Do you use Google Ads? If you do, you are probably paying ‘Googles stupidity tax’ without realising!
Google is an intuitive platform that makes it easy to be able to create and publish ads. The ease at which this can be done is both a good and bad thing.
Mistakes are easily made, as Google makes it very easy to publish ads, they also make it very easy to make costly mistakes.
Google is not there to save you; the business owner; money. Google is there to serve the searcher, giving them the most relevant and up to date content as possible.
Therefore if you are targeting the wrong customer, the wrong keyword match types, or the wrong network, you could be facing a very steep price.
Set up your account properly
If your Adwords is set up properly then you should face no issues. Have a look at the steps below to ensure you are making the correct moves.
Start with a low daily budget
£5-£10 a day will allow you to get your bearings on what to expect with a low amount of funding. This amount allows you to make mistakes safely. Change the parameters a little, see what has the best ROI then increase the budget from there.
Google will try to ‘help’ and make assumptions if you haven’t set up the account properly. Not being thorough is a great way to accumulate big costs in clicks with zero leads.
Keywords & Negative Keywords
If you followed step #2 on the account set up, you should be in good stead for this one. When setting up your keywords for an ad group they need to be structured and themed. Inexperienced advertisers fall over here, for example:
Affordable bicycles
Best bicycle for mountain biking
Best place to buy a bicycle
Bicycle repairs
A better example would be this:
Best bicycle deals today
Best bicycle for the price
Best mountain bicycle for sale
Best bicycle repairs
A tightly themed list of keywords that are relevant and themed are much more effective.
A negative keyword is one that prevents your ad from being shown through the use of a certain keyword or phrase. This is known as a negative match, and can be useful if you don’t want your ad to be shown inappropriately.
Broad match, Phrase Match, & Exact Match
Broad match Ads may show on searches that relate to your keyword, this can include searches that don’t contain the keyword but ones that have similar meaning. Broad match is the default type keyword, and will ensure that your phrase is spread across as many channels as possible.
Phrase Match Ads show searches that include the meaning of your keyword. For example, if you search ‘Baseball Glove’, the ad may show searches for: ‘equipment for baseball’ and ’Yankees Baseball Glove’. The Ad would not show for searches like: ‘Baseball bat and baseball glove’.
Exact match ads will only show on searches that have the same meaning or intent of the keyword. This gives you the most control over your ad although it will be seen by a smaller audience. If the phrase does not exactly match the keyword, the ad will not be seen.
Come up with some cracking copy
Use the keywords to create some copy for a compelling ad. These ad groups should be entirely focussed on one idea, product or service. So having tight keyword groups helps here.
Test and refine
Use your analytics as a guide. Test your ads, budget, keywords, and landing pages once a week. Refine your content and your offers too.
The longer you are in the game, the easier it gets. So start with a small budget, figure it out, then expand outwards.
Fancy a chat? Click the link below to talk anything marketing.
https://meetings.hubspot.com/jacob-vint/
Cheers,
Jacob