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August 2006- Top 10 Tips To Boost Your Google
Adwords Performance
by Kevin Gibbons
Online advertising has rapidly grown into a multi-billion dollar industry,
with Google’s recent $900 million deal to advertise on MySpace
an example of it’s huge demand and popularity.
Pay per click (PPC) advertising is the most cost-effective form of
advertising so it’s vitally important that all aspects of advertising
campaigns are managed to achieve maximum return on investment (ROI).
Google AdWords is the most popular method of PPC and is an excellent
way of increasing targeted website traffic, providing the advertising
costs can be justified by ensuring the clicks turn into sales.
Nobody gets it all right the first time and most of the best advertising
campaigns are developed over time. Below are 10 tips to get started
and help to get the best performance from your Google AdWords advertising
budget.
1) Keyword selection
Good keyword selection is essential to ensure you can attract users
who are interested in your products and with the potential to become
customers. It can be very easy to get carried away and select the most
popular keywords recommended by Google AdWords and the highest in terms
of clicks from the estimated traffic tool. But remember traffic is not
your main goal, a successful advertising campaign is based on bringing
quality traffic with the potential to bring sales to your site at a
cost that can achieve a positive ROI. To help keep track of the performance
of your ad campaigns it is useful to manage the selected keywords in
multiple AdGroups and this will also help you to use ad text specific
to each keyword.
2) Where to target your ad's
The best performing campaigns generally target the search network
which for AdWords means that your ad will appear on Google and it’s
network of partner websites. You also have the option of advertising
on Google’s content network which includes all AdSense publishers,
clicks from the content network can normally be attained at a lower
CPC (cost per click) but this generally doesn’t convert into sales
as well as the search network and is more likely to receive fraudulent
clicks. The content network is normally a good option if your main objective
is increased traffic as opposed to converting sales.
2) Location targeting
It is important to define the geographic locations you are targeting
to produce sales from. If you are a business which only delivers within
the UK there is no need to advertise your website outside of the UK
as this would be a waste of a large proportion of your clicks. In some
cases it is essential to restrict your ad’s visibility further
than country level by setting a city or region to advertise in, for
example a taxi company in the Oxfordshire region would only want to
advertise to users within areas they pickup from.
For companies targeting worldwide users it can be advantageous to
create individual AdGroup’s or campaigns for each country. This
way sales can be tracked in order to define which countries are producing
sales and which need working on or should be dropped.
3) Reviewing your competitors
Define what makes your company stand out from your competitors and
try to find a niche in your market that users will be interested in.
If your ad can stand out from the rest it is more likely to be clicked.
Another good method to stand out from your customers would be to find
out if they display their prices within the ad, if this is the case
and your prices are lower it would be a good idea to display them as
well to entice the user to click your ad instead.
4) Using effective matching options
Most optimized campaigns would use the exact matching option on all
keywords to ensure that they are only bidding for that individual search.
This is effective for ensuring you are only bidding on relevant keywords
and improve your click through rate (CTR). CTR is a very important factor
in deciding the cost per click (CPC) so the higher rate you can achieve,
the less you are likely to pay for that keyword.
Using only the exact matching option can have the negative effect
of only receiving a low amount of traffic as you are only targeting
a specific audience. In addition, to attract a wider range of searches
it may be worth adding the phrase and broad match versions of your exact
match keywords. As these are less specific they are likely to achieve
a lower CTR and conversion rate but will increase the amount of clicks.
It is important to use the negative matching option effectively with
phrase and broad matches to filter out any unrelated searches.
6) Managing your budget
In order to get the best from your daily budget I would suggest on
starting with a low budget to begin with. This way you can ensure you
are bidding on the right keywords at a cost-effective price without
losing too much money. I would strongly suggest defining a separate
value for content network bids as these should be achieved at a lower
value than the search network. Once a positive ROI is being achieved
you can then think about increasing the daily budget.
7) Choosing your Ad Text
Entice users to your site with a genuine interest in your business
by describing what you can offer and why it can benefit them. Whenever
possible it is also useful to raise your quality score by including
the keywords within the ad title or description and by using action
keywords such as register, sign-up or browse so that the user knows
what to expect on the next page. A high quality score will help to improve
the relevancy of your ad which can result in your ad ranking higher
than a competitor with a larger bid. For large accounts a quick trick
is to use {KeyWord:Default Text}, this will insert the keyword from
your AdGroup into your ad text providing that it is within the character
limit, otherwise it will use the default text defined.
8) Selecting your destination URL
The Google AdWords algorithm now reviews the quality of landing pages
so it’s more important than ever to ensure your destination URL
is relevant to the keyword bid upon. It is also important to make sure
that the user is directed to the webpage they expect to see, rather
than being taken to the homepage and having to find the right page for
themselves.
9) Conversion tracking
In order to monitor the performance of your account it is important
to track conversions so that you can review where sales or leads are
coming from to help manage the campaigns based upon results. A cost
per conversions value will then be displayed within your reports which
will help to make key decisions (such as changing bids, dropping keywords
or ad variations) easier. If you are running any other, non-AdWords,
advertising campaign you can also set-up a cross-channel to track the
conversions from these as well, for example Yahoo! Search Marketing.
Research has shown that Google users are generally more likely to purchase
online and this is normally reflected with a greater conversion rate
from AdWords, although there are advantages to advertising using both
methods such as exposure to a wider range of websites and lower CPC’s.
10) Website analysis tracking
Once your campaigns are up and running you will need to monitor how
your users view your website. Google Analytics is excellent for it’s
AdWords integration, displaying user stats to find out the users location,
search engine, search term and the most popular links clicked on your
webpage.
About the Author
Kevin Gibbons is a Google AdWords Qualified Professional, please check
out Kevin's website http://www.seoptimise.com for
more information about Google AdWords management.
Note: These articles do not represent the advice or opinions of
Apollo Hosting. They represent the thoughts, advice and opinions of
the individual authors.
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