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3 PPC mistakes that have to be eradicated from your next campaign

As most people will testify, PPC is one of the fastest ways to get a new business off the ground. In the...

PPC mistakes

As most people will testify, PPC is one of the fastest ways to get a new business off the ground. In the case of an existing company, it’s also one of the most efficient ways to advertise as well. And I thought of sharing the PPC mistakes which you eradicate in your next Campaign.

Unfortunately, it differs immensely from most other types of advertising and this is why so many online marketing companies are sought for it. This is the reason today’s guide has been put together, and we will now look at three of the most common mistakes used when advertising on Google Adwords.

Using accelerated ad delivery

On the face of things, accelerated ad delivery makes sense. After all, this is the setting which means that your ads are delivered at record speeds – and your budget is used up as quickly as possible. For most brands, this means that their entire daily budget will be wiped out in the morning.

However, for the most part, it’s not a function you should be using. Firstly, one of the biggest features you can take advantage of when it comes to Adwords is day-parting. In short, you target your ads at certain parts of the day when you know that conversions are at their highest. If you are just serving everything as quickly as possible, you don’t have any data for the latter parts of the day.

Not only that, but it also means that your ad will be missing out on valuable impressions. Sure, that might not mean much for some campaigns, but for those of you who are looking to build brand awareness, it can be useful to see your ad showing throughout the day and appearing to different types of people.

Using broad match keywords

This might be something of a debatable topic, as there will be some readers who swear by broad match targeting for their campaigns. On the whole, however, we are going to advise against this approach.

Sure, Google might sometimes push it, but the use of broad match really does allow a whole wave of unrelated keywords to creep into your spend. Most of the time, any account which is using broad match keywords has countless irrelevant terms associated with it – all driving up costs, and also reducing Quality Score.

Broad match is something that could show a user an ad for a pink dress, even though they were searching for a pink skirt. Suffice to say, unless you are really hands-on and managing your negative keywords list correctly, this is only going to end in tears for both you and the user.

Not using emotional language in ads

As we all know, ad copy is king. If you have the right ad copy at your disposal, you’ll be amazed at just how your Quality Score improves. Let’s not forget that a quality score of 1 can result in your CPC cost rising by 400%, while one of 10/10 can see it be slashed by 50%. It’s a monumental difference.

One of the best ways to achieve good ad copy is by using emotional language. Trigger emotional responses from your audience and respond to needs that you know exist. Common ways are to target based on disgust or anger; two issues that people tend to react very strongly to.

Written by Robin Khokhar
Robin Khokhar is an SEO specialist who mostly writes on SEO. Thus sharing tips and tricks related to SEO, WordPress, blogging, and digital marketing, and related topics.
       
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6 Replies to “3 PPC mistakes that have to be eradicated from your next campaign”

  1. The great and informative post you have shared, I am a beginner and learned some new things form your blog. Thank you.

  2. Free traffic methods aren’t really free after all. They take an even more valuable resource than your money. They take your time.
    Which, as we know, isn’t scalable.
    However, it doesn’t have to be scary. It is an investment, and it is a risk. But like any investment into your business, the point is to make more money from the outcome of the investment than what you put into it.
    This is often called your “return on investment.” If you invested $10 into pay-per-click advertising and you ended up making $15 from that, you would be earning a 50% ROI.
    When you take that money you get back and reinvest it back into more PPC advertising, you can see how this snowballs quickly. $15 becomes $22.5, $22.5 becomes $33.75, do that 10 more times and that comes out to nearly $2000.

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