Showing posts with label Adword. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adword. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

How to attain Paid search success


Many people miss is digging into the search phrase report that shows what other queries are being matched to these keywords.

Remarketing List for Search Ads (RLSAs) is possibly the biggest innovation and opportunity in search in a long time.

No longer do you have to show the same ad to a customer who comes back every week as you do to a brand-new customer.

Now you can show the customer that you know them, welcome them back, or create specific ad copy that directs that customer to your customer service section vs.


Anyone who feels like they have reached the limit of their campaign to dig just a little bit deeper and take that extra cut of data or extra step to target to see what can be squeezed out.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Bing Ads "Top Movers" Report Gives the "Why" Behind Campaign Changes

Bing Ads has expanded its reporting features for added visibility into an account's performance. In an announcement, Bing Ads says its "top movers" report would give a snapshot of significant changes to advertisers' accounts and possible reasons behind the fluctuations.
From the announcement:
A "top movers" list [includes] up to 10 campaigns and/or ad groups that have experienced the largest performance change — by size, not percent — during two specified time [frames]. With this list, you can quickly identify which campaigns have contributed most to your account’s performance variation, from both a positive and negative perspective.
The new reporting goes beyond just showing changes and attempts to predict why they are happening.
"Whereas other search providers only offer possible causes based on changes made within your account, [the] Bing Ads Top Movers report takes three types of changes into consideration," the announcement says.
Those three areas include the account, search traffic, and competitor data. 
Another differentiator of this new feature is the "opportunities" tab, which allows advertisers to "explore keyword, bid, budget, and other factors that can drive an increase in clicks/spend" for those campaigns or ad groups that have experienced the most negative change, the announcement says.
opportunities-tab-bing-ads
A comparison feature allows advertisers to view performance over a time period to view clicks and spend "week over week, two weeks over two weeks, or even four weeks over four weeks," says the announcement.
"Even when overall account performance appears stable, the Top Movers report helps you highlight big moves that may be easily overlooked. It can also be used to regularly track account performance on a weekly or monthly basis," says Bing.
The Bing Ads team also cited a plan to soon expand reports to support metrics like conversions.
(via)

Friday, August 15, 2014

Google Creates Shopping Campaigns "Upgrade Tool" for AdWords Advertisers

Google Science Fair
Google wants to motivate advertisers to make the switch from Product Listing Ads (PLAs) to Shopping campaigns and has released an upgrade tool to "help you upgrade in a matter of clicks," it says in a blog post.
In April, Google AdWords announced it would do away with regular PLA campaigns by the end of August in favor of these Shopping campaigns, which it said are a new way to manage PLAs and offer more features than PLA campaigns alone. Those features include a bid simulator, additional options for campaign creation, and the ability to create multiple ad groups.
shopping-campaign-upgrade-tool
The AdWords help files detail how to use the tool:
With the Shopping campaign upgrade tool, you select the regular Product Listing Ads campaign you want to upgrade, and AdWords will try to create a new Shopping campaign for you based on that campaign. During this process, you choose the status you want to set for your existing campaign and your new Shopping campaign, once it’s created. You can find a link to the upgrade tool from the Settings tab of any regular Product Listing Ads campaign that hasn’t already been submitted using the tool.
Google notes not all campaigns are compatible with the tool. For example, if advertisers use AdWords labels or groupings in their product targeting or inventory filters, they’ll need to upgrade the data feed with custom labels before using the tool.
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Saturday, April 19, 2014

Google Shopping Campaigns Transition Tips

Google has officially announced that the current Google Shopping product ad format will be fully replaced by Google Shopping Campaigns in August.
Online advertisers who were part of the Google Shopping Campaigns beta program have had a year of experience with the program. But for the majority of advertisers, Google Shopping Campaigns has only been available for a month, and will take over a large part of their Google ads in less than four months.
Below are some helpful tips to get you set up with Google Shopping Campaigns as quick and smoothly as possible.

1. Identify Key Differences Between Google Shopping Campaigns and Current Product Listing Ads

Both Google Product Listing Ads and Google Shopping Campaigns display products from advertiser inventory based on product ad groups in AdWords. Advertisers create these groups by choosing inventory attributes from all of their inventory. Advertisers send their inventory information to Google using a data feed, which they then use to identify products to use for ad groups.
Google Shopping Campaigns
Shopping Campaigns changes both parts of this process - how retailers create ad groups and how they identify product attributes from the data feed.

Inventory Format

Google Shopping Campaigns' inventory format switches out AdWords labels as a data feed requirement with Custom Labels. While both feed labels are used to mark product attributes in order to create ad groups, Custom Labels differ from AdWords labels in number and flexibility. Advertisers are limited to five Custom Labels for Shopping Campaigns (0-4), which limits the number of ad groups that can then be created within AdWords.
Before you send your updated inventory file to Google for Shopping Campaigns, consider these best practices:
  • Choose your Custom Labels carefully.
  • Note that you can only have one custom label per column.

Campaign Structure

The other key difference between Shopping Campaigns and current Product Listing Ads is how advertisers create product ads within AdWords. Once advertisers send their inventory information to Google, they can then create ads based on those products within AdWords.
Ad groups within current Product Listing Ads are created by choosing product attributes from inventory information to create product groups. Advertisers can choose almost any product attribute (or combination) through which to create an ad group.
So if you sell luggage, for example, you can create ad groups for different product segments based on the product information Google has in the data feed. Ad creation for Product Listing Ads is forever expanding outward. How many ad groups are created, and how many attributes overlap, is entirely up to the advertiser.
Google Shopping Campaigns Expanding
Shopping Campaigns product group (new name for ad group) structure works on the opposite premise of current PLAs. Instead of building out from your inventory data, Shopping Campaigns segment pieces of your inventory. Product groups within Shopping Campaigns are a sub-set the All Products Ad Group, and any additional product group is a sub-set of another product group.
If you sell luggage through Shopping Campaigns, and your initial product group is a Category, each product group following that must be a subset of that category, or a subset of the remaining All Products. Any product group within that category can have additional ad groups, but similarly segment products from that specific category only.
Google Shopping Campaigns All Products
Before you start creating Google Shopping Campaigns ad groups, consider these best practices:
  • Outline your product group structure carefully beforehand.
  • Use analytics data and your current PLA campaigns to structure your Google Shopping Campaign.
  • Be sure your custom labels reflect the product groups you want to create.

2. Utilize Shopping Campaign Tools

Google Search
Google updated Shopping Campaigns with new advertiser tools that will help you leverage your campaign. You should be testing and optimizing your ads using these tools now:

  • Bid Simulator: If your bids are too high it will show you how many impressions you stand to lose and the difference in cost.
  • Multiple Ad Groups: Start by creating an All Products Product Group, and then choose your sub Product Groups based on your inventory data. You'll likely want to start with a category Product Group, and segment into more specific attributes like brand and best-seller.
  • Item Level Detail: Shopping campaigns highlights more granular product data within AdWords, which you can use to generate product reports and analyze historical data.
  • Impression Share & Benchmark CPC: Highlights competitor data which you can use to optimize bids.
Shopping Campaigns is also a great opportunity to test some of the existing optimizations for PLAs you might now be using such as geotargeting, day parting, and segmenting mobile traffic.
  • Geo-Targeting: Modify your traffic based on location. You may not need to exclude any areas, but do some digging in AdWords and Analytics to make sure you aren't wasting any spend.
  • Dayparting: Changing how much visibility your ads get based on the time of the day and day of the week is huge. If you're not experimenting here you're likely wasting ad spend or losing conversions.
  • Mobile Traffic: Contrary to hype, mobile doesn't always perform well. Delve into your performance data to determine mobile performance, or test mobile in Shopping Campaigns to ensure you are leveraging your spend.

How to Transition to Google Shopping Campaigns Smoothly

  • Don't run Shopping Campaigns with PLAs. Shopping Campaigns are replacing PLAs - structure Shopping Campaigns while PLAs are live and pause PLAs when you are ready to switch over. If you have Google Shopping Campaigns and current PLAs set up, you are running two ad campaigns that are going to overlap and waste your ad budget.
  • Build out slowly. The Custom Labels and initial Product Groups you choose for Shopping Campaigns are important. Start your campaign simple, and build out based on product performance. Pick one way of grouping products (e.g., category) and build out from there initially.
  • Choose your ad groups. If you have a PLA campaign that is significantly built out, consider which Custom Labels you should use with Shopping Campaigns.
  • Be careful what you delete. Because Shopping Campaigns are structured on top of one another, if you delete a top product group, you can delete all of the product groups within it. It's possible to delete an entire campaign structure very quickly. I repeat: be careful what you delete.
  • Get started. The best advice here is to just get going. If you have a limited PLA campaign, this is an opportunity to build a good campaign structure. If you have PLAs built out already, you can start moving over gradually – but start now. The sooner you can start becoming familiar with Shopping Campaigns and testing features and ads, the better your campaign performance long term, and the farther you'll be ahead of your competitors.
Google Advertisers have roughly 100 days to switch to Google Shopping Campaigns. Use these tips to ensure it's a smooth transition.
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Monday, November 4, 2013

3 Google Shopping Campaign Challenges & Solutions

google-shopping-cart
On October 22, Google announced a new enhancement to Product Listing Ads, called Shopping Campaigns. The announcement came via the official Google AdWords blog, and notes a number of key features, including access to new data, insights, and increased integration with the merchant feed.
Google noted that these enhancements will make it easier for advertisers to launch and optimize Product Listing Ads. Based on the many of the initial hurdles that our clients and teams had to deal with when PLAs were first released.
PLAs have been tremendously successful at increasing paid media exposure and driving incremental revenue. However, advertisers are still dealing with a number of challenges.

Challenge 1: Disconnect between the merchant feed and the Product Listing Ads program.
  • Logistical issues such as separate client teams or vendors managing the feed and the Product Listing Ads campaigns often create unnecessary barriers to efficiently managing and optimizing PLA campaigns. The inability to see feed data directly in AdWords has further obstructed the process.
Google Shopping Solution: Increased feed integration.
  • Advertisers can now browse product inventory and create groups for items they want to bid on directly in the AdWords interface.
Long Term Impact to Advertisers: Do we need a feed management solution?
  • Many clients have inquired as to whether this enhancement will make feed optimization and management solutions such as Mercent and Channel Intelligence less effective for PLA campaigns. By providing additional options within AdWords, no longer are advertisers reliant on changes to a feed to get a new product target up and running. Still, good data remains the foundation of a strong PLA campaign, so advertisers without the in-house capacity to optimize a feed with strong titles, effective labels, and accurate attributes should explore partnership opportunities with a feed management vendor. Additionally, advertisers that engage with multiple comparison shopping engines will find many efficiencies in leveraging a "one feed" solution that many of these vendors can offer.
Challenge 2: Limited Reporting.
  • Currently, reporting within AdWords is limited to basic KPI stats by product target or ad group, with limited insights into the products or feed attributes that are successful. While some of this data can be extracted via advanced analytics suites and proper tagging, this adds an extra step (or 5) to efficiently managing and optimizing a PLA campaign.
Google Shopping Solution: Advanced reporting.
  • Advertisers will be able to filter and segment reports with additional attributes from your feed such as category, type, item ID, brand, and customer labels.
Long Term Impact to Advertisers: API support will provide enterprise level advertisers/agencies with powerful tools.
  • While access to this data within AdWords will provide immediate and actionable data to advertisers, enterprise level clients and agencies will want to see this data integrated with a campaign management platform, such as Marin Software. These platforms are already hard at work in identifying the most effective way to leverage these new Google Shopping Campaign data points in their UI to provide advertisers with an efficient and automated way to manage targets and bids to ROI goals (something that most of these platforms can handle today under the current PLA methodology).
Challenge 3: Answering the question "How High Is Up?"
  • As clients see strong performance from PLA campaigns, and investments in PLAs increase, a common question is, "how high is up?" With a lack of competitive metrics that are readily available in traditional search campaigns such as Impression Share, advertisers are limited to assumptive models to answer these questions (e.g., leveraging a day-parting report to determine if/when campaigns are capping out to determine max opportunity).
Google Shopping Solution: Competitive insights.
  • Discover the average CTR and max CPC for other advertisers with similar products, as well as the Impression Share for your shopping campaigns to determine opportunity lost to rank or budget.
Long Term Impact to Advertisers: Round 2 of the PLA "Wild West".
  • As Google removes the guessing game from PLAs, many advertisers will be able to outline tangible action plans and budgets for PLAs that will allow them to meet or exceed business objectives. Expect to see increased PLA investment, and subsequently increased CPCs, as advertisers take advantage of these powerful data points to maximize the opportunity and capture market share from competitors. Much like the initial launch of PLAs, expect to see ebbs and flows in your performance as advertisers "shoot it out" in the PLA frontier.
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Monday, September 30, 2013

Remarketing Lists for Search Ads: 4 Smart Strategies

Remarketing
Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA) have been available to all AdWords advertisers for several months now. RLSAs are really flexible. As a feature it opens up a lot of potential strategies.
This article will look at some smart strategies evolving for different types of advertisers to give you an idea of what could work for each one. These aren't the only potential strategies for that client type, but hopefully it'll give you a start for how to apply these to your business.
What I want to avoid is telling you what will work. That's akin to telling you what keywords to choose: it'll be different for everybody.

1. High-End Retailer

Chair
High-end retailers rely on finding their demographics. If you're willing to spend $5,000 on a sofa, chances are you're also the right person to spend $800 on a lamp.

For these advertisers, repeat customers are key. The fact that they have purchased once is the best possible indicator that they will purchase again.
Use RLSA to bid much more aggressively for existing customers. If they're searching again for a different item you carry, you absolutely want to be present and you can expect a better conversion rate than from everybody else.
This strategy is a good starting point for almost any advertiser where repeat customers make up a large proportion of their sales.

2. Subscription Service

Subscription services are unlikely to sell a subscription twice. It can happen, but in reality conversion rates for those users will be much lower, even if they're searching again.
I have Lovefilm and Netflix subscriptions. After I found Lovefilm, I kept searching in the same market for the second, but I wasn't going to get a second Lovefilm subscription.
RLSA here takes the opposite form: reduce bids for people who have already subscribed. They (probably) don't need it again.
Some subscriptions are more complex. There may be multiple stages (e.g., 1. register for free; 2. pay to subscribe). In this case, as soon as somebody completes the first stage you have their information.
There's no need to spend money on search again. You can save that budget and use much more targeted emails instead.

3. Low-Margin Retailer

Queue
A low-margin retailer probably can't afford to spend much per click or bid on expensive head terms. These guys are likely to be competing against Amazon, eBay, major supermarkets, etc.
Once a user has visited the site however, a whole new world opens up. That's a user who recognizes your brand now. Somebody saw something compelling enough in your messaging before to click your ad or otherwise visit your site. Take advantage!
Create a new campaign with all the keywords you can't normally afford. There is traffic there. Lots!
It's super exciting if you can get it, and now you can limit yourself to just the subset of users who have engaged with you before. More affordable, better conversion rates. Great!

4. Comparison Shopping

Competitors
Finance (and many other markets) involve a lot of comparison shopping. These users will visit your site as part of a longer journey including several of your big brand competitors.

Create a new campaign with competitor names as keywords, and bid on it only for users who have visited your site recently. Make sure you don't drop off their shortlist while they're comparison shopping!

4 Things You Can't do With RLSA

Due to certain limitations, there are a few things you can't do with RLSA that you might like to:
  • You can't tell the user you know them: There are some very real privacy and policy issues at play. If you know that user A just bought a sofa, you can't use your ads to say "Buy this side table, it goes great with your new sofa!" You can (and sometimes should) adjust your ad texts to be more compelling based on what you know about the user, but expect your ads to get disapproved if you start verging close to the line. Don't tell them what you know.
  • You can't remarket to people from a year previously: There is a limit of 180 days on these lists. That's a shame. A compelling case for remarketing on display is for services that renew once per year, like insurance. That's out of play for search, you simply can't hold people in your lists that long. Sorry.
  • You can't use them with Product Listing Ads: This is annoying. Several good use cases for RLSAs involve ecommerce websites. But the best ecommerce ad format is incompatible. I have no idea if we can expect this to change soon, but it seems an obvious connection to make. Keep your eyes peeled.
  • You can't see the stats separately: You can't segment search queries (or quite a lot of other helpful data, frankly) by audience. This is a problem because a negative keyword for one might not be appropriate for the other. This is an argument to keep your RLSA targeted ads in a separate campaign, so that you'll get entirely separate search query reports for each.

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Monday, August 12, 2013

Google Puts Local Ads on the Maps App

Google Maps Local Ad
Google has introduced a new way for local businesses to advertise on the Google Maps app for iPhone and Android.

"Relevant ads", as Google described them, will appear to users after they perform a Maps search. The ads will be located at the bottom of the screen and include the title, ad text, and a link to get directions to the business.
These new ads have a different way of computing how the advertiser gets charged for the clicks. When a user views the ad, there are several ways they can interact with the ad, some which result in the standard CPC charges to the advertiser, and others that are free clicks that the advertiser won't pay for.
When the user clicks on an ad, they will see standard business information, such as the address, phone number, photos, reviews, and more. If a user saves the business information for later, shares the business with a friend, or starts navigation, these are all considered free clicks the advertiser won't be charged for.
For interactions that advertisers are charged standard CPC charges, includes the initial "get location details" click the user makes, directions, click to call, and clicks to the ad headline.
Because technically a user could click on several different paid parts of an ad, which could result in multiple CPC charges depending on how the user interacts with the ad, advertisers will only be charged for maximum of two paid clicks per ad impression.
One unique aspect about this is that Google is actually giving advertisers analytical data on free clicks as well as the paid clicks. So if you would like to know how many people are interacting with your ads that do not result in a charge to you, you can find it in a new reporting area. There is of course all the analytical data for paid clicks as well.
For advertisers wanting to advertise the Google Maps app, you need to add location extensions to your search campaigns, where created an ad for it with AdWords Express. You also need to ensure that your campaign is permitted to be shown on mobile devices and on Google search partners. 
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