Ten days? That's basically still a foetus in campaign terms. I wouldn't start panicking yet-buyers aren't born overnight.
You're on Maximise Clicks with a tenner per day. That's Google's way of saying "I'll send you anyone who breathes near a search result." It's optimised for traffic, not for people who actually open their wallets. The algorithm hasn't got a clue what a converting visitor looks like because you haven't given it one yet.
Before you start fiddling with bid strategies, here's what I'd actually eyeball:
First, click volume. If you've had less than 50-100 clicks in ten days, you simply haven't had enough eyeballs to expect a sale. At $10/day in India, you might be scraping by on a handful of clicks daily. That's your real problem, not the bid strategy.
Second, your feed. Is your title actually telling people what the product is, or does it read like a half-arsed tweet? Good images? Competitive price? Shopping ads are feed-first, everything else second. A crap feed kills conversions faster than any bid strategy can save.
Third, the landing page. Loads fast? Easy to buy? Trust signals-payment options, returns policy, contact info? If your page feels even slightly dodgy, people bounce harder than a rubber ball.
Should you switch bid strategies? God, no. Jumping to Maximise Conversions with zero conversion history is like trying to teach a toddler calculus. Google needs data to optimise towards something. You can't optimise for a thing you've never had.
Stay on Maximise Clicks until you've bagged at least 10-15 conversions. That might take weeks or a couple of months depending on your budget and click volume.
The blunt truth: $10/day for a product around $75 is a tough ask. You're maybe getting 3-5 clicks daily on a good day. Ten days without a sale isn't weird-it's just maths.
Let it run another two to three weeks. Focus on polishing the feed and the landing page. Don't touch the bid strategy until you've got at least ten sales in the bank. If after 30 days it's still crickets, then think about upping the budget or testing a different product. But right now? Patience, grasshopper.