Today at PPC Summit, we had another round of info packed sessions. This is REALLY great stuff.
I picked up some real gems regarding Google Adwords today :
There’s been a veil of secrecy on Google’s part as to what’s the deal with history?
ACCOUNT HISTORY
There’s been widespread claims in the SEM world that people who have had Google accounts for years have a significant advantage (in terms of lower click costs) over newbies who are just starting out.
Now, one of the presenters actually got some answer out of Google regarding account history, and Google claims is takes only 4 months to overcome the disadvantage of having a new account.
So presumably there’s no benefit between someone who’s had a Google account for 1 year vs 5 years, once you’ve had your account actively running for about 4 months you’re on a level playing field – according to Google.
What sucks is when you first start a new account you could be paying 30%-60% more per click than you otherwise would, just for having a new account!
CAMPAIGN HISTORY
Now many of you have heard that when you first start a new campaign you’ll get high click cost and/or poor ad positions until you’ve build some history.
But how long do you have to build history on a new campaign anyway?
Again, according to Google, in the case of campaign history it takes approximately 2 weeks to build up your history.
So over the first two weeks of building up a campaign expect your traffic to increase and your CPC to drop as your history builds.
There’s keyword history and ad history as well. How fast your keyword history or ad history builds up depends on how much traffic you’re getting.
POSITION NORMALIZATION
Position Normalization? Yeah, sounds like some fancy mathematical term! LOL
Position Normalization was put in place by Google on August 2006, and yet most people have not heard of it.
So what does it mean? It means that Google no longer rewards you JUST for having a high CTR, it’s now ‘normalized for the position.’ So if you’re in position #1 on Google and your CTR is 5%, while most advertisers get 7% CTR in that position, you’ll be penalized, NOT rewarded.
Your CTR only helps as far as it compares to how other advertisers fare in the same ad position.
In the old days you could bid high when you launched your campaign and build up a super high CTR by being in the first position; as a result Google would give you a high quality score. Then you just cut your bid by 75% and your ad would STILL be on the first page thanks to your high quality score.
Guess what? With position normalization this doesn’t work anymore. Unfortunately a lot of people are still aggressively promoting this bogus strategy – totally not their fault, Google slipped position normalization in while no one was looking!
Don’t waste your money by bidding high when launching a campaign – only benefit of biding high now is to build up your ad and keyword history faster – but you don’t have to be in the first position to do this.
I recommend you determine your initial bid as followed:
Assume average conversion rate : 1%=0.01 (5%-10% for pay per lead)
Let’s say you have a commission payout of : $X
I would recommend that you start bidding 1% x $X = 0.01 x $X
Why? Because the Conversion rate times the Commission (affiliate payout) = EPC (earnings per click)
Now if you’re bid = EPC you can expect to break even at this point. Then you can just adjust your bids from there as you collect data.
Now this is just a rule of thumb, but it works well in most cases. It works best if you actually KNOW what your EPC or your conversion rate is for ppc traffic (ask your affiliate manager).
It was SOOO worth paying $1000 to go to the PPC Summit, just for these few tidbits I got on the second day!
If YOU want to be a super affiliate you have to be absolutely hungry for the knowledge.
I’ve been hungry since day one, and I’m still seeking to take my game to the next level.
account history campaign history position normalization ppc summit
Brent,
When you pause a campaign you don’t lose your data the only reason you would lose your data or it being reset is that Google is manually editing your scores.
The biggest kept secret in the adwords game is that if your quality scores are getting smacked or reset its because its being humanly edited.
Google has employees that watch your accounts a *lot* specially on new accounts or if they notice your account is changing around a lot like launching new campaigns and simile things to that…
Actually Shoemoney told me about that, but if you really think about it you can tell Google is manually reviewing your account a *lot*
Debby,
Nope if you pause it you will still have your data there thats what I was saying…
Your data will only get reset if Google manually reviews it and slaps your scores.
Debby,
So if your account balance runs out and your campaign stops that has nothing to do with your data being reset.
Tyler,
Dude sorry but you are way off topic. The topic is account history/ campaign history as it relates to CPC (Cost-per-click). I’m well aware that pausing my campaign doesn’t result in it’s data being deleted LOL. This entire blog post is all about CPC. You are going on about quality score ..yada yada. Amit is talking about CPC and account history, nothing else.
-Brent
Brent,
You stated the following below…
“I’m wondering if a campaign that has already built up a campagin history enough to bring down CPC prices is paused, when it is unpaused, is the CPC history still there or is it treated as though it is a new campaign (again, CPC-wise).”
Brent,
Also everything I stated correlates with this topic, it only makes sense…
I mean really
Brent,
I see what you was thinking on why you think I was talking off topic if you read that cleary and combined the concepts I’m talking about you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about..
Put two and two together…
Adwords is like science
Tyler,
I know what YOU are talking about, but this is Amit’s blog post and what he is discussing is campaign/account history and how it affects CPC. Of course, yeah, there are many factors that play into minimum CPC, but this post is about how account history affects CPC, not about Google employees watching accounts or quality score etc. That stuff has all been hashed through aroung the web 1000 times. The stuff Amit posted is new knowledge to most and so it’s be nice stay on topic with this new information.
-Brent
Thanks for sharing that info Amit, Good to know that show is worth attending!
Tyler, I understand that $0.15 bid is harder to get. But let’s take a look at this CPC again.
Your commission is $15 for order. If your conversion rate is 1% it’s mean that you must have 100 clicks to have a single order, if your bid is 2.24, you must spend $224 to get one sale. So your will loose $224 – $15 = $209. After some time your bid dropped to $1,24! If conversion rate is the same 1%, you must spend $124 to get one sale which will bring to you $15 commission. So now you still loose money: $124 – $15 = $109!
I think $0.15 bid is maximum bid which I can setup if I don’t want to loose money. When I want profit, bid must be lower then $0.15, when conversion rate (1%) and commissions ($15) are constant.
Or I’m wrong?
P.S English is not my native language, but I think you understand me