AdWords
Author
Discussion

Plotloss

Original Poster:

67,280 posts

293 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
Setup some Google AdWords ads last week and they seem to be doing the job, driving people past my front door so to speak.

What I cant get a handle on though is how to measure the success of particular ads.

For example, what is classed as a good click through rate?

Happy with the spend etc, just looking for a frame of reference really.

Thoughts?

dick dastardly

8,325 posts

286 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
It's different for all companies, keywords and industries so you won't get a definative answer.

If you are finding your ad ranking rising without spending any more money then your CTR is better than the competition so google is rewarding you in a sense. The reverse is also true should your CTR be low.

As a guide I aim for 5% and above, with some of my best ads getting around the 10% mark.

Plotloss

Original Poster:

67,280 posts

293 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
So CTR affects your ranking? Didnt realise that.

As of today, CTR for all 4 ads is around 2%

With average position of 6.4 which I presume puts me on page 2 more often than not...

dick dastardly

8,325 posts

286 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
CTR does affect ranking wuite a bit. If your ad gets a much better click through rate than one from your competitor then even though you may be paying half as much for the position your ad could appear above theirs. It's Google's way of keeping the adverts relevant, otherwise some large company with bags of money could bid high for any unrelated term and still be at the top.

One way to test CTR for different ideas you have is to make two almost identical adverts with only the one change between them. Run each of the ads for 50% of the time and let the market decice which ad is better. Once you can see one gets a better CTR then promote it to 100% coverage.

Plotloss

Original Poster:

67,280 posts

293 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
I happen to know that one of my competitors is doing around £1000 a month to be consistently rated on similar keywords in the top 5.

I'm spending nothing like that, nothing like it at all so perhaps I should just be happy with the current performance.

dick dastardly

8,325 posts

286 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
Sounds like it, and now that you are mastering AdWords give its rivals a go:

http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/

and

https://adcenter.microsoft.com/Default.aspx

The MSN version is only a few months old so not many companies are using it yet, so I'm currently coming top for all searches for pennies. The downside is the number of clicks in a week can be counted on your fingers.

slapmatt

1,132 posts

245 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
Matt - how is your natural search engine ranking going nowadays?

Plotloss

Original Poster:

67,280 posts

293 months

Thursday 2nd November 2006
quotequote all
slapmatt said:
Matt - how is your natural search engine ranking going nowadays?


Good on some terms, for the company name (without the Ltd) for instance I am number one on all the search engines

Still havent been picked up by DMOZ which is the big one I suppose but some stuff seems to be working.

Trouble is my field has a LOT of hobbyists and most traffic appears to come for either google, when I've been lucky on search terms or from links on well known portals for this technology.

Your advice did help massively though I have to say.

Its an iterative process on the whole I guess.