Optimizing Your AdWords Campaigns

Pay per click advertising is a form of marketing with major benefits. It differs from other methods of marketing in its ability to allow advertisers and marketers to measure and analyze the results of their techniques, to refine and optimize them to increase ROI beyond almost anything possible in the offline marketing world. Google AdWords is currently the prominent pay per click resource available today. Learning some of the ways to optimize your AdWords campaigns can cut costs while keeping conversions up in several ways. Here are four ways to refine your AdWords campaign to see where money spent is producing the best return and to adjust settings to maximize return on investment. 1. The Segment option. This is one of the newest additions to AdWords. The Segment option is available within your Campaigns, Ad Groups and Keywords tabs. Within each, the options are different, but allow for viewing of your results in specific ways of measurement. This can include breaking into specific units of time, such as weeks or days of the week. By viewing your data this way you can discover what weeks are most active for a seasonal market, as well as information such as which days of the week are most prone to getting better conversion rates. By knowing this data, you can reduce costs where your conversions are more expensive, increase bids where you are seeing better conversion rates, and in all these ways increase ROI. 2. A-B Split Testing for ads. This can be one of the most effective means of increasing CTR for your ad groups. Have two or three ads active for each ad group. After a number of clicks (ideally at least 20 clicks on each ad), choose the better performing ad. Replace the more poorly performing ad with a different ad copy. Repeat the whole operation to find which advertisement will produce the best CTR or the best conversion rate. Doing this can often improve your CTR by a factor of 2 or more, and a higher CTR improves Quality Score as well as increasing lead generation. To get an accurate reading for proper A-B split testing, make sure your campaign setting for Ad Delivery-> Rotation is set to “Rotate: Show ads more evenly”. 3. Remarketing with the Audiences tab. This is an element of AdWords that works only for the Content Network. When the Audiences tab is enabled, you can create remarketing lists to target specific visitors to your site. By placing code on specific pages within your site, a cookie is put on all users who visit these pages. Then when they visit other sites with similar targeted themes, a very relevant ad is shown to these users to give them motivation to return to your site to make a purchase or opt-in. This works by reaching out to visitors who had visited your site previously and displayed some kind of interest in that market. Often this remarketing approach can increase conversions by contacting people who have an established interest in your products and reconnecting with them. 4. Changing advertising frequency/rate settings. Advertising can be adjusted in AdWords to not just advertise for certain days and hours of each day, but the amount for CPC can be adjusted to raise or lower bidding rates for certain days and hours. The setting is within each Campaign settings area, under Advanced settings-> Schedule and choosing Ad Scheduling, the selecting “Bid Adjustment” inside the scheduling option. After doing research for performance for specific days within your campaign you can make changes to cut costs and increase ROI nicely. For example, after viewing that you are getting little or no conversions on certain days of the week, you can pause these days with this setting. In the same way, any days that have better conversion rates can have an increased bid amount to maximize CTR for those days. This can all help improve business results for your AdWords campaign. By knowing about and using these different options within AdWords you can greatly improve your pay per click results. AdWords optimization is a definite way to increase ROI and open additional opportunities to expand your marketing methods. Properly using these techniques can cut costs, increase profits, and help you make the most out of this powerful tool. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . Optimizing Your AdWords

A Holistic Approach to PPC

Paid search is hot. Well, it’s been hot for a while — at least the past 5 years. And it continues to grow: according to eMarketer, search spending will reach $11,422 million this year. But with all this growth and attention on the click, most conversations on PPC start and end there — from bids, to ads, to keywords and more — without any mention of how to convert the click. But if you think about it, the click is really just the first part of search marketing — the first phase. The goal of most search campaigns is actually the conversion — the second phase. The click is the yin; the conversion the yang. Search marketing really deserves a holistic approach — one that combines the two goals of search marketing — getting the click and converting it.  Instead of just launching your ads and optimizing your clicks, take a holistic approach to PPC and follow through on your paid clicks by optimizing landing pages. Here are 5 ways to develop a holistic approach to search marketing in your online marketing: 1. Develop collaboration between search & conversion experts. Assuming you are optimizing your landing pages, it’s essential that the person in charge of your landing pages (whether an outside vendor, or someone on your team) openly collaborates and works with the person in charge of your search campaigns. 2. Match agility of search with agility of conversion. The most exciting part of search marketing is it’s agility — you can launch & update your keywords and ads in real-time! Have an idea? Simply log-in, add some keywords, create an ad, and you’re done — well, not really. When you take a holistic approach to PPC, you must match the agility of search with the agility of your landing pages. When you create and edit your keywords & ads, you must follow through and optimize your landing pages with that same velocity. 3. Prioritize conversion within your organization. To take a holistic approach to PPC, you must prioritize conversion optimization within your organization — that way you can be sure nothing (IT, design, schedules etc.) gets in the way of you creating and updating your landing page. 4. Follow through to the landing page when developing search strategies. When developing your search strategies, make sure you include the landing page test (a nice A/B test) that should be included with each ad, inclusive of its messaging and call-to-action. 5. Illuminate landing pages when reporting search metrics. When reporting on search metrics, include important key metrics of your landing pages, such as bounce rates, conversion rates, cost-per-acquisition, and overall engagement. That way, you can gauge the overall health of your landing pages in tandem with your PPC, and assess ares of concern and opportunity. Because it’s not all about the click — it’s how you convert it. Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . A Holistic Approach to

7 MS Adcenter Improvements I Dream About

MS Adcenter has a slightly higher ROI than other major PPC alternatives. However, this is where its dominance ends. Adcenter is plagued with small design problems that are not only annoying, but downright frustrating. With the amount of money that Adcenter brings in, it is time for them to make life a little easier for advertisers. Here are 7 easy changes that would make working in Adcenter much smoother. For me, MS Adcenter stands out from other PPC platforms for one important reason; a slightly higher ROI. Over the past several years, I have used Adcenter for a variety of different products and services, and have consistently experienced better conversion rates with Adcenter than with Adwords or YSM. Unfortunately, higher conversion rates are the only advantage that Adcenter offers. While a high ROI is a fantastic benefit, the small annoyances quickly add up. Sometimes, I question whether the higher ROI is even worth it. As MS Adcenter quickly gains more leverage over the PPC search market, there are a number of changes that need to be made to help push it over the edge. This is especially true with the likely prospect of the MS-Yahoo deal coming to fruition by the end of year. 1. Ridiculous Custom Data Range

A Monetization Model Worth Trying: Video CPA

Being in online marketing for a bit more than two years, I am now at that stage when getting traffic and promoting a resource is not a problem any more: I can do that pretty quickly and easily. What is still the problem is building a solid monetization plan. So far what I’ve been earning from was from selling my services. I still have yet to learn to earn from monetizing my (multiple) web sites effectively. Therefore exploring various monetization models is so important to me. Today I’d like you to share your opinion on the model I plan to try: video cost per action. I have discovered this site specializing in video CPA – Video Performance Network – and it looks and sounds very promising. Here’s how the process looks: Fill in the application; Get approved (the service seem to be open to all countries and all niches); Preview the videos you’d like to run, grab some simple code, and embed it on your site just like you do for a banner; Get paid on a CPA basis when anyone clicks through from the video and goes to the Advertiser landing page. In the past, if you wanted to run video on your site and get paid for it, you had to integrate a certain type of player specified by an ad network. You usually did not get to choose what type of videos were displayed on your site, and you had no say in what kind of payout you received for playing someone else’s video on your site. Video Performance Network has changed all of that. Now, for the first time ever, any Affiliate or Publisher can run Video Ads on their sites, and get paid on a CPA basis I am wondering how effective this model is and what are the advantages (and maybe the pitfalls) of the model? Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal . A Monetization Model Worth Trying: Video