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Exactly What Is
Google® Adwords?
Adwords is Google's version of the
pay-per-click (PPC) advertising model.
Adwords allows you to display online-ads
which link directly to your website
when searches are done for your chosen
keywords or key phrases.
These ads are
located to the right of the search results
which Google gives you for a search
and they're also displayed on Googles
many partner web-sites which include AOL,
Earthlink, HowStuffWorks and Blogger.
Recently with the launch of Google's
Adsense program your ads could also
be displayed on websites related to
your keywords.
When you create a Google Adwords ad,
you choose keywords for which your ad
will appear and specify the maximum
amount you're willing to pay for each
click. Remember Googles Adwords program
uses a PPC model so you only pay when
someone actually clicks on your ad and
hence visits your website.
Adwords enables you to save money as
its program Discounter automatically
reduces the actual cost per click you
pay to the lowest cost needed ($0.01
above competition) to maintain your
ads position on the results page.
Google is competing well in this arena,
in fact they now dominate the market,
pulling more advertisers and revenue
than former industry leader Overture.com
does. I don't know how long this will
last though as Yahoo INC! has just bought
Overture. What has Yahoo got up its
sleeve?
Advantages of the Google Adwords program
Just as the popularity of Googles search
engine is derived from its strong technologically
advanced features and results so too
is its advertising program Adwords.
Google Adwords has many advantages over
similar programs such as Overture.com
and Findwhat.com.
One of these has been mentioned already,
it's the Adwords Discounter feature
which will lower your cost per click
price to one cent above your nearest
competitor to allow to stay ahead of
his or her ad. This means that you don't
have to be constantly checking if your
competitors have lowered their bids
in order for you to minimize your price,
Google does this for you.
The way Google Adwords positions your
ads is also another great advantage
of the program. In Adwords the position
of a certain ad is determined by multiplying
your CPC (cost per click) by your CTR
(click through rate) and not simply
by CPC alone as this would allow the
big fish to win all the time.
Googles stipulation that your ads must
have a CTR of at least .05% means that
a company with deep pockets simply can't
outbid the competition. They also have
to outwit them by using good ad copy
and appropriate keywords. Even if your
competition is willing to pay sky high
prices for clicks this still won't save
them, as if they can't write good pulling
ads they will be dropped from the program,
leaving you to move up a position.
Other advantages which Googles program
has over similar ones include setup
time and specific country / language
targeting. With Adwords your ads can
be live on Google within five minutes
of creating them so you can potentially
begin to see results immediately, ads
on Overture usually go live after a
three to five day waiting period. Adwords
allows you to choose who should see
your ads from among 250+ countries and
14 languages, this means you have more
control over your ads so you can be
sure they're only shown to a highly
targeted audience which means your more
likely to be successful.
How to profit with Google Adwords
Now you know why Google Adwords is
such a good thing, let's move onto how
to actually use it in order for your
business to make profit. First things
first, you should determine how much
you can afford to pay for a click. Doing
this is important as it enables you
to better understand the amount of money
you can bid on keywords in Adwords while
still remaining profitable. To do this
your conversion ratio is needed, calculate
your conversion ratio by dividing your
monthly unique visitors by your monthly
sales, then convert your answer into
a percentage by multiplying by 100.
Imagine in a month you get 20000 visitors
and sell 500 products each with a gross
profit for you of $50. Your conversion
ratio simply put is (500/20000)*100
= 2.5%. This means that for every 100
people who visit your site 2.5 buy your
product.
Your gross profit per 100 visitors
is calculated by multiply the gross
profit on your product by your conversion
ratio, to continue with the previous
example - $50 x 2.5 = $125. Divide your
gross profit per 100 visitors figure
by 100 to determine how much you can
bid in Adwords.
In this case you could afford to pay
up to $1.25 for a visitor and still
break even. Rarely will you have to
pay this much for a click, remember
that the minimum CPC on Google Adwords
is only 5 cent so play your cards right
and you can have high profits.
Choosing your Google Adwords keywords
Next on to picking your keywords. These
are the words which when searched for
will trigger the appearance of your
ad next to the search results. Choosing
the right keywords is imperative to
the success of your campaign. A good
approach to choosing the right words
is to imagine what you'd search for
if you were looking to buy a product
similar to your own.
Remember as with Overture, the more
popular a word or phrase is the higher
CPC you'll have to pay and generally
clicks from general words convert to
sales far less often than clicks from
specific terms so it's always better
to have a few highly focused keyphrases
that get clicks than to be number one
for the most general word or phrase
in your industry. In Googles own words:
"General or broad keywords will generate
many impressions with few results."
Do you want "few results"? You certainly
don't so avoid the expensive popular
words and stick with the less popular
but more profitable keywords. Finding
such specific keyphrases can be time
consuming, but it's worth it as research
has shown that although much cheaper
using specific phrases helps get more
highly targeted people to your site
and hence helps you get more sales.
On Googles Adwords website they recommend
using spelling variations and plural
versions of your keywords to reach everyone
in your target audience. I think this
is a good approach as not everyone of
your potential customers will search
a keyword in the same way, some will
use plural versions and others will
use singular versions. Similarly some
may use American English rather than
traditional English, this of course
only applies to certain words whereby
Americans use different spelling than
British, Irish and other English speaking
people would.
Adwords keyword matching options allow
you to refine further when your ads
are shown by allowing you to choose
whether your ads are shown for certain
types of searches on your keywords.
There are four types of keyword matching
options available, these are broad,
exact, phrase and negative. Assume your
keyphrase is 'marketing course'.
With broad matching your ad shows when
users search on the keywords 'marketing'
and 'course', regardless of other search
terms used or of the order in which
they are entered. Broad matching is
the default, you don't have to do anything
extra to use it.
Exact matching requires you to place
square brackets around your keywords,
like the following: [marketing course]
Your ad will show when users search
only on the phrase 'marketing course'
and will not show if other words are
included or the words are entered in
a different order.
The third matching option is the phrase
option, this is similar to exact search
in the sense that the keywords must
all be present and in the right order
however your ad will still show even
if other words are present in the search.
To use phrase matching you must include
your keywords in quotes, for example
"marketing course".
Negative matching is the fourth option
available. It allows you to block your
ad being shown if a certain word is
present in the search query. If your
keyword is 'marketing course' but your
marketing course is to do with offline
marketing and not internet marketing
then by using negative matching you
can choose not to have your ad shown
for 'internet marketing course' as people
searching for this are looking for something
different than what you offer. In this
case 'internet' is your negative keyword.
You simply place a dash before your
negative keyword to use this option
(ie '-internet marketing course'). Now
if a user searches for 'marketing course'
on Google your ad will be shown, it
will not however be shown when the term
'internet marketing course' is entered
as the query.
Using exact, phrase or negative keyword
matching gives you more control over
who sees your ads so you won't pay for
clicks that are unlikely to produce
well-targeted results so always try
and use these options, doing so could
result in lower CPC, higher CTR and
higher ROI. To demonstrate this fact
I conducted a dummy ad to find the prices
using broad, exact and phrase keyword
matching options for the term 'internet
marketing'. The currency I used was
the Euro, I left the maximum CPC at
the default of €5. The results are as
follows:
- internet marketing 11.0 €2.65 -
Default broad search cost €2.65 a
click and expected clicks is only
11.
- "internet marketing" 30.0 €0.74
- With phrase matching expected clicks
per day was 30 and cost €.74.
- [internet marketing] 37.0 €2.41
- Exact matching cost €2.41 a click
and expected clicks was 37 a day.
You can see from above that using
both exact and phrase matching options
resulted in a lower cost per click
rate than simply using the default
broad match option. I highly recommend
using keyword matching options.
As mentioned earlier Google Adwords
allows you to block your ads showing
for searches conducted by people from
certain countries and people who speak
a certain language. There's no point
in letting your ad be seen by people
who won't understand it. Likewise if
your product is only sold to a specific
country than that country's residents
should be the only people who get to
see your ad, as if your company only
sells products within America then any
other nationals clicking on your ad
are simply costing you money for nothing.
Creating your Google Adwords ad
Knowing which keywords to use and how
to format them with keyword matching
options alone will not make your Adwords
campaign a success, you must of course
also write a good ad which generates
interest among those who will see it.
To do this your ad must use attention
grabbing copy such as 'free', 'new',
'sale', 'tips', 'limited offer' and
give the advantages of your product
at the same time. This however isn't
easy as Google allows you a headline
of at most 25 characters including spaces
and only two other lines of at most
35 characters including spaces, so stick
to the point as room is limited. Sticking
to the point means avoiding using words
like 'on', 'at', 'of' and 'an' unless
you really have to.
Your ad should target your keywords,
by this I mean it should include them.
Always include your exact keywords in
the title of the ad as this is proven
to boost your click through rate immensely,
the reasoning behind this I believe
is that when users see the keywords
they've just searched for in an ad particularly
in the title of the ad they immediately
associate that ad with a good find and
will be more likely to click on it.
After just reading the previous paragraph
you may be tempted to simply repeat
your keywords somewhere else in the
ad in an attempt to raise your CTR,
however on Googles editorial guidelines
page they state that they will not allow
repetition of words or phrases in ads
as ads without repetition are clearer.
This doesn't however mean that you can't
use closely related words similar to
your keywords which you have used in
your ad title, these similar words will
help back up the searchers believe that
he or she has found a very relevant
ad. Avoid what's known as superlatives,
these are phrases such as 'the best'
and 'we're number 1', these serve no
other purpose than to make you appear
cheap and tacky, which will turn most
potential visitors off.
Apart from letting the searcher know
your ad is relevant using your keywords
in your ad has another advantage, namely
that of making your ad stand out among
the other ads also on the page. Your
ad stands out as Google will highlight
in bold any occurrences of the search
terms not just within the main search
results but on the page as a whole including
within any Adwords ads present.
Try if you can to include a call-to-action
phrase. A call-to-action phrase is a
phrase that which as the name suggests
provokes the reader to do something,
in this case click on the ad and go
to your site. Unlike a banner type advertisement
you can't use generic call-to-action
phrases such as 'click here' or 'visit
this site' as this does nothing to help
the searcher make up his or her mind
as to click on your ad or not. To quote
Google again:
"The limited text space should be used
for concise, informative language that
sets you apart from your competition."
'Click here' or 'visit this site' is
not informative language, it's language
that simply wastes space and that does
nothing to help you, the searcher or
indeed Google for that fact. Take Googles
advice into mind and
"Use a call-to-action unique to the
service or product you provide."
Examples of unique call-to-actions
include: "Join now for 20% discount",
"Register for membership now", "Download
free trial now" and "Order now for free
shipping".
Remember your Adwords ad space consists
of just a headline and two lines of
text, you need to use this space efficiently
to have a chance at success, so to recap
I believe the best strategy to use this
limited space is to include your exact
keywords with or without other words
in your headline, give a brief line
about your product using words similar
to your keywords in the first of the
two 35 character lines and use a unique
call-to-action phrase in the second.
All that's left to do as far as creating
your ad is concerned is to enter destination
and display URL. Not really much I can
talk about here, except to point out
that your destination URL should be
a landing page specific to the product
or service dealt with in your ad and
not simply your home page. Remember
users have clicked on your ad because
they're interested in what the ad offered
and not necessary interested in what
your company offers as a whole. Landing
pages will always convert more clicks
to customers than if you had simply
linked to your home page.
Other Google Adwords issues
This section of the article will cover
briefly other Adwords related issues
such as money issues, adgroups, tracking
and testing.
As with any advertising campaign budget
management is very important, without
it you could quickly find yourself in
trouble. In Adwords after you have chosen
all your keywords and maximum cost per
click amount Google will suggest an
amount for you to set your daily budget.
This amount is usually about right,
and I would suggest sticking with it
in most cases, however depending on
how deep your companies pockets are,
it may be a good idea to raise this
suggested amount a little at the start
of a new campaign as your ad will be
shown much more and you will be better
able to view how your ads are performing,
then if after analysis of click through
rates you decide it would be better
to lower your daily budget do so.
Don't let being in position one dominate
your mind when deciding what cost per
click to pay for keywords. Doing so
may mean your spending more than you
really need to, when Google gives you
the average position of your ad based
on your current cost per click settle
for 1,2 or 3 as all these ads will be
above the fold (the fold is the point
on a page where you have to start using
the scroll bar to continue reading).
Remember your position is based on
CPC and CTR at all times except the
very start of a new ad, so if you use
the advice given in this article already
you should be able to obtain high click
through rates and hence your ad should
rise above other peoples ads without
you having to spend a cent more than
them.
Now onto adgroups, adgroups is a campaign
management feature which allows you
to group keywords together in order
for you to have an ad shown for a number
of different keywords rather than the
usual one ad for one keyword method.
I rarely use adgroups as I find using
the one ad for one keyword way produces
much better results as ads are highly
targeted to the specific search terms
used and hence more likely to be clicked
on.
Trying to write an ad that can achieve
a high CTR for 20 different keywords
is impossible. Hence if you do decide
to use adgroups in your campaign keep
them as small as possible at five or
less keywords.
Using adgroups sacrifices the single
most effective thing you can do to increase
an ads CTR and that's having your exact
keywords in your ads title, remember
with adgroups the same ad is shown for
all keywords in that group. To use the
one ad for one keyword approach you
will need to create a new ad for each
keyword manually as by default all ads
are put into the same adgroup when you
sign up.
I know, I know, using adgroups saves
time, sometimes it saves a lot of time
however I'm not in business to make
time, I'm in business to make profit
and lots of it and so are you for that
fact, so if it takes some time to properly
setup a good Adwords campaign well then
so be it, hence I recommend avoiding
the widespread use of adgroups for all
but the very largest of campaigns.
Adwords should be no different than
any other advertising campaign in the
sense that you need to track everything
and be continuously testing. Adwords
will automatically track clicks, impressions
and clicks through rates from when your
ad goes live until either you or Google
pull it. You should constantly analyze
these stats for all your ads, discontinue
the ones that are performing badly and
raise your daily budget for the ones
that are doing well so as to multiply
your success.
However tracking CTR is only half the
battle, you'll also want to track conversion
rates from certain ads, that is how
many people that clicked through from
one of your ads actually bought the
product the ad offered. This can be
done using affiliate software whereby
you could set up a specific tracking
URL for each ad and then refer to your
affiliate stats to determine conversion
rates that way. This specific tracking
URL would be entered as your destination
URL.
You could also as Google suggests attach
an identifying parameter by putting
'?referrer=source' at the end of your
destination URL. Imagine your normal
destination URL was http://www.yoursite.com/product
simply turn that into http://www.yoursite.com/product?referrer=source.
The source would be your keywords to
enable you to uniquely identify the
ad from which the visitor came. You
could then use a web statistics program
to determine how many people that bought
your product where referred by a particular
source / ad.
Testing has been the backbone of many
great advertising campaigns on the Internet
to date. In Adwords you should test
different copy, keywords, CPC and daily
budgets on a constant basis in an effort
to attain the highest click through
rates possible.
Run similar ads together for the same
keywords to see what little differences
can do to an ads CTR, keep the ads with
high CTR's and pull the ones with low
CTR's, create more and more ads to run
against previously successful ones and
again drop the ads with lower CTR's
(unless of course the CTR's of these
ads is extremely good too but your others
are just better). Don't forget to test
different things on your landing page
too, to try and boost your conversion
rate.
Google Adwords guide - Conclusion
Google Adwords when utilized correctly
can be a great source of new customers
for your business at a very low price.
Google doesn't charge you a cent until
your daily budget has been reached so
you could in theory start to profit
without spending anything. I fully endorse
Adwords and highly recommend you use
it.
Republished with permission
of Domainturn. |