You are here: Home > Guest Posts > Guest Post - 10 Tips For Making PPC Copy Stand Out!
Tuesday, 09 February 2010
Here's another guest post. Today's topic is about maximising your profitability by making your PPC ads stand out from the crowd. It's very easy to waste a lot of money using PPC (speaking from experience) so these tips from Michelle Strassburg should come in handy for both new and experienced pay per clickers.







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Since I suck at PPC this is really good advice for me. I never had good luck with dynamic keyword insertion - especially in regards to getting a good quality score. But I like the idea with the price inside the ad.
Written on Tuesday 09 February 2010 at 19:24:48 GMT (Permalink)
This post is exactly what I was looking for, thanks very much for this! Recently Ive started affiliate marketing using PPC onto a landing page using data feeds. Finding out ways to enhance my adds is invaluable to me - I hear so many stories of people making thousands of pounds a day using PPC so Im trying to put it into action now.
Given all the above tips in the article, I would point out though that the copy is only one small part of the ppc puzzle... It would be great to hear how you sort through datafeeds provided by networks; using datafeeds is great because it gives us access to so many products, but in some feeds the titles are not just the product title but have a lot of noise (like brackets saying packs of 10, or other words which make bidding for phrase terms unrealistic).
As Michelle has 10 years of experience, it would be great to hear how she deals with this - would she bid on broad terms and therefore risk lowering CTR due to bad impressions?
David - it would be great to get your opinion on this as well - it helps us put all the pieces together!
Thanks,
Jamie
Written on Tuesday 09 February 2010 at 19:31:18 GMT (Permalink)
@ Jamie
Thanks for your feedback. As you rightfully said, this post dealt with the copy side of the ad. As we are not an affiliate site, I haven't had experience working with data feeds, however I noticed that Google Base now has an option to link between a feed and adwords so hopefully their help section will touch on this.
With regards to quality score issues and to help you as much as I can, one method is to divide each group into two groups, one exact terms and the other broad terms. You should also try google adwords learning centre which has some useful tips.
Michelle
Written on Wednesday 10 February 2010 at 12:43:11 GMT (Permalink)
@Rb Barham - Sensible tip for any PPC'er
@Kids Photo - You're not the only one who is terrible at it - maybe we should form some sort of club :-P
The key to getting PPC right (I reckon) is creating an irresistible ad that is targeted specifically to key groups. A great landing page combined with strong retailer offers should then convert. It sounds so simple doesn't it!
@Jamie - Working with data feeds is one of the most time consuming activities ever, thanks mainly to non-standardised layouts, peculiar characters and various other bits of useless info.
CSV files are probably most useful for editing as these can be imported (some don't load properly, you have to use the import option) into a spreadsheet package such as Excel and manipulated. There are tonnes of functions that can help strip out the drivel.
It may help to get a magic formula set up so that when you paste in various details (product name, deeplink), the formulas automatically reformat the text ready for AdWords.
@Michelle - Thanks for the useful feedback!
Written on Wednesday 10 February 2010 at 13:02:24 GMT (Permalink)
Here's another tip - get a cashback credit card for use when you buy adwords credit... first of all you get e.g. 1% cashback to enhance your margins and secondly you get XX days to pay off the balance giving you some useful cash flow - useful when waiting for payment from networks !
Written on Thursday 11 February 2010 at 12:26:45 GMT (Permalink)
Hi David & Michelle - thanks for your responses.
I never really have an issue with quality scores - I code up my own landing pages with PHP and to a fairly high SEO standard, which translates into good quality score.
And David - fortunately Im quite good with excel, and I do download my feeds in CSV format. I have a number of formula's which clean up my feeds.
Ive setup one site, which is doing amazingly well - I bid on phrase keywords of the 'product title' in the datafeed. Doing so well, I thought Id rinse and repeat the process, but I cant seem to replicate my initial success. And looking at why, its because the product titles are not as concise as those from my first site.
Now unfortunately, there is no easy way to make the product titles more succinct on the new feeds because they have random noise words.
So there are two things which can happen now (baring in mind that I only get traffic through PPC):
1) Clean up the product titles somehow
2) Get more general traffic - so instead of bidding on "11.1V 4400mAh L/top Batt Clevo MobiNote M54G Clevo L/Top Batt" I bid on "clevo mobinote battery"
So I must not be the first affiliate marketer to be in this situation before.
How do you recommend I proceed - and is there any automated way of doing one of these options (going through 80,000 products is going to take a while!)? Or maybe there is an option I havent thought of?
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Jamie
Written on Thursday 11 February 2010 at 23:20:47 GMT (Permalink)
@Rob - Top tip!
@Jamie - I see your point. I imagine there's a way to process feeds quickly as, like you said, other affiliates would be in the same boat. I wouldn't know what this could be though and imagine the answer would be commercially sensitive as it's a way to speed up the PPC generation process faster than your competition. That said, perhaps some readers would care to suggest some tips?
Written on Saturday 13 February 2010 at 11:52:54 GMT (Permalink)
@ Michelle & Jamie
Re. quality score..
I agree with Michelle. Create as many Ad Groups as you need but have each one relate to very specific keywords which will both increase the quality score and CTR. For instance, for one of my holiday sites, I will have various groups - one targetted at 'Cottages', one for 'Boating' etc., with all the associated words and phrases. I started out having just one lump of keywords and different Ad Copy for all the different accommodations. Splitting them in to separate groups made a big difference.
Written on Sunday 28 February 2010 at 19:43:02 GMT (Permalink)
@ Michelle & Jamie
Re. quality score..
I agree with Michelle. Create as many Ad Groups as you need but have each one relate to very specific keywords which will both increase the quality score and CTR. For instance, for one of my holiday sites, I will have various groups - one targetted at 'Cottages', one for 'Boating' etc., with all the associated words and phrases. I started out having just one lump of keywords and different Ad Copy for all the different accommodations. Splitting them in to separate groups made a big difference.
Written on Sunday 28 February 2010 at 19:43:02 GMT (Permalink)
Rob Barham
Good tips but not all will be useful for affiliates ... Most affiliates need to be get a piece of the PPC action at the end of the buying process and not in the research stage.
Written on Tuesday 09 February 2010 at 14:41:30 GMT (Permalink)