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Thursday, 27 August 2009

Tips on How to Improve your Google AdWords Campaign

I’ve never seen a Google AdWords campaign that can’t be improved, and we’ll often restructure existing campaigns to help maximise the ROI of the account.

Most people often set up their Google AdWords campaigns using the one campaign and one AdGroup with (in some cases) hundreds of broad matched keywords all delivering traffic to the home page of a site.

The real trick to an effective AdWords campaign is to break your campaigns out into small, targeted AdGroups with just a handful of targeted keywords delivering traffic to a relevant landing page on your website.

I’ll give you an example. Let’s say you are Mitre10 and you’re setting up a large Google AdWords Campaign.

The way to tackle it is to whiteboard the structure first before you jump in and start building.
So one way to set up a Google Ad Campaign for paint might be to do the following:

Campaign: Paint

  • AdGroup 1: Interior Paints
  • AdGroup 2: Exterior Paints
  • AdGroup 3: Ceiling Paints
  • AdGroup 4: Automotive Paints
  • AdGroup 5: Spray Paints
  • AdGroup 6: Paint Accessories
  • AdGroup 7: Acrylic Paint
  • AdGroup 8: Enamel Paint
  • AdGroup 9: Paint Brand (Dulux)
  • AdGroup 10: Paint Brand (British Paints) etc, etc.

Each AdGroup should have at least 1 dedicated Ad, have a maximum of 20 keywords and phrases triggering the Ad and should go to a relevant landing page on your site.

google ad build

keyword selection in google adwords

So you can see, it can be a fair bit of work, but the long term benefits in restructuring your account will likely to be improved keyword Quality Scores (meaning your bidding costs for each keyword will significantly reduce and your Ad positions will likely be higher).

The other useful tool to save you money and improve your campaign performance in AdWords is the “Search Query Report” in the Google AdWords Reporting Section.

This can be amazing especially if you’re using broad matched keywords because it shows you what search query people actually typed into Google before clicking on one of your Ad’s.

Why is that powerful?

Well it’s because it enables you to set up negative keywords in your account to prevent wasted clicks.

I can feel another example coming on.

In the interior paints example above, we might see from the Search Query Report that 25 people typed in “Interior house painting contractors” resulting 25 clicks - which will happen due to the ‘broad matched’ key phrase. This means that if the search query contains the words “interior painting” anywhere in the string, the Mitre10 Interior Paint Google Ad will display.

In my opinion, that’s 25 wasted clicks because Mitre10 don’t offer a painting contracting service.

What you should do is look for words that aren’t relevant and set up ‘negative matching’ to stop your Google Ad being displayed for “contractors” or in your case, non-relevant key phrases or words.

Google AdWords can be a beast of a thing to get your head around, and there are literally dozens of little tricks you can use to continually refine your account But hopefully the two outlined above will go in some way to improving the overall performance of your account.

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2 Comments:

Blogger Adrian said...

An excellent article on the right way to setup an AdWords account.

You make a good point about setting up a new AdWords account being very time consuming. Re-tructuring an exisiting campaign to reflect a managable structure is a real chore also. Take it from someone that has done many major account re-organisations for clients.

A very useful tool that makes managing an AdWords account a whole lot easier is the free Google AdWords Editor tool. It allows you to upload your account to a PC, make the necessary alterations and then download the changes to your account.

Much much faster than trying to use the AdWords Interface.

Google's tool can be found here:)
http://www.google.com/intl/en/adwordseditor/

Adrian Key
Editor of AdWords Adviser, making AdWords more profitable for you

27 August 2009 8:23 PM  
Blogger Chris Thomas - Reseo said...

Hi Adrian,

You're spot on there, and I did forget to mention the AdWords Editor tool, which is fantastic and allows you to quickly build (and edit) campaigns, much faster than through the online interface!

Chris

28 August 2009 10:10 AM  
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