Google AdWords Strategy - Part 3: Other Google AdWords
StrategiesAuthor: Steve
Avery
3. Other Google AdWords
Strategies
Google AdWords Ad Positioning
Although the profit margin on the product or service offered
is a large factor, tests have proved that the first ad position
on the first page is, generally, not the most profitable. Yes,
it gets the most clicks, but it's often a spontaneous action by
the surfer before studying the ad. Sometimes the surfer is
merely browsing the subject and is not ready to buy (commonly
known as "tyre-kickers").
Tests show that the further down the page an ad is, or,
occasionally, even on the second page, the greater is its
conversion rate. The surfer has taken the time to read the ad
carefully because he is ready to buy. Furthermore, the clicks
are fewer; so, your overall pay-per-click bill is less than for
a higher-positioned ad. The downside is that the click-through
rate (CTR) of the lower-positioned ads is lower, which affects
your Quality Score adversely and raises your cost per
click.
A happy medium is to aim for positions 4 to 6 on Google's
first page. (You can use the "Show Estimated Ad Position" and
"Estimated Avg CPC" columns in the on-line Google AdWords
Keyword Tool to determine the cost-per-click to bid for each of
of your exact match keyword phrases, and then you can set those
bids accordingly. These figures can, however, be notoriously
inaccurate. Always check your keyword phrases' positions
afterwards in the 'Avg Pos' column on the Ad Group's 'Keywords'
index tab or by testing with a search on the main keyword
phrases.)
"Google Search" ads, "Content Network" ads,
"Search Network"/"Search Partners" ads, "Placement"
ads
You can specify different maximum bid amounts for these
various types of advertising. Because the quality of their
traffic tends to be lower, bids for the Content Network
("entire network" option) and Search Network (Search Partners)
(see Tactics > Search Network) should be kept lower and be
more tightly controlled than those for Google Search traffic
and the Content Network ("Placement ads" option). In the early
stages of a new Google AdWords campaign, it is advisable to go
with only Google Search traffic and switch other options off,
to help you to control costs. Once you've discovered the
keywords that produce the highest return on investment (ROI),
you can enable other options for those keywords to see what
results they produce.
If you find that a Google Search traffic campaign is too
competitive, don't just abandon Google AdWords altogether; try
a Content Network Placement ad (see Tactics > Placement
Ads), bidding either CPC or CPM (q.v.).
Testing and Tracking
Ad Variations
Despite what you may think of your copywriting prowess, you
will not write the perfect ad at the first attempt. You may
need ten attempts before you find the best formula. Although
you may hazard a reasonable guess at the advertisement text
that would attract visitors, the ONLY way to KNOW what ad text
achieves the highest click-through rate (CTR) is split-test two
ads simultaneously.
Although changing just a single word can make a difference,
do not split-test two ads that resemble each other that
closely; Split-test two radically different ads. (Switch off
Google's option to show the better-performing ad more often
than the other, as that would distort the test results.) After
between 20 and 50 clicks it should become apparent which of the
two ads is out-performing the other. Then replace the inferior
ad with another and split-test again. Repeat this process again
and again, each time reducing the textual differences between
the two ads until you arrive at the one that performs best of
all.
To track the click-through rate (CTR) of your ads, go to
your Google AdWords campaign web page, click on the Campaign
name; click on the Ad Group name; click the 'Ad Variations'
index tab; check the 'CTR' column.
Always keep all the Ad Variations that you create, to check
that you don't repeat any inadvertently.
Landing Pages
Split-test your landing pages in a similar way, to discover
which style, layout, text, call to action, etc. achieves the
highest conversion rate. To track the conversion rates of your
web pages for various keywords, go to your Google AdWords
campaign web page and click on the 'Conversion Tracking' item
on the 'Campaign Management' index tab.
Always save all the landing pages that you create, to check
that you don't repeat any inadvertently.
Keywords
After a new campaign has been running for about a month,
check the click-through rate (CTR) of all the keyword phrases
in each Ad Group on its ‘Keywords’ index tab. Click the ‘CTR’
column header to sort the keyword phrases, mark the checkbox of
all keyword phrases with a CTR of less than 0.5% and either
‘Pause’ or ‘Delete’ them. (If you have many keywords, it’d
probably be quicker to do this in your specialist AdWords
software tool and upload the keyword list to your Google
AdWords campaign again.)
0.5% is considered the benchmark of a poorly performing
keyword. Such keywords cause your ad to be displayed but, for
some reason, the people using the keyword in their search terms
don’t connect it mentally with your ad, and don’t click on it.
If several keywords have a low click-through rate (CTR), the
overall click-through rate (CTR) of your whole Ad Group is
reduced and its Quality Score will be affected adversely.
Eventually, this Ad Group’s lower Quality Score will also
affect the Quality Score of your entire Google AdWords
campaign.
This check should be performed weekly thereafter.
If you really want to use those poorly performing keywords,
remove them from the Ad Group and create a new Ad Group for
them, or even a new campaign, so that they don’t affect your
overall Quality Score.
The Bottom Line
Great importance is attached to the click-through rate
(CTR), but, to put it in perspective, it is only a means to an
end. A high click-through rate (CTR) does not make you a
millionaire in itself; It’s revenue that counts. Your revenue
is determined by the successful interaction between keywords,
Ad Variation and landing page, all three working in harmony
together.
Maximum CPC Bid
Don't be afraid to bid higher than necessary for keywords in
a new Google AdWords campaign during the first few days. This
will establish your campaign with Google and, as your
click-through rate (CTR) rises, your maximum CPC bid amount to
achieve the same ad position will fall dramatically. Then you
lower your bids and check again the next day. Repeat this
process until your bids are minimized. You do this for all the
keyword phrases in the Ad Group. If there are too many keywords
to deal with manually, invest in specialist software to
calculate the bids for you.
CPC or CPM?
Google 'Content Network' advertising (see Tactics >
Content Network) gives you the option to specify your keywords'
maximum bids as cost-per-click (CPC) or
cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) ("M" is the Roman numeral
for 1,000, "mille" in Latin). CPM can be useful if the Quality
Score is low or the cost per click (CPC) is high. If you opt to
pay for impressions rather than for clicks, Google couldn't
care less about Quality Score or click-through rate (CTR) or
even relevance; You simply pay each time your ad appears. Of
course, it's still in your interest to ensure that you follow
the advice about relevance already given.
It's your responsibility to track the performance of your
CPM ads, because Google doesn't do it for you. Obviously, you
won't want to keep paying for ads that don't convert. Moreover,
you'll still have to bid high enough to get your ad to be
displayed in the desired position within an ad unit on an
AdSense publisher's web page, or even at all, and that cost
could be quite high on a good-quality, popular web site that
you choose for a 'Placement' ad (see Tactics > Placement
Ads).
Keywords
Unless you have a six-figure annual budget and would be
happy with a mere 10% return on investment (ROI), don't bother
bidding for popular 1-word keywords, such as "mortgage". The
competition for most single-word keywords is fierce, unless the
niche is very esoteric. Moreover, searches on single words are
made most frequently by people who are simply not ready to
spend their money; they are merely investigating the market,
gathering information; in other words, they are "tyre-kickers".
1-word keywords would probably bankrupt you very quickly.
2-word keywords are a better bet, but they can still command
a high cost per click in competitive markets, surfers who
search on them may still not be ready to buy, although they're
getting there.
Keyword phrases of three words and up are known as
"long-tail" keywords. (Note that the word "keyword" in
pay-per-click advertising can mean a phrase of more than one
actual word, e.g., "New York". A "keyword phrase" consists of
more than one "keyword".)
3-word keyword phrases have the highest conversion rate,
according to tests. People who type three words as a search
term have usually done their investigations, know exactly what
they want, and are now ready to buy.
4-word keyword phrases fare slightly less well, perhaps
because the searcher may indeed be ready to buy, but is
comparing prices for a very specific item, or is doing some
academic research.
Don’t understimate the power of negative keywords! If you
sell tulips, you don’t want your ad to appear when someone
searches on the term “grow tulips”. Although they may not click
on your ad, it’d be an unnecessary impression, and its
click-through rate (CTR) would suffer. Specify “grow” as a
negative keyword. (Of course, if your Ad Group contains only
exact match keyword phrases, there’s no point in specifying
negative keywords.)
Landing Page
Relevance is covered above, and is by far the most important
attribute of a landing page. Here is some advice about other
ways to encourage Google to enhance your Ad Group's Quality
Score.
Google values "real" web sites more highly than mere
single-page "mini-sites". The robot checks for links to other
web pages, particularly a 'site map' page and 'privacy policy'
and 'contact us' pages. A 'terms of use' and an 'about us' page
may also help. Hyphenate these page names as the file names,
e.g., 'privacy-policy.html'. Place the links to these pages at
the very bottom of your landing page, in the footer, using as
small a font as a human would consider reasonable. You want to
reduce the risk as much as possible that your visitor will
click away from your landing page.
Minimize the landing page's load time. It is believed that
Google uses this as an element in its Quality Score algorithm.
Keep images and JavaScript to a minimum. They weigh the page
down. (Google cannot follow JavaScript links anyway.)
How to Attract Visitors
What makes a person click on your ad instead of someone
else's? The answer is the same as to the question why a person
clicks the 'Buy' button on your sales page: good copywriting.
That's a separate subject, but, suffice it to say here that
your ad must be not only relevant, but also compelling. Imagine
that you are the searcher, looking to buy a product or service
like yours. Look at other ads offering something similar. What
attracts you to one and not another? Ask your friends and
colleagues what they think.
You have only a 25-character headline and two description
lines of 35 characters each. Don't squander them on waffling
about your company. The consumer couldn't care less about you
or your company. The consumer has a problem to be solved, a
need to be satisfied, a desire to be fulfilled. So, mention the
problem, the need, the desire. And, most important, tell the
consumer that the solution, what he needs, what he wants is
only a click away. Tell him to "Get Help Now" or to "Find It
Here". That's the 'call to action'. About the
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Google AdWords Strategy - Part 3: Other Google AdWords
Strategies
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