Google AdWords has been the force behind Google's growth. Every company needs revenue and AdWords accounts for the vast majority of Google's revenue.
Year |
$ millions |
% increase |
2002 |
440 |
- |
2003 |
1,500 |
341 |
2004 |
3,200 |
213 |
2005 |
6,100 |
191 |
2006 |
10,600 |
174 |
2007 |
16,600 |
157 |
2008 |
22,800 |
137 |
However you look at it that's impressive growth.
And all for 130 characters!
In the next few paragraphs we'll try to give you a Google Primer, but it really is impossible to cover the whole subject in a newsletter!
AdWords is an ongoing auction. Every time your advert comes up as a possible advert to show to its users based on your keywords Google calculates whether it should be shown and whether it should be first, second, third etc. based on a whole range of attributes.
AdWords is pure direct marketing and known as pay per click advertising. Direct marketing is intelligent, targeted communication in the right place at the right time about the relevant benefits of your product or service whilst recording and measuring the 'personal' details of your customers and their behaviour so that you know the results and effectiveness of your marketing campaign.
If you know the cost per sale or customer you can afford and know your conversion rate from lead to sale, you can work back to set the cost per lead you can afford to pay AdWords allows you to do all of this in 'real time' which is why it is one of the most powerful marketing tools ever invented.
The simple answer is carefully! There are many AdWords tools / levers in the dashboard. They can provide a lot of help in fine tuning your targeting and adverts but they can also confuse the unwary or leave many people just 'doing the basics' "because it sort of does the job".
Remember, Google wants you to spend money.
Remember, you want to spend as little as possible for the required result.
The first thing Google does is offer a range of places that you can show your adverts. The main choices are:
You can't target search partners only but you can target search and content separately and whilst content results do not affect ad position or cost in the search network we always recommend running separate campaigns for each to keep results completely 'pure'.
Google allows you to target AdWords by:
and it is well worth paying particular attention to location, time and demographics. If you are a local business then you won't want to target adverts outside your catchment area. If your target audience is, say, students who are at classes during the day and typically spend time online between 17.00 and 00.00 and at weekends then time is critical. As is demographics on the content network - why advertise to silver surfers? Exclude them.
Google also offers a range of ways to place your bids. Remember, Google wants you to spend money. Remember, you want to spend as little as possible for the required result.
Google also allows you a range of options when it comes to targeting your keywords - the words or phrases you use to trigger your bid to appear in the sponsored links. Keywords are, arguably, the most important factor in AdWords and as each ad group in a campaign allows you up to 2,000 keywords you have to consider whether it is worth bidding £3 for a very popular phrase or £0.10 on 1,500 less popular phrases. Naturally that can depend on the total volume of responses you require as well as the conversion rate for each phrase.
The options that Google offers are all about increasing accuracy. If you really know that enough people are looking for [blue skinny jeans] and [black skinny jeans] then these are probably exact match buying phrases whereas history of skinny jeans (which would trigger a broad match) clearly is not.
The options are:
Phrase match: "running shoes" - with"."
Many people get hung up on the advert. It's the 'sexy' bit where you can let your imagination run riot - well, as much as Google will let you as it has rules for most things including:
Actually, like all direct marketing the targeting is more important and before you go nuts on the 95 characters of copywriting you have (!!) remember that the offer - free, discount, money off etc - is more important than the words too!
Make sure you understand keyword insertion which will make your ad more relevant to your target market. With keyword insertion AdWords will automatically replace the {.} code with the keyword that triggered the advert. Naturally in the few milliseconds since they entered their search phrase most potential customers will not have forgotten it and so seeing it in the advert generally leads to a higher click through (response) rate. It's easy:
Buy {Keyword:One of yours}
From my fantastic company
Satisfaction Guaranteed!
www.Sample.co.uk
As Google also lets you run multiple adverts, do so. Use a 'champion v challenger' strategy so that you are constantly trying to improve and make sure, PLEASE make sure that the link send potential customers to a relevant landing page that tells them about the offer, product and or service. You might also like to test how different landing pages with different offers, headline, copy, graphics etc work so that you make sure that having spent money on getting people to your site you are maximising your chance of getting business from them too.
We are going to stop there. There's a whole load of stuff about quality score and analytics that we could summarise but all you really have to remember is what we have told you above and though it's more complicated than this is how your bid is calculated and how you will win the auction and get a higher position:
Click through rate (CTR) x Bid x Quality score (QS) = Position in list
i.e. (assuming same QS)
10% CTR x £1 bid = £10 per 100 impressions for Google
20% CTR x £0.51 bid = £10.20 per 100 impressions for Google
Across 1m impressions (easy) that's £2,000 more to Google!
Remember, Google wants you to spend money.
Remember, you want to spend as little as possible for the required result.
Good hunting!
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