Tag Archives: Google AdWords

Google Revamps AdWords’ Location Targeting

adwords

Google AdWords is a service that enables you to create and run ads for your business that run on Google and its advertising network; you pay only when people click your ads. AdWords also includes location targeting so you can target ads to specific locations, which is great for small businesses that only have customers in certain regions or those that want to target top-performing geographic areas so more clicks translate into actual sales. Google just announced it has a revamped AdWords Location Targeting Tool that will make it easier to find and get more detail on target locations. READ MORE »

Google Introduces Bid-Per-Call in AdWords

google adwords

Over the next few weeks Google will be rolling out the ability for advertisers to bid for phone calls—in addition to bidding for clicks—when they show Google search ads on computers and tablets. READ MORE »

Android Holds 54% of Mobile Ad Impressions

android

Millennial Media, a mobile advertising company, has released a report on impression share in the mobile ad market for August. Android led the industry with a 54 percent share of total impressions. Millennial combined data for tablets, smartphones, and other connected devices for its report. Apples iOS commanded 28 percent of impressions. READ MORE »

Google Reaches $500M Settlement With Federal Government

google_logo1

Google has reached a $500 million settlement to close the books on charges from the federal government that the search giant hosted U.S. advertisements for Canadian pharmacies known to be fraudulent. READ MORE »

Google to Offer Credit Card to AdWords Users

google_logo1

Google is now dangling an interesting carrot in front of select U.S. AdWords users: a new low-interest credit card with no annual fee. The only catch is you can’t use it to buy office supplies or airline tickets but only Google advertising. According to Alexei Oreskovic reporting for Reuters, the AdWords Business credit card is Google’s first inroad into vendor financing. READ MORE »

Google Introduces AdWords Express

google-adwords-express

Google announced yesterday that it would be launching a version of its advertising platform AdWords designed for small businesses. The new advertising system, AdWords Express, isn’t entirely novel–Google launched a test version in limited markets last year called Google Boost. READ MORE »

Google’s Top Advertiser? It’s Amazon

Despite Amazon’s attempt to help circumvent Google’s iron-fisted control of the Android platform with its recently-released App Store for Android, the online retail giant is filling Google’s coffers via ad revenue. READ MORE »

7 Secrets to Getting More from Google AdWords

our beautiful site

Let’s say your Google AdWords budget is $50,000 a year. You’re competing against much larger companies with budgets several times larger. That means they can bid much more than you on the key words or phrases where you want your ads to appear. You’re out of luck, right? Not necessarily. Bidding for keywords on Google is not a straight auction. Instead, Google assigns each ad a Quality Score, a number between 1 and 10 that reflects whether Google thinks its users will like your ad and the web page it links to. That number influences how high your ad will rank in an auction. A higher Quality Score means you can outrank competitors with higher bids, and get much more for your advertising dollar. “Doubling your Quality Score means you only have to pay half as much per click,” explains Frederick Vallaeys, AdWords evangelist at Google. Okay, you’re sold on the idea of raising your Quality Score. How do you do it? Here are tactics that can really help. 1. Don’t run ads users won’t click on. Let’s just try this ad and see if anyone clicks on it. After all, since it’s pay-per-click, if they don’t click it costs us nothing. That may seem like good logic, but it’s a big mistake. Click through rate (CTR) is one of the most important elements of Quality Score, so if an ad for your company runs and users don’t click it, it can lower your Quality Score, thus costing you more to run the same ad or even other ads in future. (Google assigns Quality Scores to ad groups as well as advertising accounts, so a bad CTR can hurt you in many ways.) Constantly testing slightly different wording and picking the ads with better CTR will help you not only by bringing you more customers but also by lowering your cost per click. 2. Divide and conquer. “We used to get 2,000 keywords in one group of ads that sent everyone to the same page,” says Howie Jacobson, author of Google AdWords for Dummies. “What we’ve learned is that it’s better for both Google and for advertisers if we divide those into groups of a few words each that relate to a common desire and then send users to a dedicated landing page. For example, if I sell camera supplies, instead of grouping ‘Nikon,’ ‘Canon,’ ‘point and shoot,’ and ‘SLR’ into one ad group, I’d break it down. I’d have an ad group that related only to batteries for Canon PowerShot cameras, and someone who clicked on that ad would go to a landing page with links to those specific batteries.” “A small company can refine its budgeting and bid on very specific key phrases that a larger company might not,” adds Peter Levin, manager of paid search at LSF Interactive, an online marketing company. “Small companies can use this to their advantage.” 3. Get rid of keywords that aren’t helping you. David Sarment, D.D.S. reports that new customers from Google increased dramatically with a few small changes to his AdWords strategy. One of these was changing the keywords his practice bid on. “I treat gum disease and I also do implant, bone grafts, and bone reconstruction surgery,” he explains. “So I had two distinct campaigns, one around ‘dental implants’ and related terms, the other around ‘periodontal’ or ‘gum disease.’ Dental implants are a hot topic so the effect of that ad campaign was diluted. At some point, I decided to stop the dental implants campaign and focus on the gum disease side. It worked out well because there were a lot fewer ads popping up for patients interesting learning about gum disease.” For LoopFuse, a marketing automation company, better keyword performance meant avoiding keywords that fit its market, but were too general. “We have a lot of competitors in our space, but we specifically target small and mid-size businesses,” says Sean Dwyer, CEO. “Bigger companies might outbid us on ‘lead management’ so we targeted ‘lead management SMB’ searches. Homing in on our market has been essential to our AdWord success.” 4. Add content to your website and landing page. “Having useful content is one of the big things that will help your Quality Score,” Vallaeys says. “We warn people not to repurpose content from other sites. We want unique content, a variety of content, and frequently updated content. We believe this leads to a better user experience.” To Jacobson, all this adds up to one piece of advice. “I tell all my clients to get a blog,” he says. “There’s no business that can’t position itself as a source of credible information. It doesn’t matter whether you’re selling office supplies or microsurgery equipment. People use Google because they don’t know what to get yet and are seeking information. So positioning yourself as expert is great for your Quality Score, and it’s great for your customers who are usually looking for someone to trust.” 5. Give users choices. You may want your landing page to urge users toward a strong call to action, such as “Click here to learn more about our product” or “Sign up for our free e-newsletter.” But Google wants users to have a wide array of choices, and having a menu of navigation options on your landing page will improve your Quality Score. “If users go to a landing page, they usually want more information,” Vallaeys says. “They may want to explore the site, and if they can’t they become frustrated. That will be reflected in a poorer landing page Quality Score.” 6. Tell about yourself. Does your site have prominent links to an “about us” (or “company”) section? And does it offer a privacy policy anyplace users are asked to enter information such as their e-mail addresses? If the answer to either question is no, your Quality Score will suffer. “We want our advertisers to offer transparency,” Vallaeys explains. “And if users are going to give you their data, we prefer to see a good privacy policy and no-spam policy in place.” 7. Make sure your pages load quickly. “If a page loads too slowly, that’s not a great user experience,” Vallaeys says. “That’s one specific area we tell advertisers to look at, and if your landing page is loading slowly, put up a bigger server, change hosting companies, or change the graphics on the page.” “Site up time is critical,” adds Kenneth Wisnefski, founder and CEO of online marketing firm WebiMax. “Even small down times that are otherwise unnoticeable are picked up by Google’s automatic quality checks. Obviously, if Google checks a landing page and it’s down, by definition it’s not relevant and there’s a high probability of a Quality Score penalty.” To keep this from happening to you, he advises, “Consider using a site monitoring service. And if necessary, changing to a different provider.”  

The New Small Business On-Ramp to Social CRM

Over the past 12-18 months, major customer relationship management (CRM) players like Salesforce.com, Sage, SAP and others have been adding “social” abilities to traditional CRM applications — like viewing social profile information from Twitter and Facebook.  Additionally, newer services such as BatchBook, BantamLive, and others are creating CRM applications on a social foundation aimed at the small and mid-sized business market.  And with every passing day, social technologies are merging with traditional CRM functionality, giving companies more efficient ways of transforming clicks into valuable customer relationships.  A little over two years ago I wrote about the Three A’s of Social CRM.  Back then most people were focused on social media, but not so much on its impact on customer relationship management tools and strategies.  Even a year ago when I compared traditional CRM with Social CRM the interest was pretty much limited to industry insiders.  That’s not the case today, as the topic of Social CRM has become the focus of many in business.  Having focused on CRM for almost two decades — as an application developer, early Salesforce.com certified implementation partner, and finally as an industry watcher — this may be the most important development I’ve seen.  I say this because technology has amplified the voice of the customer, and given them greater control over who they engage with, when they do, and how they do so.  This in turn is forcing those charged with engaging them to change their approach:  in order to connect with customers who Tweet to thousands of followers, watch videos on mobile phones, and form their own online communities.  This also is forcing CRM vendors to provide services that do more than just store customer information and track activities.  But there’s one company that looks to be creating a platform small businesses can use to turn a variety of online interactions into stronger customer relationships — and it’s not even a CRM company, in the traditional sense. Keeping with the AAA theme from a couple of years back, below are a few reasons why Google is becoming the onramp to Social CRM success for small and mid-sized businesses. Apps — Internal Even with Facebook hitting the 500 million member mark — with billions of interactions taking place weekly — the majority of people in business-to-business (B2B) organizations  I’ve come across say no more than 15-20 percent of their total interactions on Facebook are business related.  Conversely, about 80-90 percent of e-mail interactions these same folks have are business related, and with much higher frequency.  And in many cases, the e-mail exchanges are more intimate in nature, from a business perspective.  This may be because the conversations are more direct and focused, and the people engaged in the conversations are more focused on each other — not the overall community — during these interaction.  So even today, a large percentage of customer relationship building takes place in our inboxes. Just as Microsoft Outlook was (and still is) key to increasing CRM user adoption over the past decade, Gmail is looking to be that key in the Social Age. More small companies are using Google’s low-cost e-mail hosting services — making Gmail the fastest growing of the big online e-mail providers, closing in on 180 million accounts.  But the choice to use Gmail goes well beyond price.  Google has turned the inbox into a relationship-building platform enabling multiple points of contact, and increased opportunities for meaningful interactions. When you exchange e-mails with other Gmail users, Google can (based on your security settings) connect you with them if you both use Google Reader — giving you the ability to see what kind of information they are interested in, and start feeding them more of it.  And when you go to YouTube, Google lists the YouTube channels of those you interact with via Gmail at the top of the page — giving you a chance to subscribe to them.  So Google is building an interaction-based platform on the bedrock of Gmail.  And as you exchange emails, you can grow the relationship wider by engaging across apps like Reader and Youtube.  You can also deepen the engagement with real-time collaborative interactions via Google Docs, Sheets and Sites. Apps – External Not only has Google created a business interaction-based platform with their dizzying array of applications, but they’ve invited third-party application developers to extend that foundation through the Google Apps Marketplace.  And according to a recent post on the Official Google Apps blog, the top search term for installable apps in the marketplace is CRM. Of the thirteen CRM apps in the marketplace, five of them are under the Social CRM umbrella, including Gist, BatchBook, and BantamLive.  Vendors like Zoho and Tactile add more traditional CRM functionality to Google’s interaction platform.  These and a growing group of application developers will continue building the CRM functionality Google doesn’t build itself. Android While everyone has been captivated by the developments surrounding the iPhone4 release, worldwide sales of phones with Google’s Android operating system crossed over the five million unit mark, according to Gartner.  Google recently announced that 160,000 Android units get activated every day, and it expects Android to eventually be a $10 billion business. No doubt the same apps being used on Web browsers are also driving up Android activations, as people are able to work from wherever they need to.  But Android tablet devices haven’t even hit the market yet.  And with multiple vendors like Cisco, LG, and others committing to running Android on their upcoming tablets, Google will effectively be extending their business interaction platform to new areas.  Cisco’s tablet — The Cius — is a key piece in the company’s push to enable the social enterprise.  The device will be optimized for collaboration via video chat, Webex meetings, and conference calls.  So the device will be optimized for video interactions, while other vendors may optimize their devices for different kinds of interactions.  But the bottom line is Android will be extended to cover more ground, while still offering Apps people can run across vendor-specific tablet devices. Analytics Google Analytics has become of staple of many businesses to track their Web traffic.  And Google’s ability to turn text into context to serve up ads when we do searches and read emails has driven targeted traffic via Google Adwords.  And with this ability to analyze text for ads, Google should also be able to analyze text for sentiment.  Just imagine if Google (or a third party developer) could analyze the interactions we’ve had with someone across all the Google channels we engage them over so we can know what’s on their mind, and also what is their state of mind — and how they feel about us.  Or even being able to take a group of people we communicate with on Google channels, say VP’s of marketing in the retail industry, to find out what those interactions can reveal.  This could lead to more targeted, efficient and meaningful interactions with those we’re trying to create relationships with — based on a business interaction lifecycle taking place across Google’s services. Social CRM is about meaningful interaction as well as information management.  And while business interactions are taking place all over, Google — with search, e-mail, Web traffic, and collaborations via Docs, Sheets, etc. — has created an inexpensive platform for building relationships with customers in the Social Age.  Through Apps (including third party apps), Android, and Analytics, Google is as much a Social CRM player as anyone else.  And for small businesses it may be the most important player. Brent Leary is a small-business technology analyst, adviser, and award-winning blogger. He is the co-author of Barack 2.0: Social Media Lessons for Small Business. His blog can be found at http://brentleary.com, or follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/brentleary .

Social Media: Measuring Your Company’s ROI

our beautiful site

Michael Sinkin, D.D.S. practices dentistry near Grand Central Station in New York City. He took over his practice from a dentist who retired, and inherited many patients who were near or past retirement themselves. So Sinkin set out to add some younger patients to round out the practice. Reaching this age group meant going online. “No one uses the phone book anymore; everyone is Googling,” he notes. But that presented a marketing problem, because other, much larger practices in midtown Manhattan were making heavy use of Google AdWords, in which advertisers bid on such search terms as “New York City dentist.” “A lot of these practices were investing $25,000 to $30,000 a month in pay-per-click advertising,” notes Betsy Kent, president of Be Visible Associates, an Internet marketing firm that works with Sinkin. “That just didn’t make sense for us.” Instead, they devised a social media-based strategy with the goal of bringing in new patients, especially those in their 20s, 30s, and 40s. Sinkin was already writing short items about amusing or interesting things he encountered in the course of his work, so they began publishing these as blog entries. In addition, Kent began searching Twitter for local tweets with the words “dentist” or “dentistry” in them. When she found someone complaining of a painful trip to the dentist or dreading an upcoming visit, she would send words of comfort and commiseration. Some of these tweeters appreciated the kind words, followed the links to Sinkin’s website, and liked what they saw. “We’ve been doing this for about 10 weeks, and I’ve already gotten four new patients,” Sinkin says. In his profession, a new patient can become a lifelong customer, as well as a source of ongoing referrals, so the increase is very significant. “And I’m not even counting two patients who just came in for emergency service,” he says. Who says you can’t measure ROI for social media? As Sinkin’s experience shows, it’s perfectly possible to set concrete goals for social media, beyond the vague “increasing visibility.” In fact, it’s imperative, says Dallas Lawrence, chair of the social media practice at Levick Strategic Communications. “Be wary of the salesperson who says social media isn’t trackable,” he says. “It’s absolutely possible to calculate the return on investment (ROI) for a social media campaign.” Here are some tips for making sure your social media efforts really do have a positive effect on your company’s P&L: Set goals, not just benchmarks. “It’s critical to establish an objective in advance,” Lawrence says. “That objective has to relate to your business model, to whatever your ultimate goal is. So setting a target for, say, 10,000 Twitter followers is not a goal in itself, though it can be a good benchmark for whether the campaign is working.” At Home Creations, a home builder in Oklahoma that caters to people building their first homes, marketing director Jan Astani recently achieved her goal of 1,000 fans on Facebook. To get there, the company offered incentives, such as a $50 Target gift card for two randomly selected Facebook members who became fans during December. But the goal serves a business-focused purpose. “For 2009, our goal was to put an emphasis on Internet marketing,” she says, noting that at least 75 percent of Americans start their search for a new home online. “We’re trying to drive traffic to our website with everything we do.” It appears to be working: Website traffic was up 50 percent in 2009 over 2008, Astani reports, and there were a record number of sales that began as Internet-based sales leads. Think long-term vs. short-term. “Decide up front if you’re trying to reach a long-term goal or a short term objective, because the approach will vary dramatically,” Lawrence says. “For instance, if you’ve got a promotion or a new store opening coming up, you can jump-start something very effective with Twitter, but it might not have a long term effect. If you want to build sustained momentum, you might want to think about reaching out to the blogosphere with thought leadership.” Whatever you do, he adds, don’t look at your various social media efforts in isolation. “A big mistake that I often see is when customers say, ‘Give me a Twitter program, give me a Facebook program, give me blog outreach, and let’s do SEO.’ They’re not separate. In order to get the impact you want, you have to intertwine all those pieces and let them build on one another.” Use the Internet’s power to reach precisely the audience you want. “People are shocked when I tell them that, with Facebook’s user applications for small businesses, I can find my key customer base right down to the block he or she might be on,” Lawrence says. “I can find the information they readily provide: age, race, single or dating status, ethnicity, parents or childless, military or civilian, based on the groups they’ve self-selected to follow. And you can often figure out income status from the other information.” Be prepared for a mid-course correction. What if you fail to meet the goals for your social media campaign? “Take another look at your goals,” Lawrence advises. “Make sure that they were reasonable.” Perhaps a different goal would be more appropriate realistic. But, he says, “Make sure your overall objectives are never forgotten.”