May, 2008 Archive
May 28th, 2008 by Renner in AdWords Editor
We all know and love AdWords Editor because it saves valuable time when performing tedious and time consuming tasks…but there’s always more fat that can be trimmed. So here are my top 3 wishes for AdWords Editor to include in a future version.
1. Ad Scheduling
This is the most obvious. Anyone with more than 7.23 campaigns knows it’s a pain to go through each campaign one by one to change the day and time that those campaigns are to show up. I wouldn’t have made this the top request if at least in the interface it was possible to click the little button that applies certain settings to all the campaigns below that…but it’s not possible.
2. Automatic Tracking URL Generation
We all know how tedious it can be to generate unique URLs for individual keywords…especially if someone is using more than one tracking system (which is typically the case when you have Google Analytics as a default tracking system for clients). If there were a way that Google could automatically pull in GA tags by linking up with the analytics portion of any given AdWords account…well, that would be amazing of course. But even if there was a simple setting that allowed an AdWords Editor user to set up their tracking URL structure it would make adding keywords much easier as opposed to using Excel to concatenate.
3. Integrated Keyword Research Tool
Google, listen up. If you want to shy away from the obvious and timely attempts to simply show your stockholders how recession resistant you are, *cough* automatic matching *cough*, then integrate your keyword research tool within AdWords Editor.
I personally use Google’s keyword tool as one of the methods to generate new keywords but find myself having to spend about an hour in Excel filtering through duplicates, weeding out erroneous terms and of course concatenating landing page URLs once I have a final list. Not to mention having to find the appropriate Campaigns and Ad Groups to assign each keyword.
Yes, I know that you can add keywords from the keyword tool into campaigns and ad groups through the web interface…but anyone who deals with thousands of keywords on a regular basis knows that the much preferred method in adding keywords to a campaign is through AdWords Editor…it’s just easier to work with bulk data.
So there you have it, my top 3 wishes for AdWords Editor. Let me know if you agree/disagree…or if there’s anything YOU’D like to see integrated into already amazing tool that saves so many of us a TON of time on a daily basis.
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May 14th, 2008 by Renner in PPC News
Interesting CNN article that address some points outlined below:
- · Why are some people leaving the utopist work environment Google provides in order to start their own projects?
- · Does Google need to worry when they’re netting $1 billion (billion with a B) each quarter (quarter with a Q)?
- · What does Marc Benioff mean when he says “They have a fantastic cash cow. They need a goat and a chicken.”
- · Will Google retain it’s quirkiness despite having become a huge corporation? Is that even possible?
- · With so many side projects going on inside Google, aren’t some people working in parallel on the same thing with no collaboration?
- · Is Google’s next big success going to be Google Apps (MS Office competitor) or Android (open source cell phone)?
- · Is Google recession proof or recession resistant?
- · Did a Microsoft executive actually compliment Google with this quote? “They could be such pioneers that no one will know for years.”
Bottom line…we still won’t know what to expect next from Google. Google is a riddle inside a mystery wrapped in an enigma. Apparently that’s all you need to create in order to net $1 billion (with a B) each quarter (with a Q).
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May 12th, 2008 by Renner in Google AdWords, Tools
Do you have a lot of traffic coming through your PPC campaigns?
Do you want to know not only what headline/call to action works best, but in what combination?
If you said yes to either one of those questions then this tool can help you out. If you’re not familiar with Taguchi methods then check out Wikipedia’s long explanation or read the next sentence. It’s a way to test out a butt load of variables and how those variables interact with each other.
How does this apply to PPC campaigns?
That’s where AdComparator comes in. Despite disappearing for a while, this useful script is back and will help you determine which lines of ad copy are most effective but more importantly how they interact with each other to create an invincible, CTR increasing, ad position boosting SUPER AD!
This doesn’t just apply to PPC campaigns, it can be used for email or any other campaign that involves the testing of various variables. Yes, I just said various variables.
Go ahead, give it a shot!
Ad Comparator
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May 10th, 2008 by Renner in Local Advertising
Okay, so maybe Flickr has had this feature for a while…but whenever Google seems to integrate something into their user interface it all of a sudden becomes popular; remember MapQuest before Google Maps? I just think Google makes things better all around.
So I did a search for an address in Tempe and found that there were random pictures popping up nearby:

I guess Flickr has had the same feature for a while…but even as a Flickr user I wasn’t very well aware of it, therefore it’s not important
Right now I”m probably going to waste about a half hour just exploring different areas and seeing what pictures are up, because I LOVE playing with Google Maps and making up for having never taken a geography class (it was never included in my curriculum much to my dismay).
Here’s Google’s quick little YouTube video that explains what it is…but not how they find the pictures. I’d be interested to know how they select them, possibly Picasa?
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May 7th, 2008 by Renner in Analytics
The holy grail of search marketing!
If you ask a search marketing professional what the number one thing that needs to be improved in the industry is…they’ll most likely say analytics.
Not just analytics, but being able to attribute value to each online marketing tactic. This means the broad terms you’re bidding on, which actually triggered the beginning of a sale/conversion, will finally prove their value. Currently it’s either a guessing game or crude testing process that will show the drop in conversions/traffic when broader terms are turned off in a PPC campaign, banner campaigns stop running or branded terms are removed from a PPC campaign (thus reducing overall site traffic).
We all know that in most cases banner ads provide an incremental lift in ROI when paired with PPC campaigns, and that running branded terms on a PPC campaign provide an incremental lift in overall search traffic (the running of the two provides more traffic than each separately brings in), but until Coremetrix came out with this product we haven’t been able to prove how effective advertising dollars really are.
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