December 7th, 2015 | By: Asher Elran | Tags: Customer Acquisition
Google AdWords is a heavyweight when it comes to understanding and monitoring the desires and questions of Google searchers, and ultimately understanding what affects the overall decision making that drives clicks.
By digging through and analyzing data, one can find explanations for budget leakage, and reasoning for campaign renovation. Using AdWords, in combination with multiple tools, users can conduct an accurate analysis of a campaigns current performance, both to discover strengths to continue taking advantage of and areas to improve.
For those of you looking to discover new ways to analyze your campaigns and make large and small scale changes to your account, join us for this ultimate PPC account analysis.
In order to perform an analysis this in depth, you will need to take advantage of some tools. Each of these offers new insights, and a better understanding of the market and competition that you’ll need to analyze. The tools below were used for the example client:
ICCS stands for Impressions, Clicks, Conversions, and Spend. The relation between the four categories yields important insights that a user can learn from, as well as take action on. The graph below shows the previous six months and the massive fluctuations between the four categories. Every graph will be different, but below are five main takeaways concluded by looking at this graph.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Quality score is one of the most important factors for any PPC account. When an account has great quality scores, it’s clicks will cost less, it’s rankings will improve, and the entire account will see better ROI.
Keyword quality score is marked at 6 out of 10 when initiated. After a significant number of impressions, Google will display the quality score based on a campaign’s performance. Quality Score basically reveals how Google rates a campaign for the SERPs. Comparing with competitors will help to analyze a standard industry benchmark that should be aimed for.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Using the Location Report in AdWords, a user can see each of the targeted locations. They can also see the performance of each location, and take action based on it. AdWords allows for country, state, county, and city based targeting, so users can get pretty in depth here based on CTR.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Impression share is the amount that ads are triggered by relevant search queries. If an account has a low average impression share, it can have a negative impact on the performance of the overall PPC campaigns. Basically, the less that users show in search, the less clicks, traffic, and conversions they’ll receive.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Using AdWords, a user can view the performance of their campaign based on the seven days of the week. Some days are more active than others depending on the niche of the account. Some days, active searches may increase, which in turn will improve impressions, and hopefully CTR. After discovering the best converting days, a user can establish which days are better to target.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Using Google AdWords, a user can see the performance of an account, based on the 24 hours of each day. When conversions decrease during specific hours of the day, ultimately, the Cost per Acquisition (CPA) will increase for the entire campaign. Users can, therefore, target specific hours of the day to improve performance, and avoid budget leakage.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Users can look at the search terms that their ads appeared for by opening the search query report. Some ads will perform better for specific keywords typed in by searchers. By reviewing this report, users can discover new keywords with high potential, and also weed out the irrelevant terms by placing them in the negative keywords list.
Analysis:
Digging for four types of keywords, over the course of 60 days. Below are the four categories into which these search terms fit, along with the cost of appearing for them.
Example keyword cloud
How to improve:
Using Google Analytics for the analysis, open the keyword positions report. Here, you can view the visits (sessions) alongside the conversions that the user has received. Each keyword has performed in multiple positions in the SERPs. Once the user can see a specific position in which the keyword performs well, they can adjust the bid to ensure the keyword achieves that position more often.
Analysis:
How to improve:
The relationship between the keyword groups of main competitors reveals new opportunities and areas from where we can eliminate leakage. Finding keywords that only competitors share, or don’t share, provides the user with important insights for keywords.
Analysis:
How to improve:
If a user’s ads are not relevant to searchers queries, then CTR will be low for a campaign. Even if a campaign has high impression share, they will continually have low CTR if their ads are not relevant. Understanding CTR and the patterns that improve it will help a user’s campaign ads and make them more relevant for search queries.
How to improve:
Any PPC account requires continual maintenance and optimization. If a user actively manages and optimizes an account, they are more likely to see better ROI from it. View this report in Google analytics to gain insights into time spent on an account.
How to improve:
Long tail keywords are the keywords that are made up of two and three words. They are keywords and phrases that are harder to discover and target, but are less competitive. Oftentimes, advertisers will focus on the competitive and costly one word keywords and neglect the longer ones. Discovering and targeting these LTK can produce strong conversions, for a cheaper cost to the user.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Ad text is what searchers see in the SERPs. It’s the main factor that helps them decide whether they will click on an ad, or pass it by. Improving ad text can improve a campaign’s CTR, Quality score, and overall return. By comparing a user’s ad text with competitor’s text, they can evaluate the effectiveness of it.
Analysis:
Total ads / Ads per group
How to improve:
Ad extensions allow ads to be optimized with extra business information. They are direct links to web pages, click-able phone numbers for mobile users, and business information underneath the ad, like address, store rating, etc. Ad extensions generally improve ad CTR, and are a worthwhile optimization for PPC account users.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Strong ads alone are not enough to maximize an account ROI. Campaigns can benefit from having multiple landing pages, and mobile ready pages to optimize and maximize conversions. Effective landing pages can increase quality score for keywords, and improve conversions, because, when created right, they will be more targeted towards specific keyword(s).
Analysis:
How to improve:
With mobile searches already surpassing desktop searches in 2015, users can identify and leverage opportunities for improvement in mobile PPC ads. They can also identify things such as text ads optimized for mobile search, sitelinks, call extensions, location extensions, and other mobile paid search best practices.
Analysis:
How to improve:
Negative keywords are words that you don’t want to show up for in searches. When adding terms as negative keywords, ads won’t show to people searching for those terms or visiting sites that contain those terms. Identifying them helps users to reach the most interested customers, reduce costs, and increase return on investment (ROI).
Analysis:
Example of irrelevant | Example of informational |
limit | Why |
Tucson | When |
yelp | Can I |
How | |
pill | What |
Memes | Can you |
Vegas | |
Meaning | |
Calculator | |
video | |
Information | |
Data | |
Database | |
Public records | |
court |
How to improve:
To measure a campaigns success, use:
Research and Planning – (7-10 Business Days)
Transition Action Plan – (90 Days)
On-Going PPC Management – (Ongoing)
As time continues, an in-depth understanding of the PPC account will help to determine some of the large scale changes that you make. It will also ensure that the changes made to the account are intelligent, data based decisions that will improve the campaign by decreasing leakage, and increasing ROI.
About the Author
Asher Elran is a practical software engineer and a marketing specialist. CEO at Dynamic Search, founder of Web Ethics, as well as the co-founder of the software, Ignitur.
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