The Beginner’s Basics about Google Adwords
There’s no bigger internet advertising option than Adwords, and Adwords has made Google an online giant since the’90’s internet crash. Google has grown Adwords to offer an astonishing array of new options for building up traffic and generating website revenue. Largely due to Adwords, website designers have transformed the net from a place for your company gimmick to a profit-making dynamo, but before you get going to your on Google Adwords profits, there are a few basics you need to know.
Signing up for Adwords is something you can do in five minutes or less, and you can fund your new account with as little as $10. The first time you log into Adwords, you will notice a tremendous number of useful tools. But don’t spend time learning them right away. The first thing you need to do is to get a list of keywords.
While you can certainly find keywords on services like Wordtracker, the best keywords will be those you think up yourself. That’s because users judge your site (and Google ranks your pages) on the basis of content, not just keywords. If a keyword has a great KEI and seems like it would roll in traffic for you, it won’t do you any good?and could do you real harm?if you don’t have useful content to match.
Brainstorm to find your own list of keywords, not somebody else’s. Think of the words and phrases that advertise the unique content of your web pages. Once you have your own list of words, only then try the Google Adwords keyword selection tool. What this tool can do for you is to remind you of terms that you simply did not think of in your brainstorming session, and tell you which terms are being searched for on Google and its partners. Anything that has a long bar for a high search volume and a short bar for low competition is a good place to start your campaign.
A common beginner’s mistake is to use too many keywords. You only want to use as many keywords as you can test and track. Probably you don’t want more than 10 to 15 keywords in your first campaign. If you use more than 15 keywords, you may succumb to the temptation to ax words that don’t bring you traffic right away, and you may be left with keywords that are not really the best. When you have your short list of keywords complete, then write just one ad. Make the copy for your ad a magnet for web search. Make it clear and direct, giving anyone who sees it a very clear reason to go to your site?and make sure your site delivers the content you advertise. When you have done this, then it is time to set your budget.
Most site owners who use Google Adwords set budgets on a daily rate. This means that if your budget if $100 a day, Adwords will run ads until your $100 is spent, and not run any more that day. The cycle starts again the next day, assuming there are funds or credit for your Adwords account. You can also set your campaign to run just certain hours of the day, if you think you will get more actual customers at one time of day or another. Or you can program your campaign to spend money evenly through the day. Be sure to set your demographic targets, city, state, country, continent, or world, appropriately for your sales goals. If you are selling bikini wax, for instance, you probably don’t want to run your ads in Saudi Arabia.
With Google Adwords, you have total control over how your ads appear. You control when they appear. You control how much you pay for a click and where your ads are displayed. As you learn to use all these tools in ways that drive your traffic and generate sales, Google Adwords will prove to be your most useful tool for growing your site and your profits.
Justin Harrison is a leading Internet Marketing consultant responsible for the Internet Marketing strategies behind some of the biggest online brands including Amazon, BBC, MasterCard and many others.

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