SEM News, The Ultimate Guide To Search Marketing Optimization Part 3 & The Top Marketing Words Of All Time

In The Trenches is a weekly spotlight of tips, tricks, and news about the tools search engine marketing professionals use to give them a leg up on the competition. Today: News from the search engines, today’s in-depth look, The Ultimate Guide to Search Marketing Optimization Part 3 – Self-Service SEM Optimization Class, The Top Marketing […]

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In The Trenches is a weekly spotlight of tips, tricks, and news about the tools search engine marketing professionals use to give them a leg up on the competition. Today: News from the search engines, today’s in-depth look, The Ultimate Guide to Search Marketing Optimization Part 3 – Self-Service SEM Optimization Class, The Top Marketing Words of All Time, and this week’s free tips and tools.


News from the search engines

Google AdWords: See account changes mapped to performance statistics. I noticed this listed as a feature change from April so I thought I would share this nice tip when using the My Change History tool.

In addition to listing the changes made in your account, the My Change History tool shows these events mapped to a chart of your account’s impressions, clicks, conversions, click through rate (CTR), or cost. Having all this information in one place can help you spot any impact account adjustments have on performance.

You can learn more at the Google AdWords help page on this subject, but one of the more helpful features is that the system will flag “significant changes” in the account based on the metric that you’re viewing. Here’s more on this:

View flagged days: If there’s a significant change to the metric displayed in your chart, and if an event happened that day or the day before, the day will be flagged on the chart. Flagged days, therefore, may change depending on your selected metric. Here’s an example: Say your chart shows a spike in impressions on June 6. The My Change History tool will see if any changes were made in your account on June 6 or June 5, and will flag one or both of those days accordingly.

If you click a flag, the My Change History results below the chart will reload, showing only the events that happened that day. Click Show all changes to see all events again. Note that the flags are numbered, and correspond to the list of dates to the side of the chart. This list shows the number of events that occurred on each date. Click Scroll up and Scroll down if you can’t see all the dates at once.

Yahoo Search Marketing: New Ad Performance Report features. According to theYSM! blog, three new columns have been added to this important report.

  • Ad ID column – This column displays your ad’s ID number
  • Ad: – This column provides a visual representation of your ad, including its title, short description, and display URL
  • Destination URL

The YSM blog states:

These enhancements can give you more insight, control and better transparency into how well your ads are doing. The new columns let you view ad content and ad performance together, plus you can see how each live ad is performing in relation to other ads in your portfolio. Or you might want to gauge the impact of changing your ad copy or destination URL.

Tiny, but valuable addition. Good job, Yahoo! Glad to see the tech/product teams are continuing to push while the businessmen continue to talk. Good lesson for everyone – no matter what’s going on with your company from a business perspective, keep putting out good work. Besides the new columns, there’s also addition to the status column which I’ll detail next week.

Microsoft: Ad Position Best Practices for PPC Well, my new favorite Microsoftie, Shefali Singla, has another great post at the adCenter Community Site. This time it’s a guide on ad position, and she starts off with a great explanation on how Microsoft determines ad position and the value of getting high positions. She also has a great section on improving relevancy, including some of the following tips:

  • Use power terms that are not superlatives (because superlatives will not meet editorial guidelines) such as hot, excellent, leading, wholesale, huge, etc
  • Use parameters to dynamically insert keywords. (Wish all engines had this really great feature.)
  • Make sure that your ad copy is aligned to the stage of the purchase cycle.

I urge you to read the entire entry and then post back some comments as well.

In depth: The Ultimate Guide to Search Marketing Optimization Part 3 – Self-Service SEM Optimization Class

So, Part 1 and Part 2 of this series has had some straightforward advice. Optimization is so key to what we do. In fact, as my agency’s parent company is a traditional marketing firm, I am constantly relaying the differences to my offline partners and one of the biggest differentiators I list is optimization. In offline, the main work is done BEFORE a campaign starts…planning, buying, trafficking, etc. In online (and especially in SEM), the “easy” part is the upload. The majority of the work is tracking, reporting, managing, and optimizing. If you don’t optimize, you won’t get good results. In fact, you could end up completely wasting your budget.

Obviously, paid search optimization is a huge subject that could take weeks and weeks to fully cover. However, I’ve put together a list of links that make up a pretty good range of knowledge on this subject. If you go through all of these valuable resources, you’ll be a first class SEM optimizer by the time you’re through.

Good luck!

Semester 1: Google AdWords Help Center

Choosing successful keywords

Creating targeted ads

Optimizing your account

Semester 2: Yahoo Search Marketing Help Center

Improving your results

Improving your results – Industry-Based

Improving your results – Site-Based

Semester 3: Microsoft adExcellence Training Center (flash files)

That should be enough to get you started…next week, in Part 4, I’ll examine ten tools on and off the engines that will help you with optimization.

Free resource of the week: The Top Marketing Words of All Time

This is a page I’ve had bookmarked for quite a while and maintained by Nicholas Longo. It’s really a great resource (thanks, Nicholas!) and has “300+ marketing words and counting” that he’s collected in his twenty years of marketing. There are some good ideas here and I’m always referring to it when developing SEM creative. He states, “It’s nice to reference to if you need some help coming up with a witty one liner, slogan, or product description.” I agree.

Josh Dreller is the Director of Media Technology for Fuor Digital, an agency concentrated in the research, planning, buying and stewardship of digital media marketing campaigns. Josh can be reached at [email protected]. The In The Trenches column appears Fridays at Search Engine Land.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Josh Dreller
Contributor
Josh Dreller has been a search marketer since 2003 with a focus on SEM technology. As a media technologist fluent in the use of leading industry systems, Josh stays abreast of cutting edge digital marketing and measurement tools to maximize the effect of digital media on business goals. He has a deep passion to monitor the constantly evolving intersection between marketing and technology. Josh is currently the Director of Content Marketing at Kenshoo.

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