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Search Advertising Tips
Sheryl Sandberg
Sheryl Sandberg is Google's vice president of global online sales & operations.
1. Know your business
The
point of a search advertising campaign is precision: reaching the right
users at the right time. And the first step toward achieving this is to
know your business. What products and services are you selling? What's
your precise market niche? What selling strengths do you want to play
toward? Do your homework up front so your campaign planning will be as
effective as possible.
As
an example, let's assume you're running a gourmet coffee website,
http://www.frothing-latte-bean.com, on which you sell a range of coffee
products, from beans to machines. Your target market is devoted coffee
lovers everywhere, and you want to focus on your great products and
easy ordering options.
2. Identify your goals and organize around them.
Once
you have a clear sense of your business, stay focused on it as you
establish the goals for your ad campaign. Then, as you set up your
search ads, structure each campaign based on a simple, overarching
goal--for instance, getting people who want to buy great coffee
products to visit your site so you sell more coffee beans online. In
some cases, you can use the same structure for your campaigns as you do
for your website. If your site is already grouped into categories, for
example, your job is almost done. Mapping your structure on paper first
will produce an easy-to-use template.
Now
that you've set your campaigns and related goals, you can create
logical groupings within each campaign called "ad groups." Ad groups
are made up of keywords and ads (and we'll go into this more later).
Since you've chosen one goal per campaign, each ad group within a
campaign should be helping you met those goals.
3. Choose the right keywords.
Choosing
keywords is both an art and a science. Start by brainstorming a list
that's as wide as possible. There are a variety of online resources
that can assist you in brainstorming. Using them, you simply enter a
few basic ideas, such as gourmet coffee, French roast and coffee beans,
and you'll get back dozens of potential keywords and phrases (two- and
three-word phrases usually work best as keywords).
Once
you have a good list, you'll want to sort it (many advertisers put them
into a spreadsheet to make sorting them easier). Start by selecting a
"match type" for each keyword. A broad match means any user who
searches on "coffee" or "bean" in any combination will see your ads;
more precisely targeted matches--such as a phrase match or an exact
match--will deliver fewer ad views but perhaps better targeted ones.
You can even choose negative match keywords to eliminate searched
phrases you don't want your ad to appear on, such as "cheap" or "free."
Finally,
you should refine your list by cutting irrelevant keywords that don't
really relate to your business, and then organize the remaining
keywords into themed groups. For instance, you might want to place
keywords relating to whole-bean coffee in one ad group and those
relating to ground coffee in another one.
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4. Write ads that get people clicking.
Now
that you've set up your keywords and grouped them in ad groups, your
next step is to write the ads that users will see in their search
results when they search on those keywords. You have three lines with
which to grab that potential customer's attention. Here are a few tips
for getting it right:
- Get to the point quickly.
- Include your keywords in your headline.
- Write copy that encourages users to click through to your site.
Here's a sample ad for our gourmet coffee site:
Gourmet Coffee Beans
Order fair-trade, French roast,
decaf coffee beans. Free shipping.
http://www.frothing-latte-bean.com
This
ad tells people what you offer (gourmet coffee beans) and why they
should buy it (fair-trade, French roast, free shipping). It also tells
them what to do when they click through (order beans).
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5. Target the right users.
Who
are you trying to reach? Once you know your potential customers' key
demographics, you can target individual campaigns by language and
region. For instance, some keyword advertising programs allow you to
reach potential customers in more than 40 languages--you could consider
setting up a campaign for each language you target for easier
tracking--and you can also target on a regional, city or customized
level, such as a 20-mile radius around your business.
These
locally targeted campaigns should have general keywords such as "coffee
beans" or "shade-grown coffee." Even if you can offer products or
services only to people within a very specific geographic area, you can
set up a country-targeted campaign in parallel that's full of
location-specific keywords such as "Seattle coffee" or "New York coffee
basket." These broader campaigns can help you get more qualified clicks.
6. Track your results.
So
your campaign has been live for a week. Are you spending your money
wisely? Measuring your results will tell you which keywords bring you
the most customers, which ads bring in the most business and,
ultimately, how much return you're getting on your investment (ROI).
Then you can adjust your campaign settings based on those results.
Be
sure to select a keyword advertising program that provides a tracking
tool and analytics platform that will help you understand which
keywords and ads drive your conversions. Conversion tracking reports
that review overall campaign performance and results can mean the
difference between acceptable and stellar long-term results. For
instance, you should figure out whether all the clicks you get on
coffee makers are actually turning into sales. If not, you might try to
reshuffle your budget and bids. You should also monitor whether an ad
is overly click-enticing--this might eat through your ad budget quicker
than you'd like--or whether the promotion you mention is too hard to
find on your destination page.
Stay
alert for creative ways to track offline conversions as well. Your
keyword campaigns are just a piece in your overall sales puzzle; even
purchases or signups that happen offline, such as by phone or at your
place of business, might have been driven by your website and your
keyword advertising program. The best way to measure your offline
results is by tracking customers to a conversion, such as with a coupon
or an order form, or simply by asking customers how they found you.
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7. Control your spend.
Keeping
regular tabs on your account statistics means knowing which ads and
keywords bring you results, not bidding more than you can afford to
spend, and always focusing on relevance, that is, never letting
yourself pay for keywords and ad text that aren't goal-focused and
producing results. Here are some quick tips for controlling your
keyword campaign spending:
· Set your limits.
Don't bid more than you can afford. If you find you're not getting the
results you expected, scale back your campaign by figuring out which
ads and keywords are bringing results and deleting the others.
· Focus on relevance.
Build your campaigns slowly. Spend time handpicking your keywords and
writing your ads. When your keywords and ad text are more relevant,
you're likely to pay less than you bid, so creating highly relevant
campaigns is the most cost-effective way to manage your budget.
· Grow from what works.
Once you know what works, you can start to build more campaigns and ad
groups. Watch your account statistics and tweak your targeting
settings, keyword list and ad text to test different results. Use the
conversion tracking methods we discussed earlier to find your top
performers.
· 8. Test, test, test.
· Search
advertising means never resting on your laurels. Take a moment to
review what you've set up, one campaign at a time. Are your keywords
logically grouped into ad groups? Does the campaign help you achieve a
goal? Does your budget match your goals? Successful advertisers are
constantly revising their campaigns, just as searchers are constantly
searching for different things. To flourish in this ever-changing
environment, you should continue to test and refine your keywords and
ads, build on ones that work and delete others that don't. You'll want
to check results, such as clicks and conversions, for ad text
messaging, keywords, match types, budgets, cost per clicks and web
addresses, and then hone your campaigns accordingly.
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9. Stay relevant.
· Don't
just change your campaign based on test results; also stay responsive
to product, seasonal, industry and competitor changes. For example,
don't miss sales opportunities during and after the holiday shopping
season. Prepare for the increased traffic to your ads, and make sure
your budget doesn't run out before you reach all the customers you
want. Update your ad text as well; when people search to buy "coffee
machines" or "coffee bean gift boxes," be sure your ads mention
benefits like "avoid the crowds" and promotions like "last-minute
delivery," "free gift wrapping" or "delivered to your home or office."
· 10. Utilize all the available features.
· Many
programs provide "help center" resources that are easily available
online and up to date in order to help you learn everything you need to
know to boost your campaign performance. These help centers provide
tools and features that help you:
- Choose content websites to show your ads on.
- Let your cost-per-click bids be automatically adjusted based on your budget.
- See what searches your ads are appearing on.
- Draw a customized geographic region whose users you want to reach.
· Don't
forget that your search advertising campaign's success depends to a
large degree on how effectively you plan, create and maintain it.
You're not paying for a billboard on the side of the highway--you're
investing in a tool that can reach your potential customers when and
where they're ready to buy.
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Search Advertising Tips
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