A very common complaint by new advertisers in the AdWords Help Forum is that their newly placed adverts will run well, typically for a few days, and then stop running. Often, the advertiser will notice that Google is complaining of a low “Quality Score”. This video blog with supporting notes is a consequence of a charity posting their problems, together with sample adverts and keywords. This unusual openness makes them a great candidate for a case study.
Google Video – lower quality, faster to display, click the “Play” button at lower left:
Click on the link at the end of this sentence for a higher quality, large QuickTime Movie – where you can see the detail of the slides and screens, showing precisely which links to click to setup a new AdWords account, as a new AdWords user.
The video shows choosing a Standard Edition rather than Starter Edition AdWords Account. I’ve picked “Standard Edition” because the best use of AdWords usually comes from the additional power of the Standard Edition account. The Starter Edition limits you to a single campaign – and you need at least two campaigns to fully manage performance.
In the video I warn that users should not use a publicly known email address, especially if they have given other people access to their normal email account; perhaps a family member or an office colleague. Since the AdWords account controls the spending of money, make sure that everyone who has access to the Google AdWords Account, uses their own account name; that way you can trace decisions and actions. Especially make sure that the account names that are used, are not published anywhere. My standard practice is that I have public email addresses and private email email addresses. The private email addresses are used for receiving email from AdWords only, so no one knows their identities, other than AdWords. If you know an email address to send me email, then that’s one email address you can be sure I won’t be using for AdWords management!
Note the addresses that Google uses in the confirmation eMail. Especially notice that the right URL to sign in to AdWords is “h t t p s : / / a d w o r d s . g o o g l e . c o m /” If you see anything else at the beginning of the URL, then you may be visiting a spoof site that will try to steal from you.
Campaign Setup
The video steps through the process. Key points:
- Name this first campaign “Keyword targeted” – because that’s what we’re doing
- Target one language and one country per campaign – this is usually the most effective
- If your budget is high enough, then select “Accelerated Spending” to maximise your impression volume
- If your budget is too low to spend all day, use the default budget method – this spreads spending through the day
- Deselect the “Content Network”, despite the popup window that warns you about losing traffic; we’ll set up the content network in a later video.
- Select “Rotate” adverts, rather than allowing Google to optmise; it is easy to manage advert performance and rotation allows you to optimise better than the default.
Schizophrenia Charity
You can guess at the most likely keywords that a Schizophrenia information charity should offer. As it happens, the advertiser decided to appeal to a particular symptom, hearing voices. So the advert didn’t include any of the keywords. That’s almost certainly why he has a poor quality score… Psychological factors.
User Psychology
If someone types in “schizophrenia”, then they probably are looking for information about it. If they type “red leather shoes” then they probably want information and possibly sales sites featuring read leather shoes. Advertisements that mention the keyword help to assure the user that the right advert is showing. By coming back to them with what they said, you show you are listening and that you address their interests. The difference in Click Through Rate (the percentage of impressions that result in clicks) between using and not-using the Keyword in the advert can be more than 50% – you can double click rates by using the keyword in the copy.
We’re going to use that technique of “mirroring” to help get a good quality score in the adverts.
If the keyword is “schizophrenia”, then we should use that word in the title of the advertisement.
If the keyword was “luxury red shoes”, then we should use that.
User Psychology – Continue The Dialog
Apart from using the keyword, what else needs to be said? Classic marketing – a Call to Action. Obviously you want people to click and come to your site, but what will make them come? A low selling price? A wider range? A free delivery service? Free extended warranty? What is *your* unique appeal that will have a segment of the audience click on your advert more than they will click on other advertisements?
In the case of the Schizophrenia advice charity, they probably have three audiences. The person who is hearing voices – who probably won’t be inquiring about Schizophrenia. The friends and family – the social network – of the schizophrenic, who may want support and advice and might be searching for “Schizophrenia”, or “hearing voices”, or “psychosis”, or looking up side effects of prescribed medication, or a bunch of other search queries. And finally medical professionals – the care network – who probably have specific terms and may be considering the use of specific drugs for treatments.
When you have three segments, and overlapping keywords, you should probably offer three different web sites. The types of people going to each should be different, will need different language in the landing page and think about the problems they are trying to solve in different ways. That also means that potentially you might *need* to advertise three times on the same keyword – expecting different segments to click on different adverts and go to three different websites.
We’ll look at that, a very advanced concept in advertising, later. For now, let’s focus on reaching the main groups in the obvious ways. As you learn the techniques, you can start to apply some subtlety!
Google Video about improving advertising with AdWords
Since publishing this article, Google has produced a short video that emphasises many similar points:
Summary
This technique is about focus for new advertisers. Instead of spreading widely and becoming confused, pick a keyword that is the essence of what you do. Whether that is “lawn mower repair”, “luxury teas”, or a charitable operation. Pick that one word and write the best advert you can, that will bring people to the best page on your site that addresses the implicit question. If you have to, create a new page to make sure you address the search query.
Restrict the campaign to avoid the content network. The content network has its uses, but you need to target in a different way, and the adverts often should be different. Budgeting – is tricky. Generally, for a first campaign, keep the bid lower in order to get more clicks from the budget. There are reasons to worry about position, but you’ve enough to learn getting just one AdGroup working properly.
Before looking at anything else, this would be a good time for you to explore the rest of the user interface, and especially look at the reporting and web analytics. Future steps in performance improvement will require web analytics on your web site, or AdWords Conversion Tracking… But that’s still a few steps away!
Updates
2009-06-06 – Added Google video about optimising adverts – it echoes many of the same points made here.

Good writing. Keep up the good work. I just added your RSS feed my Google News Reader..
Matt Hanson
Jeremy,
Great post! So wonderful to go back to the basics now and then.
I think the video is extremely helpful for people getting started and really enjoyed the section on User Psychology. Great idea to get into a customers head and think from their perspective. To many people forget to do this.
Can’t wait for part 2!
Kim
Jeremy,
I was thinking about your post again. Had an employee watch it with me and read the post together. We really liked how you setup the account. Same setup we follow for campaign settings! Good way for people to get started is small. They can always add as they go. Also I totally agree with your suggestion for new advertisers to refrain from the content network. It requires a different setup which very few people understand.
Having read so many of your answers in the old and new AdWords Help forums, Jeremy, it’s great to hear the voice behind the JezC username. ;-)
Your audience is of course segmented which leads to a division. The resulting sub-audiences are again segmented, okay let’s split them into pieces. And these pieces are again segmented … etc.
Everyone is crazy about segmentation nowadays just that are there any limits? We may well end up having a separate landing page for each visitor.
Hi Bill – one of the ancient wonders touted for the web, circa 2000, was “mass customisation” – the ability to deliver the content sought by an individual, based on their stated preferences and behaviour. To some extent, the current model of a web server is based on delivering unique units of a message, not on composing an overall message for that user and their history.
So, segmentation into multiple landing pages ends when we make adaptive landing pages. There is this, perhaps hallucinatory, goal of personal marketing communications.
Practically, where does it end? When the segment is too small to economically address; they may get a side mention on another page, or are simply ignored.
Hi Kim and Rich – thanks for the comments! Interesting to hear that you do campaign set up this way, tpo!
Adaptive landing pages – sounds like science fiction. Or does it simply mean dynamic landing pages which are rich in the users’s search queries, or keywords? Can we go further: “adaptive” to users’ habits or behaviour?
Jeremy- this looks really great. Could I give a brief intro blurb for the post and then link to it from the forum? I think it would help a lot our forum newbies.
Hi Sarah – sure, please do use it. Though, if people reach the forum, it is probably too late. I might do a “rescue me” version!
I’m new. Where’s the video?
Diana, just click on the arrow in bottom left corner of the large “getting started” image.
@Bill – Adaptive landing pages? Partially fictitous. There are techniques to help with optimisation, such as Google’s own Website Optimiser, SPSA (Stochastic Perturbation Statistical Analysis), Theory Of Experiments and Taguchi Methods. These all tend to rely on setting up experiments, recording results, making decisions and moving on to new experiments. I’m not going to say what I’m researching in this area, but it’s a different approach… ;)
Thanks for the tutorial, I certainly learn a lot.
Thank you for your help, I have so much to learn. I wish I saw this before I started my ad campaign.
Kind Regards Malcolm
Hi Malcolm – there’s plenty of free resources. The downside is a hard learning curve. I’ve started three businesses so far – and the trick for me is working out the point at which I ought to outsource the problem rather than learn it.
Thanks for writing these articles.. I find them extremely useful! Can you list a couple key differences you would make in a campaign targeted at the content network? I turned off the content network in my current campaigns as you recommended. I know you said you’re going to make an article about it too but I need to at least get it started. Thanks again!
@Marc – the Inside AdWords Blog in late 2007 has three articles on the Content Network. Use the search “site:adwords.blogspot.com content network” and look for Part 3 in the series, for some very helpful and specific advice.
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I’ve read and read the policies but the reference is too vague.
What did I do wrong?
Terence.
@Terence – I see you’ve learned all the techniques as an affiliate! Using a TradeMark symbol. Non-rounded earnings numbers, finishing with a “7″ as it is more trusted, etc. However, Google is likely to regard this as a breach of the AdWords Unacceptable Content policies.
I believe that the policy you have breached is this one:
Hi JecZ, many thanks for the advice; very useful. I’m just starting off with a Google grant for a humanitarian aid charity – the IRC. We are meant to be targeting all of Europe, so before reading your advice I set up multi language campaigns. However, after starting off with a high number of clicks, they are now dropping massively. -Is this because I’m in multiple countries, or are there other causes for this kind of Google behaviour?
I’ll re-optimise campaigns to individual countries anyway. Is there some way I can re-set Google so that it re-evaluates the quality score?
Cheers, John.
Hi John – I’m willing to provide some free support to charities when I have time. Drop into the Merjis site and email me or fill in the contact form. Your problem is probably that you have a crashing Quality Score. Right now, *pause* everything. It costs to recover from a poor Quality Score. Talk to me, we’ll rework it, and then you can resume with a growing Quality Score – make that Grant stretch further. :)
Why are your adwords pages and selections different than mine? I can’t select “accelerated” when I put in a maximum CPC bid. I can’t choose different ad groups and keyword groups, I can only choose to make a new campaign. Is there something that I’m missing?
@Jason – You probably got partway through starting, left the session before you created a campaign, so now it needs a campaign. You must have a campaign before you can have an AdGroup, advert or keyword.
I am not new to AdWords but I find after watching your video that I have bad habits to unlearn.
I may also have started with a Starter Account. Is there a way to learn if I am still in Starter or Standard?
Thank you Pros for all you do hear. I’m hoping to succeed with AdWords soon.
Hi Jeremy,
Unfortunately I read your post after my first experience with AdWords. The advise to avoid, in the instance, to activate the Content Network would save for sure a lot of time.
ps.
Google removed the second video from youtube.