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Google AdWords

Google changes effect 35% searches.


Friday, November 4th, 2011

In the Google blog post announcing his change we are told

Search results, like warm cookies right out of the oven or cool refreshing fruit on a hot summer’s day, are best when they’re fresh. Even if you don’t specify it in your search, you probably want search results that are relevant and recent.

We completed our Caffeine web indexing system last year, which allows us to crawl and index the web for fresh content quickly on an enormous scale. Building upon the momentum from Caffeine, today we’re making a significant improvement to our ranking algorithm that impacts roughly 35 percent of searches and better determines when to give you more up-to-date relevant results for these varying degrees of freshness.

Call us on 02 9957 3337 to find out how this effects your own rankings.

Google Rolls out its Panda update!


Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Google Rolls out its Panda update internationally, and in the United States the initial launch impacted nearly 12% of queries. So it stands to reason that the impact may be similar for English-speaking searchers across the world.

We will keep you posted on trends and stats as we get them in.

Google Caffeine changes the way we optimise.


Thursday, December 16th, 2010

The introduction of Google Caffeine is having a significant effect on Search Engine Optimisation. To keep your ranking or to obtain a better ranking it is vital that your website creates a clear theme. It is important to create silos (partitioned relevant areas of content) so that Google can see that they are subsets of a larger specific topic.

Once you implement the silo structure to your website you are less likely to find your website losing ranking to newer, smaller websites that are more narrowly focused.

Google’s new Caffeine has 4 major changes to the way you website is crawled, indexed, and ranked.

1. Spider indexing is no longer set a long intervals and actually takes place almost instantly, constantly.

2. New websites are indexed much faster and existing websites are now indexed for keywords that they were not previously targeting using “Latent Semantic Indexing”.

3. Websites are now ranked in terms of their relevance.

4. Google no longer uses the keywords meta tags to index your site.

Google AdWords Tips (5)


Saturday, September 11th, 2010

Google AdWords Tip 5 – Test different Advertisments and positions.

How much difference will being first, second third or tenth position make to your conversion rates and your budget? To be effective, you should know.

Test your advert in each position and watch how many clicks it gets in each. Also see if the lower positions work as well as the top. You can get the lower positions cheaper so you can get mpre clicks, that is, if you can attract the clicks at the lower positions.

Try different creatives. Write different adverts and try them at different times and judge the click ratios. Throw out the least performing ads and create new ones to try to beat the best performing ads.

Remember that the AdWords ranking algorythm works on a CPC x CTR (click thru rate). It also takes into account how well targeted the keywords in the advert are to the page that it goes to and also compares to the search key phrase that has been used to invoke the advert.

Two adverts at the same bid price (CPC) will be judged higher or lower by the amount of clicks each attracts (CTR).

There is also another cool trick. Patience. You can get to the top later in the day with a much lower CPC as the top bidders run out of budget. If their ads are successful you will slot in and climb higher as their expensive clicks get eaten up and their daily budget is reached, causing them to stop running the adverts for the day.

Google AdWords Tips (4)


Monday, August 30th, 2010

Google AdWords Tip 4 – Turn off content targeting and search network.

The search network is where Google places advertising on other peoples websites. If you have a popular website you can make money from having a google ads display on it, and the ads that are shown on each form the Google Adwords Network.

The problem is, you don’t know where your ads are going to show and the people there are not really searching for your site. This does attract clicks but they are usually just browsers, not searchers, and it just costs you money each time they have a look.

You can turn Search Network Ad Placement OFF in the preferences. I usually leave the display on mobiles option ON.

Hope this helps.

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