Wednesday, April 1, 2009

New Insights for Search features

Since Google launched Insights for Search in August of last year, They have received great feedback about the many ways advertisers have been using Insights for Search - from anticipating demand better, to stocking desired brands, to finding new keywords for their AdWords campaigns from the list of top rising search terms. Now they launched additional features that will provide more granular data so you can make better informed advertising decisions.

  • New data sources - Google added additional data from Google News, Image and Product Search sites so you can see what the world is searching for beyond Google Web Search. For example, retailers could use the Product Search filter to get a better understanding of what people are more likely to buy, and then stock the appropriate products.
  • Category suggestions - Ever wonder what other categories your search terms might be classified under? Insights for Search now suggest category breakdowns for your terms. For example, if you type in the search term "apple", Insights for Search will show you all the relevant categories searches are classified under such as Computers & ElectronicsEntertainment, and Food & Drink.
  • Metros for the U.S. - User can now drill down to specific geographic regions, or metros, to see how search interest levels vary. This can help with geo-targeting in your AdWords campaigns.

These newly added features will be very use full for AdWords campaigns.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Google AdWords Interface Beta Test


Google has opened the beta it to more US advertisers, as well as to new countries (the UK and Australia) and new languages (Spanish, Japanese, French, and Brazilian Portuguese).

When you login to your AdWords account, you might see a message pop-up.(When trying out the new interface, you may get a second pop-up warning you that recommended browsers are Firefox 3, Internet Explorer 7, and Chrome. It works in Firefox 2, but is a bit slow.)

The new interface is heavy on Ajax, and will probably remind you of the Google Analytics interface (if you use GA as your analytics tool). In this week’s announcement, Google mentioned these new features:

  • Performance graphs on every campaign management page
  • Insight across ad groups - you can see and edit all groups from a single “page”
  • Inline editing - no need to load separate pages to edit ads
  • Easier content network management via a new “Networks” tab

Google emphasizes that the new interface is only about cosmetic and management changes; it has no impact on things like bidding, ranking, Quality Score, and how ads run.

Many advertisers will see the “New Interface (Beta)” link by default when signing in to AdWords. Advertisers who don’t see the link, but want to try it out, can learn more and ask to join the beta on the New AdWords Interface mini-site.


Source: search engine land