There are more contact fields, questions by vertical and new ways to automate customer data imports into Google Ads.
Lead form ad extensions will be available in Display campaigns later this year, Google noted in its announcement Wednesday.
Google has expanded the field options available for collection since it initially started testing lead forms. Now in addition to name, email, phone number and postal code, advertisers can opt to collect city, state, country as well as business contact information, including company name, job title, work email, work phone.
A few things to note about lead form extensions:
- They are not available to advertisers in sensitive verticals or sub-verticals.
- Segment the performance report by “click” and “conversion type” to see lead form click and submission/conversion data.
- Engagement with lead forms won’t be attributed to actions users subsequently take on your site.
- Engagement with lead forms won’t show up in Analytics because users never arrive on your site.
- Leads can be downloaded to a CSV or you can use a webhook to automate lead data imports into your CRM or customer data platform.
Automating data imports. To help advertisers optimize their campaigns to generate leads that are more likely to convert into actual sales, Google said it will be rolling out solutions to make offline conversion imports easier “by just using the information people already give you in your lead form” later this year. Several advertisers are testing this now.
Currently, you can use Zapier to automatically import offline conversions from your CRM to Google Ads.
Customer Match lists also now integrate with Zapier to automate keeping your lists up-to-date. The Zapier integration allows you to automatically upload contacts from whatever CRM, marketing automation or commerce platform you’re using to Google Ads.
Lastly, match rates for customer match will update in real-time in the Google Ads interface.
Why we care. Based on this rollout to other ad campaigns, it looks safe to say that Google has finally cracked lead forms in ads — it tested contact form extensions in 2010 and cost-per-lead-ads in 2011. All of these solutions are aimed at helping small businesses, in particular, capture and act on more leads from their digital campaigns.