More from the Mailbag: Quality Score Mysteries and Great PPC Learning Resources
David digs into the reader mailbag to discuss Google's quality score issues, and some good beginner resources for learning PPC advertising.
David digs into the reader mailbag to discuss Google's quality score issues, and some good beginner resources for learning PPC advertising.
This week I’ll cover a few more topics that readers have been writing about, and then get back into the flow of the column the first week of December. We’ll let you concentrate on your turkey dinner next Thursday.
My installment describing Google’s Account Quality Score, and the Big G’s sometimes maddening insistence on charging seemingly-outrageous bid prices, generated more mail than any other topic. The comments mainly fell into two buckets: “Thanks — that explains a lot!” and “I still can’t believe Google would do that!”
Re: the latter comment: I think Google is doing their best to face a thorny challenge: how to calculate quality score (which determines minimum bid price) for keywords with zero search history — within the AdWords account and across the web?
I think Google will come up with a better solution someday — for example, for brand terms, Google could, with a little more software and bandwidth-consumption, compare an ad group and/or keyword list with the landing page content — or even just the domain name. At least that would let advertisers enjoy sensibly-low bid prices on their own brands and company names.
But let’s circle back for a second: my point was that the high-minimum-bid-price phenomenon (which I’ve seen described as the “Google Slap” — though that term seems to be applied to anything that mystifies AdWords advertisers) mainly affects brand new accounts. So my simple advice is:
I think you’ll find that Google assigns reasonable minimum bid prices to the less-popular keywords this way. It sure beats the conventional wisdom: resigning yourself to paying $5.00-$10.00 for your own brand terms!
New topic: many readers ask me whether I can recommend good beginner resources for learning PPC advertising. While this column aims to be a soup-to-nuts tutorial on PPC advertising, it’s going to take many weeks for me to fully cover all related topics. So for those of you who want to make faster progress, here are my top picks:
Next week I’ll resume the flow of weekly lessons. Meanwhile, if you have questions or comments about topics I’ve covered, jump on over to the Profitable PPC forum and fire away!
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