3 BIGGEST Adwords Newbie Mistakes
Google Adwords Tips
The 3 BIGGEST mistake Adwords newbies make
A Whirlwind Guide
Without doubt the biggest mistake a newbie to Adwords makes is compiling a long
list of less than targeted keywords and whacking (technical term) them into a
single ad-group.
Using broad match only
The unholiest of the trinity – not tracking results.
#1
The Single Ad group
Although at first it may seem tempting – collecting all your keywords and
lumping them into a single ad-group for ‘ease of administration’ is not a good
idea for a multitude of reasons.
First off, let’s say you have managed to find 1000 keywords for your campaign
and you pop them all into a single ad-group. Yes, you get a single point of
administration (or more accurately a single point of failure) but look at what
you miss:
The ability to group tightly cohesive keywords (which are the mindset of your
prospects) and construct targeted adverts which are more likely to gain a
click through to your site.
The ability to have specific landing pages on your site for specific customer
psychographics. This alone will greatly increase your chances of getting a
prospect respond to your call to action – be it an email address capture or a
sale.
The ability to keep tight control over the budget of your ‘best’ keywords
(where best are high traffic/high conversion). Sure, you can adjust individual
CPC’s within an ad-group, but the granularity and control is not there and the
problems inherent with grouping too many loosely assembled keywords will ensure
your efforts are thwarted and money wasted.
Have you ever had your account slowed? It’s a pain for sure but the more
keywords you have administered in a less than disciplined way, the more of your
keywords will be put on hold/in-trial and/or disabled.
Remember Google rewards good advertising performance and looks
at all advertiser histories & your advertising history when
determining how well you are doing.
Adwords is not a fire and forget medium (unless you have a very niche market
with very little competition – but the days of such markets are numbered).
Active campaign management is required to ensure you have not just a return of
your investment but a positive return on your investment.
#2
Using Broad Match
Consider the keyword ‘widget’.
How many ways can you search for this keyword? In theory there are infinite
number of searches that can be conducted but in practice there are considerably
fewer thankfully.
However, how should you specify your matching options within Adwords?
Option 1: Broad Match
This specifies the keyword in an unadorned fashion within your list like so:
Blue widget
What this means is that should somebody search for the keywords:
Blue widget
Red blue widget
Widget blue
Widget who searches for these things blue?
Don’t need blue widget
Then, your advert would show for all of these. This is all very well
when broad match (I’ll not talk about expanded match searching for fear of
confusion!) shows your advert for terms relevant to you. But…
For every term relevant to your market there could be 10, 100 or 1000 others
which are not (which is why when you utilise broad matching you should use
negative keywords exhaustively).
The upshot of this is two-fold:
Your advert will have more untargeted impressions which will result
in a lower Click Through Rate
You will receive more ‘tyre kicking’ clicks from visitors who are not in the
least bit interested in your product/service thus increasing your costs.
Option 2: Phrase match
This specifies the keyword by surrounding it in quotes like so:
“blue widget”
What this means is that should somebody search for the keywords:
Need blue widget
Blue widget
Blue widget where are you
Don’t need blue widget
Then your advert will show because the phrase is found within the
keywords. This is the next most highly targeted form of search matching and is
an ‘improvement’ on broad match – in terms of specialisation.
Option
3: Exact match
This specifies the keyword by surrounding it in square brackets like so:
[blue widget]
Now, your advert will only show if and only if the keyword
Blue widget
is searched for.
In an ideal world, you will know exactly what every keyword is that your
prospects are searching for and you could therefore have an exact match for a
keyword search. This would serve to both minimise your advertising
expenditure and increase your return on investment simultaneously.
But, to get to a point whereby you know the keywords (or at least know as many
as possible) which are profitable to you, you need to conduct some research
within your adwords campaigns.
So which is the best matching options to use?
Starting off, it is best to utilise all 3 matching options within your ad-group
because:
You get to know if there are keywords out there you have missed in your
research and can dig further to find out if they should be specified with more
targeted matching or added to your negative keyword list.
The assignment of your keyword status (on hold, in trial, disabled) is delayed
because the impressions are spread between the variants of the keywords.
More targeted terms (using exact match) generally have higher conversion rates
so you can assign different more cost effect cost per clicks accordingly.
Eventually, as your campaigns mature in time, you will have more and more exact
match and less phrase & broad match. As a result your advertising
costs will decrease whilst your return on investment will naturally increase.
#3 The Unholiest Error
Ok, this isn’t an adwords tip perse as it should be adopted and applied to each
and every part of your online and offline advertising.
It’s time to be honest – for each and every piece of advertising/PR you
have on the go, how well are you tracking results?
I mean can you categorically put your hand on your heart and say, “Yes, by
handing out business cards, I generated £x of business last month” (doh! – I’ve
just got a new batch printed up and even I’ve missed out on this, slap my
wrist, practice what you preach Tom!).
In the world of Adwords, you need to know what keywords are giving you results
and focus your budget and efforts accordingly.
If you have an advert that shunts prospects to a generic landing
page, which is not tracked and you have no idea as a result whether they signed
up or bought a product/service.
Then, you are wasting tens, hundreds, thousands (bigger companies are some of
the worst offenders wasting millions) of pounds every year.
Now you can no longer claim ignorance on the biggest mistakes made
with Google Adwords. And I shall make sure my next batch of business
cards are trackable!
Senthe Selva
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