| | Problems With Google Adwords | | |
Everyday I read about mixed experiences with Google Adwords. Professional marketers rave about its innovative method of determining ad relevance by factoring in click-through rates, while beginners complain that they can not
get a functioning account up and running. Let the truth about the Google Adwords system be told: using click-through rates to gauge performance and determine pricing helps automate the editorial process and maximize profits, but it does not increase the relevance of site listings to user queries.
As is fairly often the case, Googles logic is incorrect. To determine whether a site is relevant to the keyphrases being bid on, it is not enough to measure the rate at which users click on a listing. This is because an advertisement
listing does not have to be an accurate indicator of a sites content. The most obvious examples of this are listings that appear for a trademarked name. When a user searches for GreenPath Debt Solutions he/she is searching for that particular business
. Other businesses
that offer similar services are not relevant to that query, but other businesses
dominate the search results. To a nice
extent, ads can mislead the user, and advertisers take advantage of this fact.
It is even debatable whether high click-through rates indicate that a listing is relevant to a users query. This is because click-through rates increase dramatically for higher rankings or for advertisement
writing
that repeats a users query. Consider an ad that moves from the number one position to the number eight position. Its click-through rate will certainly decrease, but the ad text cannot be less relevant because it is exactly the identical
as it was before. Consider an ad that has a synonym for a users query written in the text. If you change the synonym to the exact query, it will show up in boldface type, and its click-through rate will increase. But the meaning of its content is the same, so it cant be more relevant. If changes that dont alter the meaning of an ads text can impact click-through rates, an ads CTR must not be a sizeably successful
indicator of an ads relevance to a user query.
Adwords system does have advantages, mostly for advertisers and for Google. Listings become active faster, and ad text is user friendly to change. Googles system is more instantaneous, but it all comes at a price. Adwords is more complicated and difficult to manage in-house without a crash-course, largely because of quirks that surface due to the CTR variable
. In addition, keyphrase hijacking and spam impressions are starting to become a concern. Despite its advantages, the CTR system causes problems for advertisers and problems for Google.
But what I want to do, what nobody else has seriously done, is look at the system from the point of view of the user. The fact is this: for each business related query there are usually tons of business
sites that are all equally relevant Adwords can not
miss on these queries. But when it comes to more distingguished queries -- queries where there arent as many relevant sites -- Adwords system doesnt deliver dazzling results. My favorite query is national debt. You will be happy to understand
that you may find new and used National Debt on E-bay or Find the Inside Scoop on Debt Consolidation Loans & Credit Cards on inside-tips.com. When it comes to very general queries queries where an extremely large number of sites are relevant Adwords system once again does not deliver nice
results. Click-through rates are too low to sustain these types of keyphrases. Adwords treats general queries as if nothing is relevant to them, when the opposite is true. Here we have two important cases when Adwords doesnt deliver nice
results -- two important arguments for the utilize of human editors.
From the point of view of the user, Googles search engine system continues to range from mediocre to poor. Its worst features contruct
the most profits. Advertisers, marketers, and investors applaud as Google drives down the quality of the users internet knowledge. Adwords bidding system is one example; Ill discuss more in the future.
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