Google AdWords Strategy - Part 1:
RelevanceAuthor: Steve
Avery
With permission from the Google AdWords Guide: Novice to
Expert to Superhuman - http://www.AdwordsCampaign.net
1. RELEVANCE
A primary aim is to reduce your cost per click (CPC). Google
will favour you with a low cost per click if you master the
concept of relevance. If you don't, your pay-per-click rate
will be high, your profits will suffer, your campaigns will
probably fail, and your competitors will beat you.
Google is the undisputed leader (by far) among search
engines because it provides searchers with results more
relevant than those of any other. When a surfer types in a
search term, Google's complex algorithm returns pages that
match closely the words searched for.
Google applies the same principle to AdWords advertisements.
Ads that are more relevant than others are given preferential
treatment. Less relevant ads are allowed to compete, but they
are penalized by a high cost per click.
Google AdWords employs two distinct modes of measurement of
relevance: A. Robot; B. Human.
A. An automated program compares the search term not only to
your advertisement text, but also to the keywords in its Ad
Group, to the URL of the specified landing page and even to the
textual content of the landing page itself, to determine how
relevant these components are to each other. If all four are
tightly integrated with the search term, you'll pay a very low
cost per click -- perhaps only 5 cents -- and still command a
high position on Google's first page. Any component that does
not match the search term closely causes the CPC to rise,
perhaps even by a factor of a hundred!
B. Every time Google displays your ad, it records the fact.
This is known as an "impression". If a surfer clicks on the ad,
Google records that also, and divides the number of clicks by
the number of impressions. The result gives your ad a
"click-through" rate (CTR). A similar calculation is made for
your keywords that appear in the search term, to give them
their own click-through rate. Google AdWords assumes that, if a
human clicks on your ad, it is probably relevant to the search
term typed in.
As your CTR rises, so do your keywords' Quality Scores, and,
as more and more keywords' Quality Scores rise, so does the
Quality Score of the entire Ad Group. The higher the Quality
Score is, the lower will be the cost per click. Conversely, the
fewer clicks your ad gets whenever it's displayed, the lower
your Quality Score and the higher your cost per click will
be.
How to Increase Relevance of the 4 Components
(keywords, ad text, URL, landing page)
If you create a campaign manually (rather than by "brute
force" means), use only one keyword phrase per Ad Group, e.g.,
"adwords guide", and specify exact match initially. Once the Ad
Group's Quality Score has increased, expand it to phrase match
also, to capture phrases such as "online adwords guide" and
"adwords guide for beginners". (To specify broad match, to
capture search terms like "adwords online guide" and "guide to
adwords", is impractical unless you use "brute force"
software.)
Use the precise keyword phrase in the heading of the Ad
Variation, and sprinkle the keywords in the two description
lines.
Use the keyword phrase, hyphenated or unhyphenated, in the
display URL, e.g., "/adwords-guide" or "/AdWordsGuide". Not
only does Google's robot consider it relevant, but humans do,
too, and are more likely to click on the ad.
Use the keyword phrase, hyphenated or unhyphenated, in the
destination URL of the landing page, e.g.,
"/adwords-guide.html" or "/AdWordsGuide.htm".
If possible, register domain names, both hyphenated and
unhyphenated, containing the keyword phrase. Use the hyphenated
one in the display and destination URLs, and redirect the
unhyphenated one to the hyphenated one for other promotion
purposes.
Use the keywords in the landing page content as follows:
-- The precise keyword phrase in the About the
Author:
www.AdwordsCampaign.net is updated
frequently with free advice about Google AdWords strategy,
tactics, tips tricks and techniques for success in AdWords
advertising.
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Google AdWords Strategy - Part 1: Relevance
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