Google For Dummies Free Open Book

Google For Dummies

Previous Section
 < Day Day Up > 
Next Section

Understanding the AdWords Concept

A business of any size, even an individual just starting out, may purchase AdWords ads. There is no exclusivity based on type of business, amount of revenue, promotional budget, or any other criterion. You do need a Web page. You do not need to be selling something, though there is probably a low limit on the amount of money anybody would spend on advertising a hobby site.

Beginning an AdWords campaign consists of four main steps:

  1. Sign up for an AdWords account.

  2. Write an ad.

  3. Choose keywords with which your ad will be associated.

  4. Price your ad and decide on an overall payment budget.

You may create the account and your ads before committing to the campaign; your ads can be activated anytime after creating them.

AdWords ads are nothing more than blurbs. With no graphics and minimal text, they fit concisely along the right side of search results pages. Figure 11-1 shows a results page with several AdWords placements, as well as two sponsorships above the listings. Sponsorships are more expensive, and this section deals only with AdWords.

Click To expand
Figure 11-1: AdWords ads appear in a column on the right side of search results pages.

The essential item that you create in an AdWords campaign is the ad group. An ad group contains one ad, its keywords, and its underlying cost structure. (In truth, an ad group may contain more than one ad, but just one set of keywords targeted by the ads. In the interest of keeping things simple, this section considers an ad group as containing a single ad.)

Following is a breakdown of every element in an ad group:

  • Headline: Each ad starts with a headline that links to the target page.

  • Description lines: Two very short lines. That’s all you get in the way of descriptive content. Concise writing is crucial.

  • Destination URL: Each ad spells out the target page address, which is the same as the Headline link address.

  • Keywords: Every ad is associated with search keywords that cause its appearance on a results page. Keyword phrases may be used. You can change the keywords at any time.

  • Cost-per-click (CPC): You decide how much the ad is worth to you by deciding the price you will pay whenever somebody clicks it. Google enforces minimums for some keywords. (The total CPC price range for all ads is $.05 to $50.00.) Your ad competes with other ads associated with the same keyword(s), and advertisers willing to pay more get better (higher) positioning on the page.

Google’s international sensibility is reflected in AdWords; you may specify a language and a country for your ads. Google determines, more or less successfully, the country from which each user’s computer is logged in. The language requirement is more certain: Google shows your ad to users whose Preferences language setting (see Chapter 2) matches your chosen language.

Remember 

You control the cost of your advertising in two ways: by establishing a CPC (cost-per-click) price for each ad you create, and by creating a daily expenditure budget. If you get many clickthroughs on a certain day and hit the top of your budget, Google pulls your ad for the rest of the day.

Here’s how it all works. You create an ad (or ads). You choose one or more keywords (or phrases) to associate with each ad. You decide how much to pay for visitors clicking through each ad. You establish a limit on your daily expenditure on Google advertising. Then, if and when you activate your ad, Google automatically places it on search results pages when people search for keywords associated with your ad. Your ad’s visibility (placement on the results page) depends on your CPC price compared to that of other advertisers sharing your keyword(s). Most likely, placement varies over time as advertisers come and go, or as they adjust their CPC prices.

Remember 

The CPC price you set is a maximum price. Google charges less if it can, and over time, in most cases, your average CPC price is less than the price you set. In this regard, AdWords is like an eBay auction, in which you’re bidding for high placement on a Google search results page. By setting a maximum CPC price, you authorize Google to go up to that price for the top spot. But in reality, you pay only one penny more than required to get that top spot (in other words, one penny more than the top CPC rate set by competing advertisers). If your top bid is less than the top CPC price of two other advertisers, you earn third place in the placement sweepstakes.

You manage your Google advertising activity through a personal control center attached to your account. There, you activate and deactivate individual ads, change keywords, and adjust cost settings.


Previous Section
 < Day Day Up > 
Next Section
Index: [SYMBOL][A][B][C][D][E][F][G][H][I][J][K][L][M][N][O][P][Q][R][S][T][U][V][W][X][Y][Z]


     Main Menu
Table of Contents
BackCover
Google For Dummies
Introduction
Part I: Taming Google
Part II: Specialty Searching
Part III: Putting Google to Work for You
Chapter 9: Google on Your Browser
Chapter 10: Googling in Tongues
Chapter 11: Using Google AdWords
Understanding the AdWords Concept
Creating an Account and Your First Ad
Activating Your Account
Managing Your Campaigns
More About Keywords
Chapter 12: Bringing Google and Its Users to Your Site
Part IV: Tricks, Games, and Alternatives to Google
Part V: The Part of Tens
Google For Dummies Cheat Sheet
Index
List of Figures
List of Sidebars


More Books
PHP Hacks
Processing Xml With Java - A Guide To Sax, Dom, Jdom, Jaxp, And Trax
The Koran (Holy Qur'an)
Macromedia Flash 8 Bible
Search Engine Optimization for Dummies
YouTube Traffic
PHP 5 for Dummies
Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
The Pilgrim's Progress
Wireless Hacks
Flash Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips & Tools
PayPal Hacks. 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
Amazon Hacks
Pdf Hacks
The Da Vinci Code
Google Hacks
The Holy Bible
Windows XP For Dummies
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Seo Book
Upgrading and Repairing Networks
Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 UNLEASHED
Windows XP Annoyances
Windows XP Hacks
Microsoft Windows XP Power Toolkit
Teach Yourself MS Office In 24Hours
iPod & iTunes Missing Manual
PC Hacks 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools
PC Overclocking, Optimization, and Tuning - 2th Edition
PC Hardware In A Nutshell 3rd Edition
PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition
Upgrading and Repairing PCs
Google for Dummies
MySQL Cookbook
Teach Yourself Macromedia Flash 8 In 24 Hours
PHP CookBook
Sams Teach Yourself JavaScript in 24 Hours
PHP5 Manual
Free Games Paper Airplanes
500 Juegos Gratis 500 Giochi Gratis 500 Jeux Gratuits 500 Jogos Gratis 500 Kostenlose Spiele