#1: Structure the Campaign Correctly
First
things first, you must set up your campaigns correctly. By this, I mean
structuring your account into logical campaigns to give you more
control over your budgets, ad scheduling, and geo-targeting. Plus,
logical campaign structure will make it easier for you to monitor
performance across the account.
For
example, in our case study, the business provides appliance repair
services for washing machines, dryers, refrigerators, freezers, ovens,
stoves, and dishwashers. Knowing this, you might be thinking you should
create campaigns for each service. And that’s a great idea!
A
good rule of thumb is to create different campaigns for each service
you offer. Again, this will give you more control to allocate your
marketing budget to specific services. Plus, you may want to use
different ad scheduling and different targeting per service.
Before
we move on, it’s important to note that campaign structure can change
over time. For example, over time you may want to create a separate
campaign for all of your top performing keywords for a particular
service. This would allow you to allocate the majority of your budget
to keywords you already know perform best while limiting your budget on
keywords you want to test.
OK,
let’s move on to another critical step…
#2: Set Up Conversion Tracking
You’ll
notice in the graph above, I’m reporting on the number of conversions
and the cost per conversion. In this case, the vast majority of
conversions are phone call leads from the website. Conversions and cost
per conversion are two of the most important metrics because they
indicate how well your ads are performing.
Google
Ads has conversion tracking that allows you to track many different key
actions on your website, including phone calls, contact form
submissions, quote requests, appointment requests, and even offline
sales.
But
there’s a catch… Google Ads will not track any conversions unless you
set up the conversion tracking! Conversion tracking is not on by
default. You must set this up yourself or with the help of your web
developer.
Note
that none of the steps below can be completed until you get conversion
tracking set up correctly. Do not skip this step and do not assume
conversion tracking is working just because it was set up in the past.
As changes are made to your website it’s possible that the conversion
code could be altered or even removed completely.
#3: Remove Keyword Rot
Of
all the incremental changes, this one is likely the most important. The
reality with Google Ads is that some keywords simply will not perform
well. They’ll have low click-through rates and low-quality scores.
The
problem is that low quality score keywords can drag down your entire
account. Think of it like a bad apple that will eventually rot the
entire bushel. Low-quality score keywords will rot your account!
One
way to improve quality scores is to find and either block irrelevant
search terms or target top performing search terms. To do this, go to
your Keywords tab, then click on the “Search terms” sub-navigation
button (see below).
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