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Top tips to write effective Google text ads
Top
tips to write effective Google text ads
By Debbie Weil
Publisher & Editor, WordBiz Report
If
you're just dipping your toes into pay-per-click (PPC) advertising, Google is
a great way to experiment.
For a fee of USD
$5, you can write your first ad and have it appear in Google search results
within minutes.
I interviewed Andrew
Goodman, author of the best-selling report 21
Pay-Per-Click Campaign Secrets Your Competition Doesn't Know
for pointers on PPC advertising on Google. Its also called cost-per-click
(CPC) advertising.
Debbie's
Pick: Andrew
Goodman's Google
AdWords Report (2004 edition) on how to get
the most out of pay-per-click text ads.
Its filled with concrete examples and specific tips on how to choose
keywords, qualify your sales prospects, improve your clickthrough rate and
decrease your cost per click. A great primer if you're new to AdWords plus
lots of insider tips if you're trying to improve results.
CLICK
HERE to learn more and download immediately.
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Basically, there
are three variables that combine to make a successful AdWords campaign. By successful
I mean a top position in search results plus a high clickthrough rate to your
site. Goodman suggests shooting for an average cost per click of less than a
dollar and a CTR of one percent or higher.
- your maximum
daily budget
- your maximum allowable cost per click
- the relevancy of the copy in your ad
The first two parameters are easy to set (you can change them anytime). The
bigger your budget, the higher you can set your daily budget and allowable cost
per click. (Tip: set your daily spending limit much higher than you think you
should, initially. It will maximize exposure of your ad.)
The third variable
depends on your skill as a keyword chooser and copywriter. See our Q. &
A. below for specific pointers.
Of course, your
ROI (return on investment) ultimately depends on how many clickthroughs convert
to a prospect, subscriber or sale on your landing page. As with any online marketing
campaign, be sure the copy flows naturally from your ad. And tag your landing
page(s) so that you know which Google ads are driving traffic to your site.
Other tips:
- remember that
the primary goal of an AdWords campaign is to convert visitors to a sale or
lead. NOT to drive traffic to your site.
- less is more
with copywriting. You can't put complicated strategy into 20 words.
- punctuation doesn't
need to be perfect.
- use exact matching
(i.e. square brackets) for your keywords. That way you qualify your traffic
more precisely. You don't want just anyone to click.
- if your ad shows
up "above the fold" don't obsess about whether you're 1, 2 or 3.
- the word FREE
is ok, but avoid all caps and don't use exclamations.
WordBiz Q. & A. with AdWords expert Andrew Goodman:
DW: If you're new to the Google ad game, what are the top three things
to keep in mind as you start writing ads?
AG: The
first is matching." Ads that contain the same keywords in the title
or ad copy as the keywords you've used in that ad group will perform better.
As a close second, ads that match very closely in *theme* to your keywords,
rather than simply being loosely related, will perform better.
Therefore, writing
different ads for different groups - and creating new groups for new themes
and keyword families - can improve CTR's significantly. Most advertisers address
a variety of themes and aim their products at different subgroups of buyers,
so it is a mistake to lump all of these keywords in together under a single
ad.
The second thing
is testing. You can create several ads within a single ad group (just click
on "create new ad" after you have one up and running). Leave at least
two different ads running for 7 days and at the end of the period, compare their
performance on a CTR and CPC basis. At that point, if necessary, ditch the lower
performer(s).
The third is dont
use copy that is hype-filled. Clever word play doesn't work. Precise targeting
and an attractive offer does work. Rather than trying to grab people with wild
claims or crazy punctuation, study the effects of small tweaks - such as using
a call-to-action word ("download"), a sounds-like-it-will-solve-my-problem
description ("finish the job in half the time"), a third party endorsement
("blows away Toyota Camry says AutoWorld"), or a mention of a free
trial offer if applicable.
DW: What
are your top three tips for writing a compelling ad?
AG: Didnt
I just answer that?
DW: Sorry,
sounds like I'm stuck on the top three tips. Readers love this stuff!
AG: Having looked at the results of numerous advertisers, what strikes
me is that the nature of the offer itself often determines whether CTR's will
be high. If demand is high in a given field, and you put the right offer in
front of people, AND this offer is easy to communicate (not something people
don't know they need but rather something they're actively seeking), the ad
copy practically writes itself.
This game is not
about making a silk purse out of a sow's ear. If you have poor fundamentals,
it will flow through to your campaign.
Successful campaigns
I've seen:
- employ spicy
but not hypey calls to action such as "download"
- mention a free
trial or some other way of saving money
- target the ad
more closely to the exact query
- communicate clearly
with shorthand descriptors that a child could understand, like "easy,"
"quick," "powerful," etc. - rather than jargon like "build
modules with DMOTL functionality"
DW: What
are your top tips for choosing keywords that others are not thinking of??
AG: Stop
thinking like an industry insider and start thinking like a customer (i.e. ask
your Mom or electrician what they'd type in to look for a certain thing).
Read my report
so you can find out what cool variations are less likely to be copied by competitors
(eg. using syntax).
Use software and
other means of researching actual consumer search behavior.
USEFUL LINKS:
Downloadable PDF report:
Google
AdWords: 21 Pay-Per-Click Campaign Secrets Your Competition Doesn't Know
by Andrew Goodman [2004 edition]
Set up a Google
AdWords account:
Google
AdWords
WordTracker
articles on keywords
Google
text ad optimization tips
Google
editorial guidelines
[Article updated February, 2004. Originally published in June 19, 2002 issue
of WordBiz Report.]
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