Articles in the ‘MSN AdCenter’ Category

8 PPC marketing tips that I use for every campaign I do

Tuesday, July 31st, 2007

I’ve been doing PPC marketing for a fair while now for myself (personally and for my businesses) and back in the day for a long list of clients, over time I’ve developed a list of golden rules that I always try to stick by when building and managing a PPC campaign.

They’re fairly straight forward but more often than not they’re overlooked by most people and their ad spend gets blown out of proportion with not enough ROI (Return on Investment)

So here it is, my 8 tips for a successful marketing campaign:

  • ALWAYS choose counties that your customers will be in, don’t go and click “all countries”
  • BE SPECIFIC with your keywords - if you sell shoes, what kind of shoes do you sell? Put down the brands and types, like running shoes, indoor sports shoes, track shoes, Nike indoor shoes, Nike tennis shoes
  • AVOID using keywords that corss into markets you’re not interested in, for example, if you used the keyword shoes, but you don’t offer tennis shoes, then remove that keyword from the search, for Google Adwords you add the keyword with a negative in front of it like this “-tennis” and “-tennis shoes”. If you do that your ad wont show up for people who search those terms.
  • BUILD a landing page for your visitors that is relevant to your keywords or advert description. If I’m searching for Nike running shoes and I click on your advert that is advertising Nike running shoes then the first thing I will expect to see is a page on your site dedicated to Nike running shoes, not your homepage with Adidas, Puma and other general shoes. Your trying to get the targeted visitors, so give them their targeted page, the less I have to do to find what I’ve clicked on the more chance you’ll get me to buy
  • TRACK those landing pages, of the people who landed, what advert did they land from, how long did they stay, where did they go elsewhere in the site, did they exit or did they buy? If they are exiting or surfing else ware then update the landing page to something more relevant to where they are all surfing to
  • REPORT on what’s happening, what’s the CPC for each keyword and advert, how well are they converting, what’s the ROI for each keyword / advert and campaign
  • MONITOR every aspect and make the changes you need to so that your visitors buy what your trying to sell
  • TWEEK everything constantly! If after a few days some of your pages aren’t converting them change them, if for some of your adverts your converting US and not UK visitors then stop showing them in the UK, whatever you do, never just set and forget the campaign, no matter how well you think you’ve set it up, go and do it all again based on a few days results

I can’t stress that enough, nothing is perfect the first time around, trends and traffic always change, once you’ve built this campaign check your data, look at what keywords are performing and try new things, I’m a fan of not competing with 1st place in the list, I like to keep my CPC down a little and still make conversions, but if I have a page or two that are converting really well on a few keywords then I’ll up my per click spend as long as it keeps converting and producing a good ROI.

If some pages aren’t converting then change them or change the advert that’s sending traffic to them, your outlaying the money to get the visitors there so outlay the time to make the return on investment, build good landing pages that are easy to read and are relevant to the advert.

The only time I go and use general keywords like “shoes” I’ll setup my advert to be very specific in its description, so if my keyword for the ad is “shoes” then my advert will be “Nike Track Shoes – New mens Nike 07 track shoes on sale this week only for $50” Know what I mean? And my landing page will be just that, a list of my Mens Nike track shoes that are around the $50 mark that are on sale, make the page very “retail” or something along those lines. Don’t just advertise the mens Nike shoes then throw a user who has clicked on that ad expecting that to your index page that’s a bit of everything.

Anyway, I’m babbling on about things now, hope that all helped a little.

Microsoft Advertising gains ground

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Speaking of advertising companies and how much they are competing, Microsoft has just secured Digg as a new publisher of advertising. That’s right; Digg has dropped Google as their contextual advertising partner and are switching to Microsoft.

Microsoft HAD MySpace.com but lost it to Google last year, but Microsoft have Fackbook.com under their belt at the moment so adding Digg to that little portfolio of major social sites is a nice notch on their belt and is sure to attract more advertisers the Microsoft AdCenter advertising system.

Personally I love it, Google having such a large market share is just wrong, as an advertiser if everyone is advertising on the one network the cost of advertising is going to be higher because it’s more competitive for position.

Also, as a publisher of ads, if you were kicked from Google for any undisclosed reason (which they do a lot) you wouldn’t be as worried if you could switch your advertising over to Yahoo or Microsoft – knowing they would be able to deliver similar advertising revenue to you.

I can’t wait for Google to lose a bunch of market share in search and advertising. They defiantly need to lose ground in the search arena too, it’s the same problem, everyone is relying on one source of traffic. When Google changes their search algorithms you can get dropped significantly, but if you were getting an even amount of traffic from say four or five different search engines then it wouldn’t matter so much, if you had trouble optimising your site for one engine, you could try for others and so on.

AOL pushes the advertising game to a new level

Thursday, July 26th, 2007

Google is leading the field in advertising thanks to their early purchase of Applied Semantics and the subsequent integration of it into their search solutions. Their next acquisition of DoubleClick defiantly helps their market share in online advertising since DoubleClick was probably the biggest online advertising company around.

Yahoo and Microsoft aren’t far behind Google, Yahoo bought 20% of Right Media for $680M, and a 35%-50% stake in Tyroo Media for an undisclosed sum of cash, Microsoft bought aQuantive and ScreenTonic to help their online advertising market share and now AOL continues their buy-out for market share game.

AOL has just bought out Tacoda, a web firm with technology to target advertisers. This is one of many advertising company buy outs by AOL including big boy Advertising.com back in ‘04. They also bought out ADTECH, an adserving company out of Germany and an internet marketing provider based in Sweeden – TradeDoubler and Third Screen Media all in the last 12 months.

It would seem that AOL is still committed to entering this online advertising war with the other 3 big players. Now might be a good time to start an online advertising company, get some investors, acquire lots of clients, use some fancy buzz words and try and get yourself bought out, at the rate these guys are buying up advertising companies there’s not going to be many other big independent advertising companies around in a year or so.

Microsoft patents the mother of all adware systems

Thursday, July 19th, 2007

I came across this article on ars technica, it’s an article about Microsoft filing a patent for an “advertising framework” that uses “context data” from your hard drive to show you advertisements and “apportion and credit advertising revenue” to ad suppliers in real time.

Either Microsoft is stabbing in the dark at the future of things, or they have some grand plan for the next version of Windows.

The adware framework would leave almost no data untouched in its quest to sell you stuff. It would inspect “user document files, user e-mail files, user music files, downloaded podcasts, computer settings, computer status messages (e.g., a low memory status or low printer ink),” and more. How could we have been so blind as to not see the marketing value in computer status messages?

Less ads = more money

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

I’m a believer of ‘change is good’. It’s the human condition that we hate change, but I love it, I get bored doing the same thing for more than a few days and so will your visitors. If they see the same ads in the same spots all the time they’ll become immune to them to an extent so why not switch it up? Try some different PPC networks in different areas of your site, try different styles of ads, different sizes and colours ads or change the type of ad to a CPM ad, use ad links in your content and even cut back on the amount of ads you’re bombarding your users with.

The less Google AdSense ads you have on your page the better, Google deliver the higher paying ones first so if you have one ad box you’re going to have one box of high paying clicks, if you have 3, you’re going to end up with high paying mixed with low paying so you’re better off using just 1 box and putting it in a better position, move it around on a weekly basis to test where it’s performing better for you change it up a little.

If you need to make more money from your site don’t put more ads on it, better engineer your site to make money, move ads around, use a different style of ad or a whole other ad network.

Here’s a list of ad networks I like

What ad networks do you use and trust?