How to Report on AdWords Geographic Targeting


This is the fifth post in our series on Google AdWords reporting within the AdWords dimensions tab. In the previous installments, we’ve covered:



The focus of this post will be the AdWords geographic reporting options available in the AdWords dimensions tab (also available in WordStream for PPC!):




Geographic Report



What Is AdWords Geographic Reporting & Targeting?


The geographic reporting available in the AdWords dimensions tab offers you a look at how your campaigns are performing in different geographic regions:




Geographic Reporting



As with any of the reports in the dimensions tab, you can look at different data points by customizing columns, but there’s an important customization option available for this reporting feature:




Customize Columns



By default, your report will show country/territory data, but for many accounts it’s important to see region, metro area, and city data in the report. For instance if you’re running a campaign that is set up to run nationally but targets different cities and geo-regions such as a national chain or an aggregator, it’ll be critical to break out data at a geographic level to see how different regions are performing.


What Do I Actually DO with Geographic Reporting Data & When Should I Use It?


As with any AdWords report or new feature, we want to identify how (and whether) this is actionable. With geographic reporting, one use of the report (similar to dayparting and demographic reporting) is to tune budget allocation by geographic regions that are performing well (and those that are underperforming).


If you’re looking for more information on how geo-targeting works you can check out a few resources we’ve put together on the subject:



Beyond the obvious application of tuning budget to better allocate spend in areas that will perform better, you can also drive better performance by looking for “outliers” and instances where you have:



  1. High volume regions (high amount of spend/clicks/conversions)

  2. Underperformance from a CPA perspective


As with other instances where you might split out a new campaign to target opportunities that often come with high volume and high CPAs such as network targeting (content versus search) or device targeting (mobile and tablet versus laptop and desktop) there may be some geographies within a campaign that drive a lot of volume for you, but also spend too much per conversion.


You can sometimes salvage some (or most) of this volume while reducing costs per conversion by splitting the region out into its own campaign and tuning bids specifically for that region so that they’re lower and can convert at an acceptable rate for you. As with any optimization effort, you need to take into account:



  • Your business’s margins

  • How important the volume is to your core business strategy

  • The time and effort to create the new campaign in relation to the benefit you can likely get (which the size of the segment of traffic can help you assess)


In the end the geographic reporting options in AdWords can be valuable when used by:



  • Well-ordered accounts that have tackled the fundamentals (keyword targeting, campaign organization, and strong landing pages) and are looking to squeeze more efficiency from their campaigns

  • Accounts with a strong geo-focus that have products or offerings that are geo-specific (i.e., physical locations, locally focused content, etc.)

  • Accounts where a single geographic segmentation happens to be driving a lot of volume at an inefficient cost per conversion


You shouldn’t prioritize geographic data analysis above executing on the fundamentals (check out the Google AdWords Grader to see how your current campaigns stack up) but it can be a very useful report, particularly for geo-focused accounts and more mature accounts looking for additional optimizations that will help them move the needle.




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