Friday, July 27, 2018

Guide to driving more traffic with responsive search ads

Welcome the Google's All new Responsive Search Ads



The Beginning: Responsive Display Ads



Google is consistenly rolling out the updates in the past year and a half. One of their major updates towards automation is Responsive ads. What advertisers need to do is quite simple. Just enter the text, image, and logo of the ad. The ads will get optimized based on the advertising block they get assigned on a webpage. What's amazing is that these display responsive ads will adjust to all sizes that google ads support. Even the image, logos will show when there is a chance of getting clicks. These ads were a big success since they were cheap and delivering a lot of traffic, low CPA for most advertisers.

Responsive ads for Search


Responsive search ads preview
Responsive Search Ads on Google Ads 


According to Google, responsive ads for search are easy to create and manage. Below is an excerpt from their blog regarding the search responsive ads.


Google AdWords Rebranded itself into Google Ads - Goodbye AdWords


After around 18 and 22 years later, respectively, the AdWords and DoubleClick brands will soon cease to be. As part of a comprehensive effort to streamline its offerings, Google’s flagship advertising products are getting new names and reorganizing to better reflect their current capabilities and where the company sees trajectories for growth. Along with the rebranding, Google is also introducing some new solutions that further the push toward simplifying its advertising offerings.
There will now be three primary brands:
  • Google AdWords is now Google Ads.
  • DoubleClick advertiser products and Google Analytics 360 Suite are now under the brand Google Marketing Platform.
  • DoubleClick for Publishers and DoubleClick Ad Exchange are integrated into a new unified platform called Google Ad Manager.
What’s under the hood of the products largely isn’t changing. Rather these are primarily name changes that are “indicative of where we have been directing products over the last few years,” said Sridhar Ramaswamy, Google’s SVP of ads, at a press briefing Tuesday.
“Consumer expectations from mobile are on the rise…. Opportunity for advertisers is on the rise as well,” said Ramaswamy.
As Google has acquired and developed new ad products, formats and measurement solutions to meet new needs, its offerings have become more complex and numerous over the past two decades. That’s made it harder for advertisers, publishers and agencies to identify and select the right Google products for their needs, Ramaswamy explained. The new branding under three buckets makes the starting point for marketers easier to figure out, and new solutions are aimed at helping marketers achieve better outcomes more easily.
Here’s a look at the new brands and solutions announced Wednesday.

Say Hi to Google Ads


 AdWords was a platform for running text ads on desktop Search in 2000 with.about 350 advertisers Google co-founder and CEO Larry Page said at the time, “AdWords offers the most technologically advanced features available, enabling any advertiser to quickly design a flexible program that best fits its online marketing goals and budget.”


Thursday, September 22, 2016

7 AdWords Hacks to Save You Time and Simplify Your Life

7. Delete Keyword Clutter

You don’t need to have tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of keywords in your account! Sure, a few years ago you needed to make sure you hit on every variation of a keyword term, including the misspellings, plurals, stemmings, accents, etc. However, Google pretty much killed off the Exact and Phrase keyword match types in AdWords last year.
Trying to maintain an account with over 98% junk keywords is just insane. You’re making campaign management and reporting more difficult and weighing down your account. Cut loose and get rid of the underperformers after each round of testing. 

6. Delete Useless Ads

Why are you trying to maintain all of these non-performing AdWords ads? It makes your account way more complex and intimidating than it needs to be. AdWords is definitely a game of quality over quantity; in fact, you really need only one awesome ad for PPC success.
Instead of trying to be everything to everyone with hundreds or thousands of ads, use Dynamic Keyword Insertion instead. DKI replaces specific words in your ad with terms that match exactly what the searcher was looking for.