Blog

    Google Ads vs Facebook Ads for E-Commerce: What Works Best?

    By RafPublished Last updated
    Google Ads vs Facebook Ads for E-Commerce: What Works Best?

    If you’re running an e-commerce business – say you’re selling shoes – deciding whether to put more budget behind Google Ads or Facebook Ads can feel like a toss-up. In reality, there’s no one-size-fits-all winner. The best choice depends on your goals, product, margins, audience, and funnel stage.

    In this post, we’ll break down:

    1. The fundamental differences between Google and Facebook ads

    2. Real data & benchmarks

    3. A hypothetical shoe store example

    4. A decision checklist

    5. Suggested mix strategies

    6. What to test and how to measure success

    1\. Google Ads vs Facebook Ads: Core Differences

    Here are the main contrasts you need to understand:

    Intent vs Discovery

    • Google Ads is intent-driven: people are actively searching for something (e.g. “running shoes size 10,” “best leather sneakers”). You capture users who are often lower in the funnel.

    • Facebook / Meta Ads is discovery-driven: users scroll through social content; you interrupt or inspire interest. This makes it powerful for awareness, retargeting, and nurturing.

    As SearchAtlas points out, Google is ideal for “capturing immediate demand” while Facebook is better for “creating demand.”

    Targeting Approach

    • Google uses keywords, match types, search query intent, and audience segments (remarketing, in-market).

    • Facebook leans heavily on demographics, interests, behaviors, lookalike audiences, and engagement signals.

    Cost & Conversion Trends

    • Google Ads tends to have higher CPCs but also higher conversion rates. According to Four28, Google CPC often runs between $1–$5+ depending on the niche, and average conversion rates can be ~3.48% (for search) in some verticals.

    • Facebook Ads often has lower CPCs (e.g. $0.50–$2 in many cases), but you may need more impressions or nurturing to convert.

    • Benchmarks suggest costs are rising. WordStream’s latest Google Ads benchmark report shows that average CPCs are climbing across many industries in 2025.

    • On the Facebook side, recent data indicates average cost per lead (CPL) has increased ~21% year-over-year to ~$27.66, though some industries such as restaurants or food see lower CPLs.

    Ad Format & Creative Flexibility

    • Google offers search ads, shopping ads, display ads, video (YouTube), and remarketing.

    • Facebook / Instagram (Meta) gives you highly visual formats: image ads, video, reels, carousels, stories, shopping tags, etc. This visual storytelling is a strength for product-heavy brands.

    Attribution & Funnel Role

    • Google often performs better for capturing “bottom-of-funnel” conversions.

    • Facebook helps fill the top and middle funnel: awareness, engagement, retargeting.

    • In many accounts, the two are complementary - each platform influences conversions across channels when used smartly.

    2\. Benchmarks & Evidence You Can Use

    Here’s a simple comparison table with data drawn from public sources (these are helpful reference points):

    MetricGoogle Ads (Search / Shopping)Facebook / Meta Ads
    Typical CPC$1 - $5+$0.50 - $2 (varies widely by industry)
    Conversion Rate (CR)~2–4%+ (search intent)~1-2% (for many e-com accounts)
    StrengthsDemand capture, high intent trafficLower entry cost, visual reach, retargeting, lookalikes
    WeaknessesHigher cost, more competitionRequires creative, may need multiple touches to convert
    Best Use CasesProduct launches, high-intent search, complementing shopping adsBranding, catalog engagement, retargeting lapsed users

    These benchmarks help, but they should only serve as directional guidance – your real metrics will depend heavily on your niche, product, targeting, creative quality, offers, and optimization.

    3\. Example: A Shoe Store Putting Google & Facebook to Work

    Let’s walk through a hypothetical example to make things more concrete.

    Scenario

    You run “Stride & Style Shoes,” a mid-tier American E-commerce store specializing in athletic + casual sneakers. You want to boost direct sales and build a loyal audience.

    Google Ads Use Case

    • Search / Shopping Campaigns

    You target high-intent keywords: “men’s running shoes size 10,” “women’s sneakers sale,” “best walking shoes”. You use Google Shopping ads with product images, price, and store name.

    • Remarketing / Search + Display

    People who viewed product pages but didn’t purchase get display or search remarketing ads with stronger offers (e.g. “15% off your first order”).

    • Expected Performance (Hypothetical)
      • CPC = $2.50

      • Conversion Rate = 3.5%

      • 1,000 clicks → 35 orders

      • Average order value (AOV) = $80

      • Revenue = 35 × $80 = $2,800

      • Ad spend = 1,000 × $2.50 = $2,500

      • ROAS = $2,800 / $2,500 = 1.12x

    Facebook / Meta Ads Use Case

    • Collection / Catalog Ads

    You create carousel/collection ads showing 5–7 popular models of sneakers. Use dynamic product ads to retarget users who visited similar products.

    • Broad Awareness + Offer Funnel

    You run upper-funnel campaigns to cold audiences (interest in fitness, running, style), pushing them to a content piece (“5 Tips to Choose the Best Sneakers”) before retargeting.

    • Expected Performance (Hypothetical)
      • CPC = $1.20

      • Conversion Rate = 1.8%

      • 1,000 clicks → 18 orders

      • AOV = $80

      • Revenue = $1,440

      • Ad spend = 1,000 × $1.20 = $1,200

      • ROAS = $1,440 / $1,200 = 1.20x

    Notice: In this scenario, Facebook campaigns cost less to get clicks, but convert at a lower rate. Google gives fewer, more expensive clicks, but with higher conversion likelihood.

    How We’d Use This as Your Agency

    • Use Google Campaigns to capture high-intent buyers and maximize short-term sales.

    • Use Facebook Campaigns to build awareness, nurture cold leads, retarget, and expand your audience pipeline.

    • Monitor cross-platform attribution: some users might first see your shoe brand on Facebook, then later search your brand name via Google and convert.

    • Optimize creative, offers, audience segmentation constantly on both platforms.

    4\. Decision Checklist: Which Platform to Use (or Prioritize)?

    Use this checklist to guide your decisions or client conversations:

    QuestionIf Yes → Prioritize GoogleIf Yes → Prioritize Facebook / Meta
    Do people “search” for your product when they intend to buy?
    Is your product highly visual and emotionally compelling?
    Do you have strong margins to support higher CPCs?
    Is your brand awareness low (new business)?
    Do you already have website traffic / pixel data to build lookalikes or retargeting audiences?
    Are you testing new products / want to test messaging / creatives?
    Do you need immediate sales / cash flow?

    You don’t always have to choose one over the other. A smart, integrated approach often wins.

    5\. Suggested Budget Mix & Strategy by Funnel Stage

    Here’s a sample split for an e-commerce brand with a modest budget:

    Funnel StageChannel EmphasisGoalSuggested % Budget
    Awareness / Top FunnelFacebook / Meta (video, carousel, content)Reach, ad recall, interest20%
    Consideration / Middle FunnelFacebook retargeting, Instagram Shopping, dynamic adsEngagement, product views25%
    Purchase / Bottom FunnelGoogle Search, Google Shopping, dynamic retargetingDirect conversions40%
    Retention / UpsellFacebook / Instagram + Google remarketingRepeat buyers, cross-sell15%

    As your data accumulates, you can shift budget toward the best-performing segment or test incremental changes.

    6\. What to Test & How to Measure Success

    A/B Tests You Should Run

    • Headlines, ad copy, calls to action

    • Product photography styles (white background, lifestyle, model shots)

    • Offer types (10% off, free shipping, bundle savings)

    • Audience segments: cold broad vs interest vs lookalike

    • Retargeting windows (7 days, 14 days, 30 days)

    • Landing pages: product page vs dedicated campaign landing page

    Key Metrics to Track

    • Click-Through Rate (CTR)

    • Conversion Rate (CR)

    • Cost Per Click (CPC)

    • Cost Per Acquisition / Cost Per Order (CPA / CPO)

    • Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)

    • Average Order Value (AOV)

    • Profit per order (after ad spend)

    Attribution & Overlap Considerations

    Be aware of last-click vs multi-touch attribution. A user might first see your Facebook ad, then later search your brand name and click on a Google ad. If you ignore that first touch, you may undervalue your Facebook spend.

    Using tools like Google Analytics (GA4) or Facebook attribution windows can help you see cross-channel influence.

    7\. Final Thoughts & Best Practices

    • Start with your goals. If your priority is immediate sales, favor Google. For brand building or scaling reach, lean into Facebook.

    • Test both, but monitor incremental gains. Use small budgets to probe which creatives, messages, and audiences perform.

    • Creative matters. On Facebook, that often means strong visuals, lifestyle shots, video. On Google, it means concise, relevant text, strong CTAs, and high-quality landing pages.

    • Watch your margins. Higher ad spend is only worthwhile if your product margins support it.

    • Use remarketing aggressively. Someone who clicked and didn’t buy is your low-hanging fruit.

    • Be patient and data-driven. Optimization cycles (creatives, offers, bidding) take time. Don’t pause campaigns prematurely.

    Interested in launching successful Google Ads campaigns? Check out our comprehensive guide: The Ultimate Google Ads Launch Checklist – Every step from keyword research to conversion tracking. Discover insider tips to maximize your ad performance and drive results!

    If you’re ready to take your ad strategy to the next level, we’re here to help.

    At Simplee Digital, we create data-backed Google and Facebook ad campaigns that attract, convert, and scale profitably. From keyword research to creative strategy, we handle every detail so you can focus on growing your business.

    Let’s build your next winning campaign. Contact Simplee Digital to get started.

    Share this:

    Like this:

    LikeLoading...

    Related

    Prev Post

    25 Scroll-Stopping Ad Headlines You Can Use Today

    Next Post

    Why You Need Your Own Website Even If Amazon Is Paying the Bills

    Leave a ReplyCancel reply

    Post a Comment

    Δ

    Ready to build with us?

    Let's talk about how AI-native systems can grow your business.

    Book a Strategy Call

    Related