Getting started with Google AdWords
Google
AdWords is a cost-effective and easy means of pulling in targeted traffic
to your website.
With a reasonably
small amount of work and a little experimentation, there's no
reason why you shouldn't be able to significantly raise the number
of downloads and sales from your website.
If you don't
yet have an AdWords account, we recommend that you open one as
soon as possible. Below are a number of tips to get you started.
First of all, a little planning.
The system
is based on keywords of your choosing. People run a search
for a keyword that you've selected, and the ads get displayed.
You get
charged according to the number of times the ad or ads are clicked.
The ads are setup in the following format:
Headline - 25 characters
Line 1 - 35 characters
Line 2 - 35 characters
The number
of characters is in fact very limiting. The most important
point is to have the ads contain as much info as possible.
A common mistake
is that people try to lure in the visitors by
implying that the software is free. Bad idea. You'll be
bringing people in who will then not be interested in paying, and
you'll be paying for each one of them.
A good ad is all about striking a balance.
You have to
make sure that the ads are eye catching, that they contain
enough information, that they make people click them, and that
you
conform to all of Google's rules!
I think the first step should be to create some ad ideas.
Google have a few tools to help here. Details:
https://adwords.google.com/select/tools.html
You should
also take a look at their guidelines for what they will and
won't allow:
https://adwords.google.com/select/guidelines.html
There's also an excellent FAQ:
https://adwords.google.com/select/faq/index.html
And a good overview of the steps:
https://adwords.google.com/select/steps.html
Personally
I wouldn't bother setting up the account until you're ready
to go.
Once your ads
are ready, create the account, and set them all up.
It's also important
to setup some basic tracking for each ad, so that you can see
exactly how each is doing.
Click on the
campaign name that you wish to edit.
Then click
on the name of the group you wish to edit.
Check the box
next to "Keyword" so
that all keywords are checked, and
click on the button labeled"Edit CPCs/URLs".
From here you can set a custom destination URL for each.
So for example, you can set the four bids as follows:
http://yourdomain.com/index.htm?ref=ad-01
http://yourdomain.com/index.htm?ref=ad-02
http://yourdomain.com/index.htm?ref=ad-03
http://yourdomain.com/index.htm?ref=ad-04
Each of these
will then show up with a distinct URL, enabling you to
track each separately as required.
From this point
on, it's a case of regularly logging into your AdWords account
to see how each ad is performing, and comparing this with what
you see in your log analysis.
A basic example:
Ad
1 is sending 200 people/day at a cost of $0.15 per visitor.
Log analysis shows that these visitors spend an average of 8
seconds on the website, and only 1 in 150 downloads the trial
version of your software.
Ad 2, on the
other hand, sends around 10 people/day at a cost
of $0.50 per visitor. Log analysis shows that these
spend an average of over two minutes on your website,
and around 1 in 5 download your software.
It's pretty
clear which is the more productive of the two ads. Don't be misled
by simple click counts and the cost per click. These are only
part of the overall picture.
With regular
monitoring, analysis and experimentation, there's no reason why
you shouldn't be comfortably raising your daily budgets way beyond
your original expectations. Be seen, be sold.
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