Posted by Ian Howie | Posted In Blog, Google AdWords, PPC Articles | 0 Comment
I’m going to give you some ideas from my new book Wordtracker Masterclass: Google AdWords PPC Advertising and we also cover these in our regular Google AdWords Training Sessions at our Central London Office.
Reducing AdWords costs and increasing response rates requires a range of creative, trading and technical skills that few possess:
Offline, the equivalent work is often done by specialists. A creative department or agency might look after ad copy and design; a media buyer might be the trader negotiating price for media space and time; whilst techies look after the production of print, radio and TV adverts.
Although they maybe quite different in the real world, most AdWords users become either Creatives, Techies or Traders – personnas that match just one of the required skill sets.
The result is that most people play to their strengths and neglect their weaknesses. They fail to use all tools and metrics available to create higher clickthrough rates, lower costs and better response.
Below we’ll look at some techniques to help you develop your creative, trading and technical skills.
Google Adwords comes with Clickthrough Rate (CTR) and Quality Score (QR) – two key metrics you can use to measure your development.
Clickthrough rate (CTR) is the % of those that see your ads and click on them. It’s a measure of your ads attractiveness and appropriateness to searchers.
Quality Score (QS) is based on your advert’s click clickthrough rate, the relevance of your ad’s copy to the search terms you’re bidding on and the relevance of your landing page.
Google gives lower costs and higher positions on its results pages to ads with higher clickthrough rates and Quality Scores. So let’s have a look at how you can increase them by developing your creative, trading and techie skills
The most important creative technique to practice is writing ad copy that matches the keywords you are bidding on. It’s as simple as this …
If the Search is green tea then bad ad copy might look like this:
Despite the search being for green tea but keyword is not there. The text is too general.
A good ad reads more like this:

The keyword green tea is in the ad title, the body copy and the URL.
There’s is a call to action (‘Buy’), a promise of good tea (‘Quality’), you will find what you want (‘Specialist’), at a good price (‘From $0.99′) and with great service (‘Free Next Day Delivery’).
By becoming a better trader you’ll get more value for your clicks.
You can gain greater control of your bids and you lower your bid costs by mastering AdWords different match types.
Each match type uses its own punctuation to let AdWords know your bid type:
A positive broad match will show your ads for the greatest number of possible searches. With a broad match your ads will match any search containing your bid keyword. For example, if you bid on brew tea your bid will match (and your ads show for):
However, broad match contains a little sting in its tail – it includes ‘expanded match’. Expanded match will display your ads for plural versions of your bid keywords and any relevant keyword variations. For example our brew tea broad match bid might match with:
Those examples seem harmless enough – perhaps even useful. But expanded match can find matches that don’t even contain your keywords and you might think are little to do with the product you’re selling. For example brew tea might match with:
For this reason, broad match bids are us usually accompanied by negative match bids. Adding negative keyword bids stops your ads showing for irrelevant searches, allowing you to greatly increase your profits by …
… increasing your clickthrough rate (CTR) which leads to a better Quality Score and paying less per click (lower CPC).
A negative broad match will stop your ads showing for any search containing the negative keyword. For example, if the negative keyword -coffee is added to an ad group then your ads will not show for any search containing coffee and therefore including:
However negative broad match bids do not ‘expand’ like positives so you have to add plurals and related keywords. For -coffee this might include:
Only if you first organise the groups of keywords you’re bidding on can your ads and landing pages match your bid keywords. Ad groups are the techies tool for this job.
An ad groups is a group of keywords you are bidding on, with matching ad copy and the landing pages those ads link to.
The most important thing to do with your ad groups is keep the keywords focused on a very narrow subject.
The diagram below shows poor ad group with a wide range of keywords, very general ad copy and landing page (how else could they be with so many different keywords to satisfy).
By contrast, the strong ad group below is focused on a small set of keywords about one subject (green tea) with closely matching ad copy (all about green tea) and a landing page also all about green tea.
Only by organising your keywords this efficiently can you use your trading and creative skills to increase clickthrough, reduce costs and increase response.
These skills are explored in more detail in my new book: Wordtracker Masterclass: Google AdWords PPC Advertising, step-by-step guide to profitable pay per click campaigns.
I’m also hosting regular Google AdWords Training Sessions at our Central London Office which are designed help you develop your Creative, Trader and Techie skills.