Google AdWords Strategy - Part 2:
TargetingAuthor: Steve
Avery
With permission from the Google AdWords Guide: Novice to
Expert to Superhuman - www.AdwordsCampaign.net
2. TARGETING
There's no point in advertising anything unless the ad
reaches a person who might be interested in it. That sounds
obvious, but the number of advertisers who waste money on
"catch-all" ads with a "shotgun" approach, hoping for the best,
is astonishingly high. If you follow their example, you'll lose
a lot of money fast with Google AdWords. The secret of success
with Google AdWords, as with any advertising medium, is
accurate targeting. With Google AdWords, though, you can home
in on your target market with pin-point accuracy.
If you sell a machine with a specific model number, that
model number should be your main keyword. If you sell it only
in a certain town or county, that town or county should be a
keyword in the Ad Group. If it relates to a particular season
or festival, that should be a keyword.
Keywords can be combined with each other or with incidental
words, such as prepositions like "in", "for", "with", to form
2-word, 3-word or 4-plus-word phrases in various ways and
different word orders. Ideally, every conceivable phrase that a
surfer might type as a search term would be desirable to have
in an Ad Group as an exact match keyword phrase. Then your cost
per click for each of those keyword phrases would be minimal.
If you're creating your Google AdWords campaign manually, such
a task would be totally impractical, of course, if not
impossible. For such jobs specialist software that applies
"brute force" algorithms is a sound investment. You get what
you pay for, and even the high-end software pays for itself,
usually many times over.
Negative keywords have a great impact on a targeted AdWords
campaign. If you sell software, for example, and don’t just
give it away, you do not want your ad to appear when someone
types the phrase “free software”. That might trigger an
impression of your advertisement unnecessarily, thus affecting
your keyword’s and your ad’s click-through rates adversely.
Worse still would be if that person were to click on your ad.
Yes, it’d help your CTR but you’d pay good money for a
non-revenue-earning click. Specify “free” as a negative
keyword, to prevent your ad from being displayed. To
micro-target your market, your negative keyword list could be
surprisingly large.
The same principle applies to the ad text: You don’t want
freebie-seekers clicking on your ad unless you’re giving away
something for nothing on your landing page. That costs you
money. Don’t be afraid to target your potential customers who
are prepared to pay for your product or service by making it
clear in the ad text that it’s for sale and not free. Stating
its price in the ad is the easiest and most succinct way to get
that message across.
As well as geographic targeting, you can also make use of
demographic tageting to a certain extent. Demographic targeting
with Google AdWords, however, requires some judgment on your
part. Use the Google AdWords "placement targeting" function
(see 'Tactics > Placement Ads') to pick specific web sites
that, in your opinion, would be visited by the kind of people
you want to see your advertisement. Combine those placements
with specific keywords and bids to attain the desired position
for your ad on context-relevant pages on those web sites.
Here's a summary of what happens, depending on the Google
AdWords settings you choose:
- Select 'Search' with keywords in the Ad Group: Your ads
can appear on user searches related to your keywords.
- Select 'Search' with no keywords in the Ad Group: Ads
in this Ad Group won't appear on search. (Keywords are
needed to be matched to user searches.)
- Select 'Relevant pages across the entire network' with
keywords in the Ad Group: Your ads can appear on Content
Network pages matching your keywords.
- Select 'Relevant pages across the entire network' with
no keywords in the Ad Group: Ads in this Ad Group won't
appear on the Content Network. (Keywords are needed for
your ads to be matched contextually on the Content Network,
but if you have also selected Placement targeting in this
Ad Group, your ads can appear on any individual placements
you selected.)
- Select 'Relevant pages only on the placements I target'
with keywords in the Ad Group: Ads can appear only on the
placements you choose, and only if the content of those
placements matches your keywords. If your chosen placements
don't match your keywords, your ad won't show.
- Select 'Relevant pages only on the placements I target'
with no keywords in the Ad Group: Ads can appear on any of
the placements you choose, regardless of relevance.
About the Author:
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reserved. 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 2: Targeting
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