Time of conversionThe primary conversion columns mentioned above are calculated based on the time of the click, not the time of the conversion. For example, if your ad was clicked on last week and that traffic converted this week, both the click and the conversion are reported back to last week in the primary conversions columns. This allows you to accurately measure metrics like cost per conversion or return on ad spend, because ad spend is also calculated based on the time of the click.
You can also report on conversions based on the time the conversion occurred. This is helpful for you to view recent conversion data and compare with your third-party reporting. Time of conversion columns include:
Note: Data for these columns is available from March 2019. Store visit conversions and store sales conversions are not included in “by conv. time” column data.
About view-through conversionsYour “View-through conversions” column tells you when customers see, but don’t interact with your ad, and then later complete a conversion on your site. This is different from the data in your other conversion columns, which record when customers interact with an ad and then complete a conversion on your site.
View-through conversions are a helpful way to track the value of your display or video ad campaigns. For display campaigns, for example, they measure the conversions where a customer saw—but didn't click—an ad before completing a conversion. View-through conversions take into account the settings of your conversion actions, such as the way conversions are counted.
For Display Network ads, the last viewable impression will get credit for the view-through conversion. With Google's Active View technology, an impression of a display ad is considered viewable when at least 50% of the ad is onscreen for at least 1 second.
View-through conversions automatically exclude conversions from people who have also interacted with any of your other ads. View-through conversions are not included in the “Conversions” column, only in the “View-through conversions” and "All conversions" columns.
View-through conversions from browsers that don’t allow cross-site cookies cannot be reported.
View-through conversions for video adsFor video campaigns, view-through conversions tell you when an impression of your video ad leads to a conversion on your site. The last impression of a video ad will get credit for the view-through conversion.
Keep in mind: An impression is different than a “view” of a video ad. A “view” is counted when someone watches 30 seconds (or the whole ad if it’s shorter than 30 seconds) or clicks on a part of the ad. A “view” that leads to a conversion is counted in the “Conversions” column.
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