Archive for the ‘Suspended Accounts’ category

New Round of AdWords Suspensions for Landing Page & Site Quality Guidelines

February 18th, 2010

Looks like Google has begun another round of suspensions on advertisers who violate Landing Page & Site Quality Guidelines.

I received frantic calls and emails from 4 different advertisers yesterday (2/17/10) who all received a final warning from Google stating their accounts were to be suspended if their landing page quality score issues were not fixed immediately.

Here is an Excerpt from a Google Email:

Landing Page Quality Violations

Advertisers Receiving Emails from Google

These emails need to be taken seriously because advertisers who do not act immediately do run the risk of suspension from Google AdWords.

This issue is extremely difficult for advertisers because Google shares very little info about *why* these advertisers are in violation of site quality guidelines.  Google shares a small list of the possible reasons a landing page can be of poor quality but there are many other reasons for low landing page quality.  Many advertisers have no idea what they are doing wrong and Google will not give advertisers much direction when it comes to exactly what the issue is and how they can fix it.

If you are facing a possible suspension for Landing Page & Site Quality Guidelines and do not know what is wrong with your website there are services such as the AdWordsPI who can help you identify your issue.

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Kim Clinkunbroomer, GAP

Posted by: Kim Clinkunbroomer, GAP

Owner of Clinks Web Service & AdWordsPI in Chicago, Illinois

Twitter: Kim Clink on TwitterAWHE on Twitter

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Disabled for Low Landing Page Quality Score

November 17th, 2009

Google Takes on Poor Landing Pages in an effort to improve user experience.

A new round of AdWords bans were brought to advertisers attention by Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Land November 16, 2009.

Barry Schwartz writes…”Google will begin to notify advertisers that they have been permanently banned. They will receive an email with details of this ban and the email will explain how to appeal the ban. I am told that banned advertisers can reply to the email to start the “appeals process.” Every reply should get a response from a dedicated Google representative.”

A Sample of the messaging that advertisers see:

“We are writing to let you know that your Google AdWords account has been disabled due to one or more serious violations of our advertising policies related to Landing Page and Site Quality.  As a result, your ads will no longer run through the Google AdWords system and we are unable to accept advertising from you in the future.  Please note that future accounts you open will also be disabled.

As part of our commitment to making the AdWords experience safe and effective for our users and our advertisers, we routinely review the landing pages that our advertisers promote through our search and content networks.  If we find that an advertiser has submitted a landing page that egregiously violates our policies, we reserve the right to take immediate account-level action.

Landing pages advertised via AdWords must have relevant, original content, and must be transparent about the nature of the business being promoted. Further, advertising certain types of sites will lead to immediate account disabling.  These types of sites include, but are not limited to:

* Sites that charge users or collect personal information in exchange for a product that is never delivered
* Sites that charge for “free” software
* Sites that trick users into paying for fake or poor-quality content
* Sites that charge users for information that makes unrealistic promises of financial or personal gain
* Sites that install malware software on a visitor’s computer”

Good on Google’s part to provide messaging and also a relief to see advertisers have the ability to appeal the ban.  This is a new way of handing bans by Google and I am glad to see them go in this direction.

Update: AWP (AdWordsPro) in the adwords forum stated when replying in a help thread today:

“For those advertisers who have received this email, the one way to ask further questions and/or dispute the decision is to reply directly to the email. Doing so will send your reply directly to the right team – whereas contacting AdWords support in any other way will not.”

Posted by: Kim Clinkunbroomer, GAP

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