TLDR;
- Stop asking "Google vs. Meta". The real question is "Google AND Meta". They do different jobs. Use Google to capture existing demand and Meta to create new demand.
- Start with Google Ads (specifically Shopping and Performance Max) if people are already searching for products like yours. It's the lowest hanging fruit for a Shopify store.
- Use Meta Ads (Facebook & Instagram) to scale. It's how you reach millions of people who don't know you exist yet, but would love your product if they saw it. This is your growth engine.
- If both platforms are failing, the problem isn't the platform, it's your offer. A weak product page, bad photos, or unclear value proposition will sink any ad campaign. Fix the shop first.
- This article includes an interactive calculator to figure out your customer LTV and what you can actually afford to pay for a new customer, plus visual flowcharts of a real Shopify ad strategy.
One of the most common questions I get from Shopify founders is "Should I use Google Ads or Meta Ads?". It's framed as a choice, a fork in the road where you have to pick one path and abandon the other. Tbh, that's completely the wrong way to think about it. It's not a competition. It's a partnership.
Asking whether to use Google or Meta is like a builder asking if they should use a hammer or a screwdriver. You need both, but you use them for different jobs at different times. Using the wrong tool for the job leads to frustration, wasted effort, and a shoddy result. The same is true for your ad spend. The secret isn't picking a 'winner', it's understanding the unique role each platform plays in your customer's journey and making them work together.
In this guide, I'm going to give you the framework we use for our e-commerce clients. No fluff, no generic advice. Just a straightforward look at when to use each platform, how to make them work together, and how to diagnose the real problem when your ads aren't delivering.
So, Which One's Better? Google or Meta?
Let's get this out of the way. Neither is "better". They are fundamentally different beasts that operate on opposite ends of the customer awareness spectrum. Understanding this difference is the absolute foundation of a successful paid ad strategy.
Google Ads is for Demand Capture.
Think of Google Search and Shopping as the ultimate tool for capturing existing intent. Someone goes to Google and types "waterproof hiking boots size 9 UK" or "vegan leather tote bag". They are telling you, right now, that they want to buy something. They are problem-aware and solution-aware. Your job is simply to show up with a relevant product at the right moment. It's the digital equivalent of setting up a stall in a marketplace where everyone is shouting about what they want to buy. If you have what they're looking for, you're in with a great chance of making a sale.
Meta Ads (Facebook & Instagram) is for Demand Generation.
Nobody logs onto Instagram to look for a new hoover. They're there to see what their friends are up to, watch videos of cats, and generally pass the time. They are not in a buying mindset. Your ad has to interrupt their scrolling and be so compelling, so interesting, or so visually stunning that it creates a desire they didn't know they had. You are generating demand, not just capturing it. It's like putting up a beautiful billboard on a busy motorway. You're not catching people at the point of purchase, you're planting a seed for later.
This isn't just theory, it's the core of how you should structure your entire approach. Many Shopify owners get this wrong, they try to use Meta for hard-selling to a cold audience and wonder why it fails, or they neglect Google and miss out on the easiest sales they could ever make. If you get good traffic that simply doesn't convert, it's often because of a mismatch between the platform's nature and your ad's message. To fix this, you need to understand how to align your ad creative and landing page with user intent.
The Core Difference: Intent vs. Discovery
Google Ads: Demand Capture
User is actively searching for a solution.
"I need to buy a new tent for my camping trip this weekend."
Your Goal:
Be the best, most relevant answer to their query.
Meta Ads: Demand Generation
User is passively browsing content.
"Oh, that's a cool-looking tent. I didn't know they made them so lightweight now..."
Your Goal:
Interrupt their scroll with a compelling story or offer.
When Does it Make Sense to Start with Google Ads?
For almost every new Shopify store, I recomend starting with Google Ads. Why? Because it’s the path of least resistance to your first sales. If people are already out there looking for what you sell, you want to be the first person they find. It's that simple.
The main tools in your arsenal here will be Google Shopping and Performance Max (PMax). You link your Shopify product feed to your Google Merchant Center, and Google automatically creates visual shopping ads for your products. PMax takes this a step further, using that same feed to show your products across Shopping, YouTube, Display, and Search. For e-commerce, it's an incredibly powerful way to get started. By tapping directly into what people are searching for, we've helped many Shopify stores get their first sales and validate that they have a product people want to buy.
You should focus on:
- High-Intent Product Keywords: These are searches where the person knows exactly what they want. "Men's Gore-Tex running jacket", "2-person backpacking tent", "organic cotton babygrows". The more specific, the better.
- Branded Search: As soon as you have a brand name, you must run a campaign to capture anyone searching for you directly. If you don't, you can bet a competitor will, and they'll steal your most valuable traffic.
The beauty of starting here is that the return on investment is often much clearer and quicker. You can directly tie a click on a specific product ad to a sale. It's clean, it's measurable, and it validates that you have a product people actually want to buy. A key question for any founder is how to decide between platforms, so we've put together a founder's framework for choosing between Google and Meta that goes deeper on this.
Okay, So When Do I Bring in Meta Ads?
You’ve started with Google, you’re making some sales, you’ve proven there’s a market for your product. Great. The problem is, you'll eventually hit a ceiling. There are only so many people searching for your product each month. To grow beyond that, you need to create *new* customers. This is where Meta comes in.
Meta is your scaling engine. It’s how you go from 100 customers to 10,000. It lets you reach millions of people who have the *characteristics* of your ideal customer, even if they've never heard of you and aren't actively shopping. This is where creative becomes king. Your ads need to stop the scroll and make someone think. A beautiful video, a carousel showing off your product's best features, or a user-generated-style ad that feels authentic and relatable can be incredibly powerful.
We've seen this work wonders for brands. For one women's apparel client, we achieved a 691% return on ad spend using Meta's powerful visual formats and audience targeting on both Meta and Pinterest. For another, a cleaning products company, we saw a 633% return. This isn't about capturing a handful of searches; it's about building a brand and an audience at scale. If you really want to grow your Shopify store, you'll want to check out our in-depth guide to scaling with Shopify ads.
Your strategy on Meta should be structured around the sales funnel:
- Top of Funnel (ToFu): This is your cold audience. People who've never heard of you. You'll target them based on interests (e.g., people who like 'sustainable fashion', 'home decor', or competitor brands), demographics, and behaviours. The goal here is awareness and traffic.
- Middle of Funnel (MoFu): These people have shown some interest. They've visited your website, watched one of your videos, or engaged with your Instagram page. You'll retarget them with ads that provide more information, showcase different product benefits, or share customer testimonials.
- Bottom of Funnel (BoFu): This is your hot audience. They've added a product to their cart but didn't buy, or they started the checkout process and abandoned it. You'll hit them with direct, urgent ads – "Did you forget something?", "Complete your order and get free shipping!".
Top of Funnel (ToFu) - Awareness
Audience: Cold Traffic (Interest/Lookalike Audiences)
Goal: Drive new website visitors, introduce your brand.
Middle of Funnel (MoFu) - Consideration
Audience: Warm Traffic (Website Visitors, Video Viewers, Page Engagers)
Goal: Build trust, showcase value, stay top-of-mind.
Bottom of Funnel (BoFu) - Conversion
Audience: Hot Traffic (Add to Carts, Initiated Checkouts)
Goal: Recover abandoned carts, close the sale.
What if Neither Platform is Working?
This is the brutally honest part. If you're running ads on both platforms and nothing is working, your problem is almost definately not the ad platform. Your problem is your offer. I've audited hundreds of ad accounts, and I can tell you that you can't advertise your way out of a bad product page.
The platform's job is to send traffic. Your website's job is to convert that traffic. If your're getting clicks but no sales, the issue lies on your site. I see the same mistakes over and over again:
- Poor Product Photography: Dark, blurry, or uninspired photos. For e-commerce, your photos are your product. They need to be professional and show the item in its best light.
- Weak Product Descriptions: A list of features is not a description. You need to sell the benefit. How does your product make the customer's life better? What problem does it solve?
- No Social Proof: No reviews? No testimonials? In 2024, people need to see that other real humans have bought from you and were happy. A lack of reviews is a massive red flag.
- A Clunky, Untrustworthy Website: A slow-loading site, a confusing checkout process, no clear contact information... all of these things erode trust and kill conversion rates. If your store looks amateur, people will assume you are, and they won't risk their card details.
Before you spend another pound on ads, be honest with yourself. Would YOU buy from your website? Get a friend to go through the buying process. Fix the leaks in your bucket before you try to pour more water in. A comprehensive strategy to turn Meta ad clicks into actual sales involves looking just as hard at your website as you do at your ad campaigns.
How Much Should I Actually Be Spending?
Founders are often obsessed with getting the lowest Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) possible. But chasing a low CPA can be a trap. The real question isn't "how cheap can I get a customer?" but "how much can I *afford* to pay for a customer and still be profitable?". The answer lies in your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV).
LTV is the total profit you can expect to make from a single customer over the entire time they shop with you. Once you know this number, you can make much smarter decisions about your ad spend. A £50 CPA might seem high, but if that customer is worth £500 to you over their lifetime, it's a fantastic deal.
Here's the basic maths:
- Average Order Value (AOV): How much does the average customer spend in one transaction?
- Purchase Frequency (F): How many times does a customer buy from you in a year?
- Gross Margin % (GM): What's your profit margin on each sale?
- Customer Lifetime (in years): How long, on average, does a customer stick with you? This can be calculated as 1 / Monthly Churn Rate.
The LTV formula can get complex, but a simple version is: LTV = (AOV * F * GM) * Customer Lifetime. A more robust way, especially for recurring revenue, is to use this formula: LTV = (Average Revenue Per Account * Gross Margin %) / Churn Rate.
Let's use this interactive calculator to make it real.
So How Does This All Work Together in a Real Strategy?
Alright, we've established that you need both platforms. But how do they actually work together day-to-day? It's not about running them in isolation; it's about creating a growth flywheel where each platform makes the other stronger.
Here’s what that looks like in practice:
- Generate Demand (Meta): You run compelling video and image ads on Facebook and Instagram to a cold audience of people who fit your customer profile. This drives new, curious visitors to your Shopify store. They might not buy straight away, but the seed is planted.
- Capture Intent (Google): Some of those visitors will remember your brand name or product. A day later, a week later, they might search on Google for "[Your Brand Name]" or "[Your Product Type]". Your Google Ads campaign (for Brand Search and PMax) is there to catch them, ensuring you don't lose that hard-won interest to a competitor.
- Recapture & Convert (Meta): For everyone who visited your site (from Meta OR Google) but didn't buy, your Meta retargeting campaigns kick in. You show them ads with customer reviews, different product angles, or a special offer to bring them back and push them over the line.
- Feed the Machine: Every sale, add to cart, and website visit feeds data back into both the Meta and Google algorithms. Your Meta lookalike audiences become more accurate. Your Google PMax campaign gets smarter about who to show ads to. The flywheel starts to spin faster, with each rotation making the next one more efficient.
This integrated approach is how you build a sustainable and scalable customer acquisition machine. Once you have this system humming, you can really begin the process of scaling your e-commerce ad spend and driving serious growth.
Right, I'm Ready. What's the Game Plan?
I've thrown a lot at you. To make it more actionable, here’s a summary table of the strategy I've outlined. This is the roadmap we'd typically follow for a new Shopify client.
| Stage | Primary Platform | Campaign Focus | Key Metric |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Validation & Easy Wins | Google Ads | Shopping/PMax on high-intent keywords & Brand Search. | Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) |
| 2. Demand Generation | Meta Ads | ToFu campaigns (Interests/Broad/Lookalikes) with strong creative. | Cost Per Click (CPC), Website Traffic |
| 3. Nurture & Recapture | Meta Ads | MoFu/BoFu retargeting (Website Visitors, Add to Carts). | Cost Per Purchase (CPA), Cart Recovery Rate |
| 4. Scaling & Optimisation | Both | Expand winning audiences, increase budgets, test new creative, optimise LTV. | Overall Blended ROAS, Scaled Revenue |
When Do You Call in an Expert?
Reading this guide, you now know more than 90% of Shopify owners about how to structure a paid ads strategy. But knowing the strategy and executing it are two very different things. This isn't a "set it and forget it" process. It requires constant monitoring, creative testing, budget management, and data analysis.
You need to be constantly asking questions. Is this Meta audience fatiguing? Should we shift more budget to PMax this month? Is our new video creative resonating? Why did our CPA spike last Tuesday? Managing this flywheel is a full-time job. And as a founder, your time is probably better spent working on your product, your operations, and your brand.
That's where getting professional help comes in. An expert doesn't just "run your ads". They manage this entire growth engine for you. They live in the data, they understand the nuances of each platform, and they have the experience from hundreds of other campaigns to know which levers to pull and when. It's about taking this complex, time-consuming process off your plate so you can focus on what you do best.
If you've read this far and feel like you have a good product but are struggling to get the advertising flywheel spinning, it might be time for a chat. We offer a free, no-obligation strategy session where we can take a look at your business and give you some honest, actionable advice on what your next steps should be. There's no hard sell, just a chance to see if we can help.