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Sunday, March 23, 2014

Google Releases New Tools For AdMob Including Full Google Analytics Integration

Today, Google will announce new features for its mobile ad platform AdMob at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. The new features are powered by Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager.
Rather than having to access AdMob and Analytics from separate interfaces, app developers can now get performance reporting from the AdMob home screen and a new Analyze tab right within AdMob. On the Analyze tab a dropdown menu, shown in the screenshot below, allows users to switch between the full set of reporting for individual apps.
AdMob Google Anlaytics Integration
The home screen features a combination of reporting from both platforms and provides a snapshot of conversion and monetization performance, including from in-app purchases.
AdMob Home Screen Google Analytics
Google also launched content experiments with Google Tag Manager for apps. The feature will allow marketers to test changes such as in-app promotions and menu layouts in their apps on a subset of users. Testing results will then be available through the Google Analytics reporting interface.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

7 Common Pitfalls Of Google Display Network Campaign Management

The Google Display Network has been around for a long time now, yet marketers continue to make many of the same mistakes over and over again. Here are seven common issues that can arise when running a display campaign if you don’t stay on the ball.

1. Unnecessary Pausing Of Keywords

You notice that your display campaign has suddenly started spending a lot more money and your cost-per-conversion has tripled. What’s the first thing you look at?
A lot of people would tend to go straight to the keywords (if targeting contextually) and try to pinpoint the highest spending term to either lower the bid on it or pause it. This is the wrong place to be looking.
If you notice a high surge in spend, always go to your placements tab and evaluate the domains your ads have been showing on. One keyword may well have triggered an irrelevant or new placement, but this doesn’t mean that the keyword needs to be paused.
Often, you can either exclude the placement or add a bid multiplier to it to positively or negatively impact its bid. Don’t forget to look back over a longer time period to see if there are any placements that have been underperforming for a long time — these can be excluded.

2. Not Adjusting Keyword Level Custom Bids

As part of the Enhanced Campaigns rollout last year, Google added a new feature whereby you could apply custom bids to one of your targeting methods and then use bid adjustments to further refine bids for your other combination targeting methods.
If you haven’t changed your keyword-level bids since then, you’ll notice that when you do, it won’t let you until you enable custom bids on them. If you hadn’t made the choice, AdWords will have taken your ad group level bid at the time.
How to enable custom bids
How to enable custom bids
Switch on custom bids at keyword level and start optimizing each keyword! Once you’ve assessed the types of placement coming in at keyword level, you’ll have a better idea of which keywords are performing well (or not).
From here, you can adjust your bids to achieve better results overall. Too often, marketers forget to regularly adjust their keyword-level bids on display campaigns. If you’re not working toward direct response, you can still be adjusting bids to try to gain maximum traffic for your budget.

3. Not Making Use Of Bid Adjustments

Related to the above point, bid adjustments often get overlooked!
You can only set your custom bid for one targeting method; if you’re doing keyword targeting, you’ll need to choose this as your custom bid as bid adjustments (by %) can’t be made in the keywords tab.
How to change bid adjustments for your targeting methods
How to change bid adjustments for your targeting methods
If you’re doing combination targeting, you’ll want to make regular bid adjustments based on performance to either bid a specified percentage more or less for certain placements, topics or interest categories.
Google has made things much easier for us to further refine our combination bidding, so start taking advantage of it.

4. Having A Static Strategy & Structure

When was the last time you added a new ad group to your display campaign? A while ago? Thought so! Our search campaigns evolve with time, and we’re always adding in new features — but people can forget to do the same with the GDN.
Model your display campaign on David Beckham’s strategy: change and adapt with the latest trends, or set them yourself to stay ahead of the competition!
Test new approaches as often as Beckham changes his hair style!
Test new approaches as often as Beckham changes his hair style.
  • Make sure you’re testing out new options available to you such as in market segments and affinity categories which give you increased coverage for your campaigns but a more niche-level of targeting.
  • Experiment with bid multipliers for location, device, time-of-day and age, and expand your strategies based on these results. You’ll almost certainly be looking into these different bidding strategies for your search campaigns, so don’t neglect them in your display campaigns!
  • Expand your keyword lists; display ad groups have the same limits as search ones now, so you’re no longer capped at 50 keywords.
This next one takes the biscuit for the worst common mistake!

5. Only Utilizing Image Ads

Marketers often forget about text ads — at their own peril. If you’re not utilizing text ads, that means you’re not gaining full exposure on the GDN, as a significant number of sites only allow text ads to be shown.
Text ads have been shown to give great direct response, so they are definitely worth adding into your campaigns. Keep up-to-date with the latest developments in this area, too, as there are some exciting changes coming which will impact the look and feel of text ads!

6. Not Testing Ads

This is another common pitfall, and display campaigns sadly get overlooked in this area. It’s important to test:
  • Different sets of image ads
  • At least three text ads per ad group
  • A variety of image ad sizes (including the newer half page and mobile ads)
  • Different styles of image ads such as the new engagement style ads
These are just a few ideas of things to look at, but you get the idea.
For those with a particularly static display campaign, image ads can now be up to 150kb in size, so you can get some much better quality image ads in your account now compared to the 50kb limit that had been set in the past!

7. Expecting The Same Results As From Search Campaigns

Display campaigns can be short lived, if you approach them with the wrong expectations. When starting up a GDN campaign, you need to approach it with the understanding that it will not yield the same results as your search campaigns.
Clickthrough rates will be lower, conversion rates will be lower, the volume of conversions will be lower, etc. You need to launch your campaign with a goal of either raising awareness or trying to gain direct response — and if you’re looking for direct response, you’re going to need to set different goals than those of your main search campaigns.
The GDN will give you that additional reach you need whilst also offering you a lower cost-per-click in many cases compared to your main search campaigns, but you’ll need to continually experiment with all the options available to you to make it work in the right way for you. Don’t give up — keep testing new things!

To Sum Up

There are more common mistakes, but these are some of the main ones I come across when looking at display campaigns that come to the agency where I work.
Display isn’t just something you switch on and leave running, it’s something that takes a lot of fine tuning to get working the way you want it to, and with that, you need to make sure you’re giving it enough attention and budget in relation to your search campaigns. If you’re not running any GDN campaigns yet, hopefully, this will give you a few pointers ahead of getting started!
Photo Image Credit: archives.deccanchronicle.com 
Article Credit :SearchEngineLand.com

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Better Ads via Better Sitelinks

Sitelinks are an important part of successful ads.  They show value to potential customers before a click occurs, while also being (along with other extensions) a factor of ad rank.  User interaction with sitelinks is so strong that you should consider them a basic part of your ad text - title, description, display URL and sitelinks.  Optimize the messaging in this space routinely, just as you do with ad text.

Many advertisers aren’t taking advantage of this excellent feature just yet, so before we start optimizing you may need to implement them.  Adding sitelinks boosts the average CTR on an ad by 10-20% (+20-50% when the search is one of your branded terms), so that implementation should be time well spent.

Make sure to have at least six active sitelinks for desktop and four active sitelinks for mobile, but remember that you can go all the way up to twenty total per ad group or campaign.  Sitelinks allow 25 characters for the link itself, and that space allows for testing.  We’ve found that somewhat shorter sitelinks are the most effective, though, so try to keep them closer to 18-20 characters for desktop and 12-15 characters for mobile.

We think sitelinks are a great proven feature, and we also think that they can be made better.

Reporting on Sitelinks

Start by knowing how you’re doing.

When reviewing these statistics, remember to compare sitelinks to one another and not to overall ad performance (as CTR on sitelinks is almost universally lower than a click on an ad, even though an ad with sitelinks will perform better than an ad without sitelinks).  You can also look at a sitelink’s contribution to the entire creative.  If you segment by “This Extension vs. Other” you can see if that extension is encouraging clicks on the headline or other links.

Identify your strong performers in terms of CTR (on the link itself or the surrounding ad), conversion rate, and conversion volume to establish a baseline of what target you can shoot for with low performers.  If certain sitelinks aren’t receiving a lot of impressions they’ve been passed over by the system, which means that you could probably work on improving those first.

(Quick aside - Beyond normal reporting, it’s also a good idea to do a simple sense check.  Are those the six {or twenty} pages that would be the most useful for your customers?  Even if CTR or impressions are low, is there a minority of your users that will find that sitelink very useful?  You may want to keep that link in place for them.)

Once you’ve found what’s not working, try out new text to improve performance.  If CTR is fine but your conversion rate is lagging, you could be sending traffic to the wrong page or setting user expectations incorrectly with a misleading link.  As with your ads, even top performers could potentially be improved upon.  Think about something new you may want to try.

When viewing your sitelink data, the info is available at the ad, ad group, campaign, and account level.  Add or remove these columns on the Ad Extensions tab to determine just how specific you want your info to be.

Testing Your Sitelinks

Pure A/B testing isn’t possible because each sitelink must point to different content.  When you’re identifying what’s lagging behind, recognize that other variables can muddle your results (things like ad tests, bid changes or seasonality).  You can try out variations of sitelinks in different campaigns or sets of ad groups to see what works better, but it’s still not going to be a perfect solution.  Recognize the imperfection of this whenever reviewing your results.

Sitelink testing shouldn’t be as frequent as your ad testing (due to the lack of A/B testing).  Monthly or quarterly reviews might make sense for you, depending on your volume.

Apply ad copy testing principles to your new sitelinks.  Think of distinct calls to action and benefits that relate to a user’s search and the page you’re directing them to.  You can also take lessons from previous ad tests and apply them.  For example, you can use losing (but still strong) ad copy as your sitelinks or their descriptions.

Sitelinks with Additional Detail

You also have the option to add additional detail to your sitelinks, which is great opportunity to prove value to customers before they click.  At present, sitelinks automatically serve descriptions where appropriate.  That feature is going away in the near future, though, so add in descriptions yourself sooner rather than later.

Mobile Sitelinks

Try to speak to mobile users.  Think about mobile intent and how it differs from desktop, and then reflect that way of thinking in your sitelinks.  You’ll also want to keep mobile sitelinks shorter (to around 12-15 characters) to ensure they aren’t cut off.

Closing

You can show users valuable information about your site right in your ads via sitelinks.  It’s imperative that they’re present, and once they’re there you should focus on making them as good as they can be (just as you do with the ads themselves).  Sitelinks not only increase the relevance of your ads, they increase the relevance of the user experience you deliver after the click.

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