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Tune Your Google Ad
Campaign By Kevin Lee |
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Two of
the
least-used
methods
of PPC (define)
search
campaign
optimization,
particularly
in
Google's
AdWords
system,
are
campaign
recategorization
and
campaign
structural
tuning.
Most
marketers
I meet
at
conferences
and
seminars
still
use the
same
campaign
structures
run on
Google
they did
when
they
launched
those
campaigns.
Sometimes,
that was
years
ago.
Some
marketers
don't
want to
touch or
modify
their
current
campaign
structures
for fear
of
"losing
their
history."
History
is the
way
Google,
agencies,
and
marketers
describe
the good
(or bad)
quality
score
your ads
and
AdGroups
build up
over
time.
Marketers
experienced
the
results
of
histories
both
positive
(ads in
high
positions
at
reasonable
costs)
and
negative
(AdGroups
for
which
even
aggressive
bidding
can
revive
entrenched
listings).
In the
past,
history
loss was
more of
a
concern,
but
Google
has been
addressing
history-related
issues.
Many
concerns
regarding
history
loss in
AdWords
are
likely
unfounded,
particularly
when
there
may be
significant
benefits
to
revisiting
a
campaign
structure.
When you
tune or
adjust
campaign
structures
in
AdWords,
you
review
the
following
changes:
-
Match
types
within
each
AdGroup.
Do
you
run
the
right
mix
of
broad
match,
phrase
match,
and
exact
match?
By
taking
some
phrases
and
breaking
them
into
separate
AdGroups
with
separate
creative,
you'll
likely
improve
your
Google
quality
score.
That's
very
good.
-
Landing
pages.
When
you
review
keywords
in
an
AdGroup
to
determine
whether
to
move
them
to a
new
AdGroup,
bear
in
mind
the
landing
pages
you
use.
Some
phrases
within
an
AdGroup,
even
those
you
break
into
separate
AdGroups,
might
benefit
from
a
different
landing
page
--
one
that
better
addresses
the
searcher's
needs.
You'll
therefore
increases
conversion,
ROI
(define),
and
net
search
profit.
-
PowerPosting.
Do
you
use
PowerPosting?
Many
marketers
don't
set
CPCs
(define)
and
landing
page
URLs
by
keyword.
Instead,
they
assign
a
CPC
and
landing
page
to
an
entire
AdGroup.
Google's
PowerPosting
makes
separate
bidding
and
unique
landing
pages
easy.
It's
a
powerful
combination
of
two
control
types.
-
Negative
keyword
use
in
AdGroups.
I
see
it
every
day:
phrase
search
brings
up
advertisers
with
dubious
relevance
due
to
broad
match
use
without
appropriate
negative
keywords.
-
Keywords
by
AdGroup.
Do
your
AdGroups
contain
keywords
and
keyword
phrases
that
aren't
highly
similar
in
meaning?
By
grouping
similar
keywords,
you
can
tune
creative,
and
Google
can
assign
quality
scores
more
accurately.
-
Default
CPC
bids
at
an
AdGroup
level.
Do
you
have
a
default
set
appropriately?
-
Engine
syndication
settings.
Do
you
really
want
all
your
keywords
running
on
all
engines?
If
Google
traffic
converts
better
than
AOL,
Ask
Jeeves,
EarthLink,
and
others,
consider
running
separate
campaigns.
For
example,
create
one
campaign
that
opts
in
to
Google's
network
with
one
set
of
bids
and
a
second,
Google-only
campaign
you're
willing
to
bid
more
for.
Unfortunately,
you
can't
run
this
trick
backwards.
If
AOL
and
other
search
engine
traffic
convert
better
than
Google,
you're
forced
to
opt
in
equally
for
all
search
sources,
Google,
and
the
network.
There's
no
way
to
bid
more
for
AOL
traffic.
Yet
pay
attention
to
average
position
if
this
is
the
case,
because
lower
average
positions
are
less
likely
to
be
syndicated
to
AOL,
Jeeves,
and
the
other
network
partners.
-
Contextual
distribution
settings
at
campaign
level.
Do
you
have
contextual
syndication
turned
on
or
off?
See
below
for
how
to
tune
a
campaign
to
allow
for
less
expensive
contextual
traffic.
-
Geographical
distribution
settings
at
campaign
level.
Some
marketers
achieve
objectives
more
efficiently
by
using
ad
geotargeting.
Think
about
your
target
audience
and
whether
geo-optimization
makes
sense
for
you.
-
Implementation
of
the
Google
Dynamic
Keyword
Insertion
(DKI).
If
the
phrases
often
used
to
find
your
core
keyword
for
an
AdGroup
are
short,
consider
using
the
DKI
to
automatically
tune
ad
creative
to
the
search.
-
Daily
spending
or
budget
caps
at
campaign
level.
Spending
caps
can
kill
ROI.
Google
doesn't
know
your
best-
and
worst-performing
keywords
--
but
you
do
(at
least,
you
should).
Manage
based
on
ROI,
and
make
sure
you
aren't
losing
clicks
from
your
best
keywords.
There
are many
reasons
to take
a fresh
look at
your
campaign
structure.
Each has
an
accompanying
benefit:
-
Because
MSN
is
running
a
hybrid
auction
where
good
creative
and
high
CTR
(define)
also
matter,
take
advantage
of
testing
the
best
possible
campaign
structure
in
preparation
for
the
MSN
adCenter
launch.
AdCenter
will
be
available
to
new
MSN
advertisers
before
you
know
it
(existing
MSN
advertisers
and
selected
beta
test
clients
are
live
in
adCenter
on
launch).
-
By
improving
your
CTR
on
an
ad-by-ad
and
keyword-by-keyword
basis,
several
things
happen,
often
simultaneously:
-
You get a higher average position without raising your bid.
-
You get more clicks per thousand impressions in the engine, providing more opportunities to sell highly qualified visitors.
-
You get some relevance discounts. The CPC you actually pay (usually less than the bid price, due to Google's Auto Discounter) may drop, meaning you pay less on a CPC basis than you used to.
-
You get a higher ROI on the campaign as a whole.
-
Better
campaign
structures
lend
themselves
to
running
more
effective
contextual
programs
in
Google.
If
you're
considering
running
contextual
traffic
(AdSense)
in
Google,
a
better
structured
set
of
AdGroups
improves
targeting
and
ROI.
Sometimes,
if
you
want
the
additional
reach
of
the
contextual
traffic
but
aren't
comfortable
paying
similar
CPCs
(Google
often
discounts
contextual
traffic
automatically
based
on
"smart
pricing"),
then
there's
a
hack
of
sorts
you
can
do.
Clone
a
portion
of
your
search-only
campaign,
then
turn
on
contextual
distribution
but
keep
bids
lower
on
the
contextual
campaign.
Your
search
campaign
will
run
against
search
due
to
higher
bids.
The
cloned
campaign
will
be
mostly
contextual
inventory
billed
at
the
lower
CPC.
Don't
let an
antiquated
campaign
structure
result
in
missed
opportunities
and
waste
(overpaying
for
clicks).
Take a
fresh
look at
all your
campaigns'
elements
and
structures,
to
maximize
your
opportunity
in
Google
and
provide
a
stronger
foundation
with
which to
run in
MSN's
adCenter.
MSN
won't
use
editorial
policies
identical
to
Google's,
but a
good
campaign
structure
will be
equally
important
--
perhaps
more so.
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