LevelTen In-Site Blog
left shadow
August 2nd, 2006
Posted by Neil at 4:16 pm

If you have been using AdWords for very long, you know that Google rewards advertisers for high click-through rate, as well as punishes advertisers for low click-through rate. I mentioned this in the previous post.

Discovering the click-through benefits of the Google Checkout icon got me thinking of some of the other less obvious techniques that may increase CTR and save advertisers money.

These tips are targeted more toward the seasoned AdWords junkie that has mastered ad copy and call-to-action, but needs that extra edge over their competition. Using these techniques will not replace a well-written A/B split tested ad. These are merely suggestions that could increase CTRs, on a normalized scale. As with any changes, all should be tested before taken as a hard and fast rule for your specific ads.

1. Separate Ad Groups & Keyword Lists for Plurals


Figure 1-1

When I typed in the word “desk” without quotes, these commercial ads were in the top positions. It’s common knowledge that Google bolds the keyword(s) that match the search query. Many might assume Google takes into account plurals in bolding, similar to Yahoo! Search Marketing, but Google does not. As you can see in Figure 1-1, the Staples.com and Office Furniture2Go.com copywriters were in the correct line of thinking to put the keyword in the title (headline), but he/she did not take it far enough.

It can be assumed SimplySearsCollege.com made the right distinction by pairing the exact title with the exact keyword in at least two separate ads, one for “desk” and one for “desks.”

As you can see below, Yahoo! Search Marketing does not discriminate with plurals in Yahoo! Search, at least where only adding an “s” is the concern. “Desks” is bold when the search query was “desk” without quotes.


Figure 1-2

Bonus Benefit!

Bonus Benefit

Did you know separating plurals and singulars into separate ad groups could also lower your cost-per-click (cpc) for at least one particular keyword? Google’s broad match system will show either the singular or plural keyword when one is not present on your list, but the singular keyword may actually require a lower bid. By separating the bids, advertisers save money on clicks by not having to pay the same price for both singular and plural. Advertisers would only pay for the singular term when the search query was singular and the plural bid when the query was plural. Plural terms typically have a higher bid rate.

2. Relevant Display URLs

Google AdWords allows advertisers to display a different URL than the actual landing page URL. Most of the time this benefits the user experience, when long, messy, URLs are the landing pages. Many advertisers do not take advantage of this as much as they could. For a user looking for a specific item that may be one of 1000s of items sold by a company, finding the quickest route from A to B without a lot of clicking and searching is usually the most preferable.

Example: When searching for “green toys” (no quotes), which URL seems the most relevant and may receive a higher click through rate?

www.BlueWidgetCompany.com

or

www.BlueWidgetCompany.com/GreenToys

The second display URL gives the user the impression that he or she will find what they are looking for faster. Below is a real world example ad. My suggestion to this advertiser is to show the “www”on his or her diplay URL. I’ll save that tip for another entry.

diplay URL

Category: Internet Marketing

Add to: | Digg it

6 Responses to “Two Fresh Google AdWords Tips to Increase Click-Through Rate”

  1. Wolfram Says:

    It is entirely possible in your first example that Sears has utilized a dynamic headline, as opposed to separating out their ad groups into plural and singular keywords.

  2. Neil Says:

    It is quite possible. This blog was written before Google started bolding plural and singular forms whether or not it matched the query. They bold both tenses now, so you do not have to granulize as much.

  3. Uber Affiliate Marketing Guide Says:

    […] Tips For Writing High CTR PPC Ads Synthetic Ways to Juice CTR […]

  4. Stephane Grenier Says:

    Unfortunately for any new ad, the landing page must now be the same as the display ad, therefore your second tip no longer works. This has just recently been changed by the Google AdWords program (early 2008).

  5. admin Says:

    You’re right. If you look at the date of this post, it’s almost two years old.

  6. askdinkoo.com » Blog Archive » Tips to Increase CTR for AdWords Says:

    […] 1. Separate Ad Groups & Keyword Lists for Plurals […]

Leave a Reply

right shadow