Archive for the ‘Paid For Search’ Category

Adrian Leaman PPC Tips 2

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Adrian Leaman

You Filter Your Traffic With General Negative Keywords on the Campaign Level but with more precision on the Ad Group Level.

Without utilizing negative keywords your PPC results will undoubtedly suffer. KoMarketing has an article on negative keywords and it lists hundreds of prospective negative keywords by type and category. This is a great place to start with overarching campaign type negative keywords.

On the Ad Group level, you may want to get very specific with negative keywords. You may want to omit certain variations, match types, or keywords that you want to trigger different ads.

Adrian Leaman goes on to say, for instance, you have an Ad Group specifically for forklift attachments and want to bring searchers to a specific landing page and show them specific ad copy for this topic. You would add the negative keyword “attachment(s)” in your forklift truck campaign, so these searchers would not see an ad aimed at people looking for trucks.

 

Adrian Leaman

Adrian Leaman PPC Tips

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Adrian Leaman

Bid For Broad, Phrase and Exact Match Type Wherever Possible?

There are three reasons for this. First – you will increase the number of search impressions your ad generates by being represented by all of the match types. We can all agree that a broad term like “forklift truck” will generate many search impressions, but by including the phrase match option you will be eligible for many hundreds of variations, such as (manufacturer) forklift truck, or (state) forklift truck.

Second, one of the sometimes overlooked benefits of PPC is the incredible amount of data it can generate in relatively short period of time. Assuming we are running our campaigns 24 hours a day and 7 days a week, we can quickly accumulate data on how many times keywords are searched for across different search platforms. Depending on our structure and targeting, we may be able to break this data down even further by nation, region, or state. By including multiple match types we can deliver much more granular data.

Adrian Leaman

adrian leaman top 10 adwords mistakes

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Adrian Leaman

1. Neglecting to Split-Test Your Ads. I’ve got to say one of the coolest discoveries of my whole online marketing life was, in my first week of playing with AdWords 8+ years ago, noticing that “create new ad” link and seeing that I could create a 2nd and 3rd and 4th ad and try different text. Running them simultaneously, then seeing how teeny tiny changes made huge differences. Adrian Leaman still gets excited about this.

2. Letting Google Retire Your Ads Without Testing: In Campaign Settings, when you turn “Optimize Ad Serving” OFF, you declare a winner and a loser much faster. Turn that option off if you’re checking in every day.

3. Split Testing for Improved CTR Only: At first, Click Thru Rate is the only thing you can measure. You want it high so you get the most traffic. But eventually what REALLY matters is conversion rate and cost per new customer. Sometimes high CTR ads don’t bring buyers. Conversion is what matters most.

4. Ignoring the Display URL Line in your Ad: If you own http://www.redwagon.com, you should try http://www.RedWagon.com, and http://www.RedWagon.com/RadioFlyer, or http://www.RadioFlyer.RedWagon.com, or RedWagonStore.com. Tiny hinges swing big doors.

5. Creating Ad Groups with Unrelated Keywords: Do not write an ad and dump every keyword under the sun into the ad group. Make tight ad groups based on a narrow set of related keywords matched closely to the ads and the landing page.

6. Muddying Search and Content Results: If you run all three streams of traffic (Google / Search / Content Network) through the same ad group, you lose the ability to distinguish among the very different kinds of traffic. I prefer to separate Google & Search from Content, in different campaigns.

7. Ignoring the 80/20 Principle: The 80/20 Rule says that the vast majority of outputs (impressions, clicks, leads, sales) are caused by a very small minority of inputs (ad groups, ads and keywords.) Spend your time on the vital few instead of the insignificant many.

8. Declaring Split-Test Winners Too Slowly: If you can declare a winner twice as fast, your site improves twice as fast. I recommend combing through your ads as often as you can announce a winner. If you go to http://www.splittester.com you can enter the # of clicks and the CTR of any two ads and it’ll tell you whether the better one is really better, or if it might just be luck.

9. Declaring Split-Test Winners to Quickly: If one ad got 1% and 5 clicks, and the other got 2% and 8 clicks, that’s not enough clicks to know for sure the winner is a sure thing. Again, let http://www.splittester.com decide their fate. Rule of thumb: 20+ clicks on each ad.

10. Ignoring negative keywords: Just about ANY ad group should probably have some negative keywords. It should always be on your checklist. It increases your Click Thru Rate because your ads don’t get shown to people who shouldn’t see them. Less waste.

adrian leaman

adrian leaman

Adrian Leaman Google Adwords

Adrian Leaman – Porsche Carrera Cup

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

Adrian Leaman is planning to enter the 2012 Porsche Carrera Cup

The Porsche Carrera Cup GB is at the very pinnacle of British motor racing. Stunning cars, top teams and drivers and unrivalled back up from Porsche Cars GB makes the Carrera Cup the obvious choice for teams and drivers seeking a superb racing platform for 2011.

New for 2011 is the latest development of the stunning 911 GT3 Cup car, with more power, more downforce and an even better driving experience featuring amongst a host of changes.

The new season will be the ninth year of Carrera Cup in Britain, modelled on Porsche\’s long-established world-wide Carrera Cup concept. Equal cars, close and exciting racing and first-class facilities for teams and drivers all add to the strength of the championship. The Carrera Cup GB continues to be a prime support race to the British Touring Car Championship, which guarantees bumper race day crowds and first-class TV coverage. Adrian Leaman is hoping that this will aid his sponsorship opportunities.

The Professional-Amateur 2 category offers new drivers the chance to join the Carrera Cup GB for selected events and compete for separate points and awards.

After a superb Carrera Cup GB season in 2010 with a capacity entry, the stage is set for an even better year in 2011.

Adrian Leaman

adrian leaman has noticed this at Google

Monday, June 14th, 2010

http://adwords.blogspot.com/2010/06/new-adwords-reports-in-google-analytics.html

New adwords reports in Google Analytics available to all..

adrian leaman

www.adrianleaman.com

adrian leaman

adrian leaman

adrian leaman is pulling his hair out over adwords

Friday, June 11th, 2010

nightmare on adwords street and can’t do anything until 9am….grrr..

adrian leaman

www.adrianleaman.com

adrian leaman

adrian leaman is working on new adwords campaign

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Starting from scratch – very exciting

adrian leaman

www.adrianleaman.com

adrian leaman is knee deep in google adwords..

Friday, May 28th, 2010

adrian leaman is also trying to work out if a client has been hit by click fraud on facebook advertising :(

adrian leaman

adsense share revealed by google

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Google have announced this here.

Google has kept its AdSense revenue share numbers a secret for quite some time, but has now decided to disclose them – or at least some of them. They’ve revealed the percentages for AdSense for Content and AdSense for Search, but are remaining mum on some of the other offerings. Still, content and search are the two biggies.

he company says this is an effort to increase transparency (though the situation in Italy likely played a significant role), and is now displaying the revenue shares right in the new AdSense interface, in the ‘Account Information’ section of the ‘Account Settings’ page (the numbers will also be available soon in the existing interface).

adrian leaman

adrian leaman – google advice

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Take a couple of hours to check your PPC account and ask yourself these 3 questions…

Is  every single keyword a broad match?

Are you doing split testing?

Are your display URLS destroying your click through rate?

Adrian Leaman