Monday, October 27, 2008

Profitable PPC: Those Mysterious Quality Scores: Fundamentally Simple

Today's Column: » Those Mysterious Quality Scores: Fundamentally Simple 
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SEW Expert - David  Szetela
Those Mysterious Quality Scores: Fundamentally Simple
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By David Szetela, Search Engine Watch, Oct 27, 2008
Columns  |  Contact David  |  Biography

This week, I'm going to interrupt our discussion of ad testing to demystify a concept that, judging by the number of questions I've received lately, seems to be a topic of high interest (and some high anxiety): PPC Quality Scores.

If you're aware of quality scores at all, you may have a vague notion that the search engines "grade" the "goodness" of your PPC campaigns, and for those campaigns that earn good quality scores, sprinkle some kind of digital pixie dust that helps those campaigns perform better.

You may have also heard that PPC quality scores are calculated by semi-secret scoring software wielding complicated mathematical formulas, all dancing in real time to confound advertisers' efforts to understand, much less manipulate to "game the system" for unfair advantage.

While there's some truth in these notions, the fact is that understanding quality scoring, and creating campaign conditions to earn maximum benefit, is simple and straightforward.

The search engines (Google, Yahoo and Microsoft) want two things to happen:

  1. They want users to find exactly what they're looking for.
  2. They want advertisers to get site visitors whose intent -- expressed as a search query -- exactly matches what's offered by the advertiser's site.

That way, satisfied users return to the search engine for dependable search results, and advertisers can depend on a steady stream of clicks that result in sales, and so keep spending advertising money with the search engine.

Years ago, in the early dark ages of PPC, the search engines employed a pure auction system, whereby the highest-bidding advertisers gained the highest ad positions. While this seemed fair from the advertisers' perspective, it sometimes resulted in irrelevant ads appearing at the top of the search results page -- making it more difficult for users to find exactly what they were looking for.

So, for example, an advertiser could choose to pay high bid prices for high-volume keywords like "Ally McBeal" and display an ad for Janet Jackson ringtones.

The user lost because ads that appeared at the top of the page weren't really related to the intent of the search. And advertisers whose relevant ads were displayed lower on the page lost because their ads weren't prominently displayed.

So Google (followed later by Yahoo and Microsoft) decided to reward relevant advertisers (and punish irrelevant ones) by instituting the quality scoring system, which simply put says:

Advertisers who display relevant ads may achieve higher ad positions -- at lower costs-per-click -- than competitors who may be paying higher costs-per-click.

Advertisers who display relevant ads benefit two ways: more clicks (since their ads appear higher on the search results pages) and better ROI (since their costs are lower).

The quality scoring system is based on a complex group and series of calculations that take into consideration the relationships among the words in keyword lists, in ad text and on landing page -- as well as many (possibly hundreds) of other factors that the search engines won't reveal, in order to reduce the likelihood that some advertisers will try to "game the system" and gain unfair advantage.

Does that mean that as an advertiser you need to understand all the factors that are included in quality score calculations -- and conduct frequent micro-analysis and microsurgery on your campaigns?

The answer is "no" -- if you create your campaigns correctly in the first place.

If you've been following the preceding 14 installments of this column, you've already learned the best practices for building PPC campaigns -- which, not coincidentally, ensure good-to-great quality scores:

  1. Build small ad groups composed of a small number of keywords that are closely related to each other (see this installment and this one).
  2. Write killer ads that contain almost every keyword in the ad group's keyword list (see here and here).
  3. Include words from the keyword list and ad copy on the page the visitor arrives on once they've clicked on the ad. I'll expand on this in upcoming installments, but the preceding sentence tells you 90% of what you need to know.

That's it - that's all you really need to know about quality scoring to create successful PPC campaigns. If you're one of those left-brainers who simply must know all the details, I recommend the excellent series of blog post by Brad Geddes, and Google's official explanation.

But what if you're not starting a new campaign -- how do you know whether your campaign suffers due to poor quality score and what should you do about it? That's the topic of next week's column -- c'mon back then, and meanwhile, let me know your comments and questions via the feedback form below.

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Biography
PPC Advertising expert David Szetela founded Clix Marketing in 2003, following a 25-year career in technology sales and marketing. He is active in the Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO) and was the author of two lessons in SEMPO's Advanced Search Advertising course. He is a regular speaker at PPC Summit, MarketingSherpa and SES events, and his weekly radio show, PPC Rockstars, is broadcast every Monday at 4 PM EDT on Webmasterradio.fm.

Article Archives by David Szetela:
» Those Mysterious Quality Scores: Fundamentally Simple - October 27, 2008
» Measuring a Text Ad's Effectiveness - October 20, 2008
» Reading the Tea Leaves: Interpreting Keyword Reports - October 13, 2008
» Judging PPC Performance: Focus on Conversions, Part 2 - October 6, 2008
» Judging PPC Performance: Focus on Conversions - September 29, 2008
» PPC Bidding Strategies: Prudence vs. Aggressiveness - September 22, 2008
» More Articles by David Szetela

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