Browsing Category: "Google Adword"

How to quickly add Account wide Negative Keywords

Posted on June 2nd, 2008 in Google Adword, How-to Tips for Bloggers

Most advertisers will find that there are many negative keywords that apply to their entire account. The more Campaigns you have the more time-consuming it is to add new negatives as you encounter them. The good news is that they can be added at the account level - but only by using the free Google AdWords Editor program.

There is currently no way to do this in their online interface. Although there are many entries for adding negative keywords in the Google AdWords Editor How-to Guide, as I write this they don’t include how to do this. These instructions assume that you have downloaded AdWords Editor and know how to pull your account data into it. If not, you can use the links above to do so. Once you have your account downloaded, here is the process:

  1. Click on “Data” and select “Add multiple campaign negative keywords”. (The shortcut is Control/Shift/M.)
  2. Paste your new negative keywords into the box.
  3. In the Destination: Campaign drop-down box scroll all the way to the bottom and select “<All Campaigns> ”
  4. Click “Next” and then “Finish”.

Note that the negative keywords are actually added at the Campaign level in every Campaign. You can also use this process to add or delete negative keywords only in specific ad groups or delete negative keywords from every campaign in your account.

Your changes are now in the AdWords Editor program but not in your account yet. Be sure to click “Post Changes” to upload them

Safe Strategies for New Google AdWords Users

Posted on May 28th, 2008 in Google Adword, Pay Per Click

Here I am trying to address strategies to minimize risk when starting new adwords ad campaigns. If you’re new to Google AdWords, have a limited budget, don’t know what your current conversion rate is, or want to advertise some new products and aren’t sure how well they will sell; than these tips will keep costs low.

1. When first setting up a campaign, turn off the content network. This option is “on” by default. It’s a form of contextual advertising and tries to position your ads on sites like About.com, The New York Times, Food Network and others. You typically will see high impressions in your system, but often low CTR–click-through-rates, as determined by impressions to clicks–and low-quality clicks. These aren’t serious buyers; they’re wasting your dollars and time.

New campaigns should be limited to Google.com and in some cases Google’s search network. This will limit where your ads are displayed to the strongest converting traffic until you can verify that you are getting a decent conversion rate.

2. Use VERY specific (long tail) keywords and keyword phrases to describe your product. Avoid generic words that apply to multiple products and especially if you sell only upscale or expensive versions of the item. (Searchers are more likely to be in the market for the cheaper versions. Whenever possible use keywords that will target only what you are selling.)

3. Keywords should be entered as phrase and exact match ONLY (no broad match keyword phrases). If your budget is really tight or there may be more traffic than you need use exact match only and create ad groups with one to four keywords, tightly matched.

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HitTail launched AdWords Optimization Product

Posted on May 15th, 2008 in Google Adword, Keyword Tool

Hittail Today, Connors Communications has launched new PPC search marketing product, HitTail Premium, which will allow you to export keyword suggestions directly into a Google AdWords campaign from the HitTail interface. Premium will also give users the ability to separate and examine their organic search hits from their paid search hits, allowing for even faster analysis of your site traffic. For AdWords users who are running ads with the Broad Match feature turned on, this is a particularly useful way to determine which terms are actually converting into clicks.

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Prosper202 FREE PPC Keyword Tracking Software

Posted on May 6th, 2008 in Affiliate Tools, Google Adword, Pay Per Click

Most of you have heard of Tracking202 from Wes Mahler. The main disadvantage was you needed to host you data on their server.

Prosper202 is a self-hosted PPC tracking solution, it is the same code used on Tracking202. It is an online tool to help you track you keyword and campaign performance with pay per click. This software is powerful, self-hosted and fast.

With Prosper202 you can upload your sale stats from affiliates into and also your paid keyword stats from adword into and be able to clearly see how you’re profiting or where you’re losing.

Prosper202 is a free PPC keyword tracking application from Wes Mahler and his crew. It’s the same people that created Tracking202 but Prosper202 allows you to host the application directly on your hosting account if your not willing or are feeling nervous about your keyword information being out there on someone else’s server.

It also comes with Export202 which allows you to duplicate PPC campaigns from network to network.

Prosper202 Key Features:

• Works with Every Single PPC Network Out There!
• Cloaks Keywords from Advertisers and Affiliate Networks keeping them a secret!
• Works with Landing Pages or With Direct Linking!

It seems like a great tool, I’ve only been able to play around with it for a little while but I definitely think you should check out the service being provided by Prosper202 if you’re in need of a great keywords tracking application.
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Why You Can NOT Consistently Get any Specific Ad Position using Google AdWords

Posted on April 29th, 2008 in Google Adword, Pay Per Click

The most common complaint advertisers have - especially if they have a consultant managing their advertising - is that their ads are not appearing where they want them. There is a very good reason for that: that is simply not how pay per click advertising engines work. Advertisers and their consultants have to let themselves off of this hook because it is not possible to consistently place your ads precisely where you want them. Read on to find out that where you see them is not where they are for everyone else anyway.

Where your ads appear is likely to vary for every search because the factors Google uses to decide which ads appear in which position changes with each search. Every single time someone types in your search phrase Google holds a new “auction” for the positions the ads appear in. Even if the search phrase is exactly the same, the mixes of advertisers bidding on that phrase ARE different and so are many other variables (discussed below).

Here are some variables that affect how many advertisers participate in each search auction:

  • Ads being manually paused and resumed
  • Using what Google calls Ad Scheduling to designate which days and hours ads are active
  • Limiting ad impressions with the Campaign Daily Budget (often unintentionally)
  • Geo-targeted ads that only appear when searchers are identified as being in a particular location

Of these, the Daily Budget setting causes the most volatility in where your ads will appear. The more advertisers whose ads appear inconsistently, the more erratic your ad positions will be. This is due to a far greater variation is the quantity of advertisers and the bid amounts you are competing against.
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