Table of Contents
TL;DR: The Feed Hierarchy
- The Baseline: All feeds must include exactly formatted attributes (
id,title,description,link,image_link,availability,price). - The API Shift: The legacy Content API is shutting down in August 2026. High-volume merchants must transition to the Google Merchant API for real-time inventory syncing.
- The Verdict: Manual Google Sheets are viable for under 50 SKUs. For scaling e-commerce, using a feed management tool or direct API integration is the only way to prevent paying for out-of-stock clicks.
If you are running e-commerce campaigns, your product feed is the absolute foundation of your account. Google’s algorithms do not read your website; they read your feed.
Historically, managing a Google Shopping feed was a static process—you uploaded a spreadsheet and hoped your inventory didn’t change before the next day’s fetch. In 2026, relying on slow, static data processing actively damages your Return on Ad Spend (ROAS).
We evaluated the primary methods for generating and submitting data to Google Merchant Center (GMC). Here is the technical hierarchy of how to build and maintain a product feed based on your catalog size.
The Core Requirements: Do Not Skip This
Before choosing a creation method, your data must be structured perfectly. Whether you use XML, CSV, or an API, Google strictly requires these exact attributes in the target market’s language:
id: Your unique identifier (SKU).title: Must include relevant keywords, brand, and model.description: Detailed product specifications.link: The direct landing page URL.image_link: High-quality, unobstructed product image URL.availability: In stock, out of stock, or preorder.price: Accurate to the landing page, including currency.
The 6 Feed Creation Methods (Ranked by Scalability)
1. Google Sheets (Best for Small Inventories)
You can manually create a feed using a spreadsheet and connect it directly to GMC. While this method is highly customizable, it is time-consuming and prone to human error. See an example below.
| id | title | description | link | image_link | price |
| 001 | Samsung LCD 4K UHD, 75″, feet stand, grey – TV | Crystal Processor 4K • PurColor • Clean Cable Solution | https://www.site/com/product1.html | https://www.site/com/image1.jpg | 100 USD |
| 002 | Honor X7, black – Smartphone | 6nm Power-efficient Snapdragon® 680; • 5000mAh large battery; • 22.5W HONOR SuperCharge. | https://www.site/com/product2.html | https://www.site/com/image2.jpg | 200 USD |
| 003 | Sony WH-1000XM4, black | Discover how the WH-1000XM4 headphones blend our most advanced noise cancellation with exceptional sound quality | https://www.site/com/product3.html | https://www.site/com/image3.jpg | 150 USD |
An example of a Google Shopping feed file
Verdict: Only use this if you have a static catalog of fewer than 50 products.
2. Website Plugins / Apps (Best for Mid-Market)
If you operate on Shopify, WooCommerce, or Adobe Commerce (Magento), native plugins automatically generate and format an XML or CSV feed based on your store’s backend data.
Verdict: Convenient and reliable, but native plugins often lack the advanced data mapping required to dynamically rewrite titles for Google Shopping best practices.
3. Scheduled Fetches via SFTP (The Traditional Standard)
You host a formatted CSV/XML feed file on your website’s server, and configure Google Merchant Center to fetch it periodically (e.g., daily at 2:00 AM).
Verdict: Good for stable inventories, but creates a massive latency window. If you sell out at 10:00 AM, Google will keep advertising the product until the next day’s fetch.
4. Product Feed Management Tools (The Optimization Route)
Tools like BrightBid connect to your e-commerce platform and sit between your store and Google. Instead of just passing raw data, feed management software dynamically identifies missing attributes, normalizes data, and automatically groups products based on defined ROAS criteria.
Verdict: Necessary for competitive sectors where agility and dynamic Performance Max (PMax) campaign strategies dictate profitability.
5. Google Merchant API (Best for Large, Dynamic Inventories)
Note: The legacy Content API for Shopping is officially shutting down on August 18, 2026.
For enterprise catalogs with rapidly changing stock, bypassing file uploads entirely is mandatory. The new Google Merchant API allows for programmatic, real-time updates. If a price drops or stock depletes, the API pings Google instantly.
Verdict: Mandatory for complex Multi-Client Accounts (MCAs) or flash-sale models to prevent wasted ad spend on out-of-stock items.
6. Supplemental Feeds (The Tactical Fix)
If you already have a primary feed (e.g., from a Scheduled Fetch), you can create a secondary «Supplemental Feed.» This allows you to surgically override specific information—like adding custom labels for a seasonal sale or quickly changing a price—without re-uploading the entire catalog.
The Proof: Scaling Feeds in Action (Campusbokhandeln)
Having perfectly structured, rapidly updating feed data directly impacts revenue. When our client Campusbokhandeln, a major Swedish bookstore, needed to aggressively scale online, managing their massive, constantly shifting inventory was the primary hurdle.
By utilizing BrightBid’s AI to optimize their Google Shopping feeds—moving away from static, manual limitations—they achieved a level of data responsiveness that allowed the algorithm to hunt for actual revenue.
- Conversions: +134%
- Conversion Value: +192%
This data validates that a highly optimized feed is not just administrative housekeeping; it is a primary lever for scaling conversion value.
How to Get Started
- Sign up for Google Merchant Center: Verify your domain and input your business details.
- Select Your Method: Choose one of the 6 methods above based on your SKU count and inventory volatility.
- Map the Attributes: Ensure
id,title,price, andavailabilitymatch your landing pages exactly. - Submit & Review: Push the feed to GMC and immediately monitor the «Diagnostics» tab for critical disapprovals or missing GTINs.
FAQ: Building Google Shopping Feeds
Can I use both an API and a manual data feed?
No. This will cause severe data duplication errors in Google Merchant Center. You must choose one primary input method. If transitioning to the Google Merchant API, you must re-upload your product data entirely via the API so it assumes primary control of the taxonomy.
What happens to the Content API for Shopping?
Google is permanently shutting it down on August 18, 2026. You must migrate to the modular Google Merchant API to maintain programmatic control over your product listings and access exclusive AI features like Product Studio.
How do I fix missing product attributes?
If your e-commerce platform cannot natively export a required attribute (like a specific custom label or a missing MPN), the most efficient solution is to apply a Supplemental Feed via Google Sheets to append that specific column to your primary data source.
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