Google has recently announced a new Adwords interface that we’ve had a chance to beta test and found it to be a vast improvement in managing single campaigns. 

The new Adwords interface was built in response to the Adwords user community who needed a method for getting their work done faster. Among the many new and improved feature set:

Faster Account Navigation

  • Browse your campaigns and ad groups at once in a new account tree
  • Compare performance easily by jumping between ad groups

 

 

 

Track Performance Efficiently

  • Use Custom Graphs to chart trends in up to two metrics at once
  • Filter your data to focus on the keywords that matter most

 

 

Find New Optimization Opportunities

  • Use roll-up tabs to find your biggest opportunities for improvement
  • Get new keyword ideas with easier access to search query reports
  • Add negative keywords quickly to refine your targeting

 

 

 

Spend Less Time Making Changes

  • Edit bids and keywords without loading a separate page
  • Change keyword match types with a new drop-down menu
  • Make bulk edits with just a few clicks

 

 

 

Get More Out of the Content Network

  • Check your performance on individual sites on the new Networks tab
  • Adjust your bids for different placements based on performance
  • Exclude placements that aren’t working for you

 

 

 

 

The biggest time savers that we have found are the Account Tree, In-line Editing.  The Account Tree allows you to quickly navigate to any campaign or ad group from any page in your account.  In-line editing allows you to click & edit without having to navigate away from the page you’re on.  The Networks Tab is useful for comparing your ads’ performance on Google, search partner sites and the Google Content Network.

Google has listened to what Adwords clients need and has delivered very well.  If you do not have an Adwords account, sign up at http://adwords.google.com  – and then download our free white paper, Adwords Survival Guide.

**If you’re a marketing firm needing to manage multiples of Adwords accounts and ad groups for numerous clients, sorry but you will still need a more robust solution…

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You own a small business, just like me. You own a brick & mortar business. I have over a decade of personal, hands-on experience with that; I have paid rent, payroll, payroll taxes, sales tax, worried about inventory and sell-through… I get it. Your margins are getting thinner and sales are getting smaller. You have been looking at every expense item in your business and you have probably run out of things to cut. The next thing to cut will be you, or the business itself. What you need are more customers. More customers will solve your problem, won’t it?

I’d like to ask you to think about advertising your business in the Yellow Pages. I’m not suggesting you think about it as a viable means of advertising — I’m asking you, consider the advertising that you’re doing, whether it be the Yellow Pages or any of the other “old school” methods for advertising your business. Consider how that ad works for you. Consider how that ad MUST work for you in order for it to do its job of bringing more customers into your store or restaurant, or getting more prospects to call you. Someone needs to get the idea to open the phone book, page to your category, peruse the ads, find YOU, see something in your display ad to make them take action and call. NO ONE works that hard anymore to seek you out. That advertising costs thousands of dollars a year. How many of your new customers came from the Yellow Pages last year? Do you even have any metrics (data) to know where your new business came from? Humbly, I suggest the best thing you can do is eliminate that display ad; create a regular, simple listing and pay for an extra line for your website address.

Now please consider your website. I’m going to be very direct and honest with you — if you are running your website like most small business owners, it’s failing to add anything to your business. Many small business owners operate their website as though it were a Yellow Pages ad; it’s there. Your customers won’t randomly find you on the Internet. They won’t just happen to think about your business and type it in. Even if your potential customers go to a search engine and type in your TYPE of business, they probably won’t find you unless you have 1) optimized your pages properly and 2) created specific methods to increase the presence and visibility of your website to the search engines. You see, not only your customers need to know who you are, but Google, Yahoo and MSN does as well. If they don’t know you exist, they can’t deliver your site to people who need your product or service.

Done properly, a website can be a VERY effective method of adding customers to your business. It can be modified very quickly to adapt to trends. Through your website, you can feature sales, talk to your customers and find new clients. A website can be any size you want it to be. You can even sell some of your products on your website and reach beyond your local market.

Consider your website name. If your business is about plumbing, and you don’t have “plumbing” in your .com name, does Google know what your site is about? Do the pages of your site talk about the various aspects of your business? Oftentimes, you’ll see a local business have a three-page site — a Contact page, About Us, and then a HUGE page about everything it is they do. Why? Because they “got a deal” from a web designer for a three-page site that was cheap and easy to implement. This is a terrible strategy in terms of search engines. Segment your pages into one topic per page. Make sure the metatags on each page match the topic. You can Google a discussion about metatags, but essentially, metatags are the code Google looks at for clues on what the page is about. YOU determine what the metatags are. Oftentimes, web designers don’t put anything in the metatags because you have paid for “web design” not “SEO.” That’s one reason why you got such a “deal” on the price. ;) (Kinetics Web Pro only creates SEO-friendly sites, so every page has metatags.)

Metatags are easy to find. Just go to your website, and then in your browser, go to “View Source.” Search for the TITLE and DESCRIPTION tags. If you don’t have anything there, or you can’t even find those words in your code, then your page is not optimized for search engines in the most basic way.

Metatags are the simplest way to optimize a website for search engines, but really, it goes to the very structure of the site. Think in terms of an outline with 1) 2) 3) and sub-sections of a) b) and c) — search engines think the same way. They like to see orderly, planned websites that function logically. Your site should be the same way.

We hope this has been helpful to your business.

If you don’t have time to do this work yourself, we can help. Contact us today.

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