Aug 21, 2007 at 11:56am ET by Alan Rimm-Kaufman
Here are eight observations about writing and testing pay-per-click ad copy. They’re broad generalizations, so there’ll be situations where these don’t hold, but we’ve found them generally accurate.

Actually, I just made those data up. But the graph does capture our many years of experience experimenting with PPC copy. We’d suggest there’s significant benefit in fixing bad copy (moving up from a grade of “D” or “F” to a “C” ), some benefit from improving decent copy (”C” up to “B” or “A”), but the additional benefit that accrues from perfect copy is often small.
What do I mean by “bad” copy? Bad copy is overly generic, relying too heavily on title slugging, or is poorly matched to the search phrase. (Because of how the engines serve ads, getting copy right is closely tied to term list, match type, and negatives).
Back to the car analogy, a sloppy amateur paint job can really torpedo the sale value of a car. Decent paint would get the car back to normal value. A perfect paint job would increase the sale value somewhat more, but likely by less than its cost.
Those are our eight recommendations for creating PPC copy that will blow your competitors away. As always, your mileage may vary.
Alan Rimm-Kaufman leads the Rimm-Kaufman Group, a direct marketing services and consulting firm founded in 2003. The Paid Search column appears Tuesdays at Search Engine Land.
Opinions expressed in the article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.
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Please share a citation for #6 where you state that “As of this summer, Google again agrees.” I have searched high and low for this and see no data to back this up. My Google rep did not even agree…
Any follow up info would be much appreciated.