Google Adwords Basic Summary
Google Adwords Basic Summary
Google Adwords Basic Summary
1. Campaign - An ad campaign on Google AdWords is made up of your ad groups, and has the same
budget, campaign type and your other ad settings. It’s generally what you first set-up when you
advertise, and it helps you organize your different paid advertising efforts. You can run multiple
campaigns at any time from your Google account.
2. Ad groups - An ad group is your set of keywords, budgets and targeting methods for a particular
objective, within the same campaign. For example, if you are running an ad campaign for a shoe sale,
you could set up ad groups to target for online sales, women’s shoes and men’s shoes. You can have
multiple ads in each ad group.
3. Campaign Type - Your campaign type is where you want your ads to be seen. Google has:
“Search Network only” (which means Google search only)
“Display Network only” (which means your ad shows up in Google’s Display network of
websites, videos, YouTube, Blogger and more. This is also known as AdSense)
“Search Network with Display Select” (which is a combo of search and display)
If you have a Google Merchant Center account and want to use Product Listing Ads, you can also
choose “Shopping” as a campaign type.
4. Keywords - Keywords are very important in your Google Ads. They are the words or word phrases
you choose for your ads, and will help to determine where and when your ad will appear. When
choosing your keywords, think like your customer and what they would be searching for when they
want your product, service or offer. Though you can include as many as you like, I suggest
a maximum of twenty keywords.
Here’s Google’s explanation on how to build the best keyword list:
5. Quality Score - A quality score is the measurement from Google based on the relevancy of your
ad headline, description, keywords and destination URL to your potential customer seeing your ad. A
higher Quality Score can get you better ad placement and lower costs.
7. Ad Rank - Your Ad Rank is the value that’s used to determine where your ad shows up on a page.
It’s based on your Quality Score and your bid amount.
8. Mobile ad - Mobile ads are what your mobile searchers see on their devices. Google AdWords has
WAP mobile ads and “ads for high-end mobile devices”.
9. Ad extensions - Ad extensions are extra information about your business, such as your local
address, phone number, and even coupons or additional websites. They’re what shows up in blue
below your ad descriptions.
10. Call to Action (CTA) - A CTA is literally the action you want your searcher to take. Good CTAs in
your ads are short, action oriented words such as “Buy”, “Get”, “Act Now”, etc.
11. Click Through Rate (CTR) - Your CTR is an important metric in your account settings. It
measures how many people who have seen your ad click through to your link destination.
12. Landing Page - Your landing page is the page on your website to which you’re driving traffic from
your ad.
14. Split Testing - Split testing includes A/B and multivariate testing. It’s a method of controlled
marketing experiments with the goal being to improve your objective results (such as higher CTR’s,
increased conversion or even better Ad Ranking).
15. Bid Strategy - Your bid strategy is basically how you set your bid type to pay for viewer
interaction with your ads.
16. Daily budget - Your daily budget is what you’re willing to spend per day per ad. Your daily cost is
based on a daily average per month, so don’t be alarmed if yours varies from day to day.
17. CPC - Cost-Per-Click is the most common bid type on Google AdWords. It means you pay every
time a person actually clicks on your ad. You set your “maximum CPC” in the bidding process, which
means that dollar amount is the most you’ll pay for a click on your ad.
19. CPM - Cost-Per-thousand impressions is a bidding method that bases your costs on how many
times your ads are shown (impressions).
20. Billing Threshold - Your billing threshold is the level of spending that triggers a charge to you for
the ad costs. It applies to automatic payments, and the threshold level starts at $50. It you reach that
within 30 days, you’ll be billed, and your threshold then raises to $100 and so on.
Ad Creative Terms
21. Headline - Your ad headline is the header of your ad copy. It generally shows up in blue when
your ad is live.
22. Destination URL - Your destination URL is the landing page your ad is directed to when it’s
clicked. Your destination site can be a specific page. You can change it for differing ads within ad
groups. Your audience does not see it in the ad.
23. Display URL - Your display URL is what shows up in your ad copy. You can keep this simple and
clean to increase your brand recognition, trust, and conversions.
24. Side ad - A side ad is the ad that show up on the right hand side of a search engine results page
(SERP).
25. Top ad - A top ad is the ad that shows up in a shaded box above the organic search results. Note:
Your ad will likely show up as both a side ad and a top ad - so write your ad copy to optimize for both.
26. Search Engine Optimization - the process of maximizing the number of visitors to a
particular website by ensuring that the site appears high on the list of results returned by a
search engine.