Friday, May 31, 2013

Sign Up for June Learn with Google Webinars

Last month, we announced our new series of Learn with Google webinars to help make the web work for you. If you’ve missed some since then, be sure to register for any (or all!) of our 10 sessions coming up in June. Each webinar gives you deep-dive educational content, across a breadth of products and marketing objectives, in a format that’s convenient for you.

Upcoming June webinars:


[Shopping] Google Shopping 201: Maximizing Profits
[YouTube] Building your Business with YouTube Video Ads
[Analytics] Metrics for the Mobile App Ecosystem
[Search] What's New & Next in AdWords
[Analytics] Unleashing the Combined Power of Google Analytics & AdWords
[Social] Growing your Business & Engaging your Audience with Google+
[Shopping] Google Shopping 301: Creating & Optimizing Product Listing Ads
[Social] Launching & Amplifying your Impact Across Social Channels
[Display] Reaching the Right Audience with Remarketing
[Research] Creating Custom Infographics with the New Google Databoard
 
Webinars are held Tuesdays through Thursdays at 10am Pacific/1pm Eastern.

Every event is led by Google product experts and includes time for live Q&A.


Visit our
webinar site to register for any of the live sessions and to access our large library of recorded content. You can also stay up-to-date on the schedule by adding our Learn with Google calendar to your own Google calendar to automatically see upcoming webinars.

Learn with Google is a program to help businesses succeed through winning moments that matter, enabling better decisions and constantly innovating. We hope that you’ll use these best practices and how-to’s to maximize the impact of digital and grow your business. We’re looking forward to seeing you at an upcoming session!

Posted by Erin Molhar, Marketing Coordinator, Learn with Google

Webinar on Wed, 6/12: Metrics for the Mobile App Ecosystem

As users discover, download, and use your apps, understanding your customers and what they're doing is incredibly important and has a direct impact on monetization. Leveraging smart analytics and analyzing key metrics can drive future monetization and new app discovery efforts, empowering you to become a smarter and more effective app developer or marketer. In short, your ability to drive maximum value from your app only starts after the download. 



Sign up for our upcoming Webinar and join Google Analytics team members Andrew Wales and Adam Singer as they explore the key metrics to measure for the mobile app ecosystem, as well as learn about the benefits of using Google Analytics for mobile app measurement, such as:

A more powerful mobile SDK
We are providing a new mobile app analytics solution, solving the problem that there is currently no single repository to understand end-to-end value of mobile app users. This is supported by a more powerful mobile SDK (v2.0) that is easy to implement.

“One stop shop” for app measurement
Understanding app performance holistically through acquisition, engagement and outcome is critical to improve mobile app results, optimize user engagement and increase revenue generated. Our new reports show the entire lifecycle and in our Webinar, we’ll explore each section.

Improve ROI and engagement
App developers and brands can make better, more comprehensive data-driven decisions for mobile investments with better reports. For example, marketers can optimize their mobile programs to improve ROI and app developers can improve in-app engagement.

Webinar information:
Title: Metrics for the Mobile App Ecosystem
Date: Wednesday, 6/12/2013 @ 1:00pm EST / 10am PST
Level: 101 - Beginner
Duration: 1 hour
Sign up link: Register here.

Posted by the Google Analytics team

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Bidding Best Practices (Part 5): Implement Bid Automation for Better Performance and Time Savings

Today’s post about using automated bidding within enhanced campaigns is the fifth in our bidding best practices series. The previous blog posts covered calculating mobile, location and time bid adjustments. 

We launched bid adjustments for device, location and time of day to help you control your bids without duplicating campaigns as part of enhanced campaigns. We’ve heard from many advertisers that these tools help them improve results and efficiency. However, for some advertisers - particularly those with large programs and accounts - managing campaigns at scale can still be time-intensive and complex.

Since bidding is fundamentally important to your success with AdWords, we've developed a set of automation tools to help improve your performance and save you time.

Benefits of AdWords bid automation
For almost any advertiser, using the right automated bidding solution can drive better results and improved efficiency. Here are some key benefits to using AdWords automated bid strategies in enhanced campaigns.
  • Save time by optimizing keyword bids for your goal at scale. Automated tools dynamically change bids to meet your advertising goals across your keywords -- whether it’s 100 or 1 million keywords -- saving you time and effort.
  • Create and manage campaigns independently from bidding strategy. New flexible bid strategies let you apply multiple bidding strategies within a single campaign or across campaigns. This provides you the freedom to optimize towards multiple advertising goals in the same campaign or across campaigns without being constrained by account structure. Read more about these below.
  • Improve performance with auction-time bidding. Two flexible bid strategies, Target CPA and Enhanced CPC, use a combination of real-time performance signals including location, device, partner site and operating system to set specific bids at every auction. With auction-time bidding, these automated tools automatically calculate bid adjustments for you.
  • Optimize over time to continuously improve results. Our automated tools adapt to performance changes over time, saving you the effort of manually evaluating performance reports and continuously changing bids to keep up with performance fluctuations.
  • Easy to try. AdWords bid automation tools are free to use and available to all advertisers right in the AdWords interface.
When to use bid automation
In this section, we’ll provide guidance on when to use each of Google’s automated bid strategies within enhanced campaigns.

Target CPA (the flexible bid strategies version of Conversion Optimizer) is our most powerful bid automation tool. This bid strategy sets an optimum bid for every auction by predicting the likelihood of a conversion. It uses real-time inputs such as location, time, device, and network placement. Apply this strategy to ad groups or campaigns if your main goal is to maximize conversion volume while maintaining a target CPA. Target CPA will automatically set and optimize your bid adjustments for you, however, a -100% mobile bid adjustment will keep your ads from appearing on mobile devices.

Enhanced CPC can improve performance by adding automation on top of your manual bids. This automated bid strategy will refine your manual bids using the same real-time conversion prediction technology as Target CPA. You can still apply bid adjustments with this automated strategy if you know that device, location or time of day affects your conversion value in ways that are not measured in the conversion tracker. For example, if you want to use automation, but know that your mobile clicks drive value beyond online conversions, such as store visits, you can enable Enhanced CPC in combination with a bid adjustment for mobile to account for the difference in expected value per click.

The last two flexible bid strategies apply bid automation and work with existing manual bid adjustments. If your goal is getting the most clicks within a target spend, you can implement the Maximize Clicks bid strategy. Alternatively, if you’re more interested in visibility with top position impressions, you can try the Target Search Page location strategy. Read more about these strategies here.

If you’ve implemented one of the four flexible bid strategies, you can monitor your performance in the Shared Library and adjust if necessary.

While it might take some time to refine your automated bid strategy, the benefits of bid automation will improve your performance while saving you time and effort. To read more about automation and bidding adjustments, check out our Help Center.

Posted by Andrea Cohan, Product Marketing Manager, AdWords

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Digital Marketing Capabilities Lacking At Many Banks

With continued rapid growth of both online and mobile banking, banks and credit unions need to come up with better ways of marketing through digital channels. 


The technology is readily available, and best practices can be found at companies like Google, Amazon and others, but many banks are still at the infancy stage in terms of digital marketing capabilities.


To succeed in the future, financial institutions need to have a single view of the customer across channels, be equipped with advanced analytics for predicting behavior, be able to deliver offers to customers in real time and effectively integrate social media into the marketing mix.

A just released study by Efma and Wipro Technologies entitled, 'Global Retail Banking Digital Marketing Report', found that only a few banks are prepared for the digital marketing revolution, with the potential for improvement significant at most organizations. This first ever study also revealed that social media is not yet a part of mainstream marketing and is not a key customer interaction channel for most banks.

According to Rajan Kohli, vice president and head of banking and financial services at Wipro, "Digital technologies, social media and the explosion of data are redefining customer engagement models. The CMOs that we spoke with made it clear that the role of the CMO is changing as banks adapt to the development of new channels and capabilities."

For most banks surveyed, digital delivery channels were seen as complimentary to branches, being more important for processing transactions than for customer service and advice. With this transition across channels, it is believed interactions will be more frequent, insight collection will be more prolific and communication opportunities will be more direct.


Subscribe to Bank Marketing Strategies

As part of the Efma/Wipro study, a Digital Marketing Capability Index was created to benchmark capabilities vis-a-vis the best in class. Only 13 percent of banks surveyed demonstrated the highest level of maturity in digital marketing. The survey measured eight different capabilities including:
      • Ability to get real time single customer view across channels
      • Segmentation using customer lifetime value
      • Ability to microsegment
      • Availability of predictive analysis
      • Real time, event driven marketing
      • Personalization of offers on a 1:1 basis
      • Implementation of test and learn approach
      • Measurement of return on marketing investment (ROMI)
While banks in developed countries scored higher in most categories, key takeaways of the research illustrated the following potential for improvement:
      • One of the weakest areas for banks is the ability to get a real time, single customer view of products held and transactions occurring across all channels.
      • There was a surprising lack of test and learn processes and measurement of return on marketing investment in digital channels.
      • While most banks are proficient at the use of advanced analytics (such as predictive analysis), most don't have the capability to integrate this insight in real time for marketing on a multichannel basis.
      • While involvement in social media is standard practice at many banks, these channels are only used for outbound marketing and monitoring complaints. Using social media for transactions and digital interactions is lagging.
      • Effectiveness of 'big data' projects (in the few places where implemented) has been modest, yet several of those surveyed believe big data will play a significant role in the future.
Interestingly, many smaller banks scored relatively well on digital marketing capabilities, possibly signaling an advantage of relatively new, non-legacy IT systems. The two direct only (online) banks in the survey both scored high in digital marketing capabilities.

Marketing Spend


The marketing mix at banks continues to change in response to the growth in digital channel usage. While the research indicated that traditional advertising comprises around 50% of a bank's marketing budget, this spend was less than 50% for banks in developed countries and as low as 20-25% of the budget at some of the more progressive banks surveyed.

When asked to project what the marketing mix will be in 5 years, traditional advertising and sponsorships continued to slide, with non-traditional (digital) and direct marketing increasing due to the potential for better targeting and measurement.


The Digital Marketing Capability Index


Using data collected from the survey, it was clear that big differences existed between the leaders and laggards in digital marketing. While significant work would be needed for many banks to reach 'best in class' status, the index provides a valuable index to measure opportunities for improvement.

Review of the actual study will provide additional insight into the measurement process and weightings, but a standard 'bell curve' was the 'digital maturity' output of measuring over 100 banks from 38 different counties from November 2012 and April 2013. Sixty-two percent of the responding banks were smaller banks, while 38% were medium/large institutions. Fifty-eight percent were from 'developing' countries with 42% being from higher income, developed countries.

As can be seen below, on average, banks feel most proficient at developing predictive analysis and segmentation. Deeper discussions with the banks in the study, however, indicated that very few banks are able to do analysis in real time or link the analysis back to individual customer offers on a channel level.

In addition, most banks fell short on the ability to leverage real-time, event driven marketing or 1:1 personalization which is becoming expected by customers in the digital age.


Real Time Single Customer View

Not surprisingly, most banks have a real time, or at the least a periodic, view of retail customer product holding, product use and transactions. What is less likely is for a bank to have a view of all accounts within a household or across business and personal accounts. All of these capabilities were projected to improve significantly over the next five years according to the study.


Segmentation

Segmentation for better targeting and customer experience is not new at banks or credit unions. In fact, 90% of the banks covered in the Efma/Wipro research are increasing their segmentation efforts to take into more detailed demographic categorization and even channel use. This is important since traditional demographic segmentation (age & income) has recently been found to have limited use. (see Bank Marketing Strategy coverage on the weakness of demographic segmentation here)

The missing element in many cases is lifetime value segmentation for use in dynamic, real-time marketing. In addition, online data such as web clicks and social media is still used rarely for segmentation purposes by banks while used extensively by other industries like retailing and travel.



Business Intelligence

One of the more significant challenges for financial marketers today is the collection and analysis of unstructured data from within and outside the bank. As mentioned earlier, while predictive analysis was still found to be done in the majority of institutions, the use of this analysis to drive real-time decisioning was still rather rare. The same could be said for micro segmentation as shown below.


Real Time and 1:1 Personalization

The surprising lack of use of lifestage behavioral triggers and and 1:1 personalization of offers by financial institutions have both been covered recently by the Bank Marketing Strategy blog. The findings of the Efma and Wipro digital marketing capabilities study found the same deficit. 

According to the study (and realizing that the numbers are marginally better in developing countries), only 36% of the banks can do any real time event marketing, and only 47% make 1:1 personalized offers. 

Obviously, with more banking and credit union customers using online and mobile channels for the majority of their everyday banking, the inability to be agile with offers puts many banks at a disadvantage. 


Test and Learn

The concept of 'test and learn' has been used in banking since the early 1980s, with large credit card companies being the earliest and most well known proponents of this strategy. More recently, other large banks, such as PNC, Chase, U.S Bank, Bank of America and others have integrated this technique as a standard operating procedure within their direct marketing and knowledge management teams.

Surprisingly, the global banking study found that 70% of banks reviewed use test and learn in less than 25% of their digital marketing campaigns, with only 10% of the banks using test and learn in more than 75% of their campaigns. Possibly more disturbing for seasoned financial direct marketing professionals would be the finding that while test and learn was used for individual programs, the findings were not retained and retested as part of an ongoing process.


Return on Marketing Investment

Despite the importance of measuring the results of marketing campaigns to justify future investment and determine which programs should be continued or curtailed, only 25% of the banks surveyed measured ROMI in more than 75% of their digital marketing campaigns. It was also found that the confidence in the measurements done was not high, potentially the result of different attribution strategies.

Interestingly, several of the banks surveyed also believed that almost all digital marketing campaigns were effective and that it was not necessary to measure the impact of any one campaign result. This is obviously a faulty assumption.


Social Media in Banking


It comes as no surprise to any financial marketer that the growth of social media has realized a parallel trend to digital marketing. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, LinedIn and other popular social media sites have become the focus of discussion and debate within the financial industry as to the effective use and potential value of these channels. Adding to the confusion is the fact that most social media site users skew towards the younger demographic segments (that traditionally have a lower immediate value to banks and credit unions).

Because of this doubt, and despite a great deal of 'noise' that seems to point to the contrary, the spending on social media efforts by banks is still relatively small, with less than 500,000 Euros ($637K) being spent by 80% of the banks, with a very small number of banks spending over 1M Euros ($1.3M).

1M Euro = Approx. $1.3M
Not surprisingly, Facebook continues to be the primary channel invested in by banks, followed by Twitter and YouTube. Interestingly, while user generated content was currently used least, this is an area of social media where more future investment seems to be heading.


Currently, social media is used more as a branding and broadcast communication tool and as a way to monitor customer comments and complaints. Despite some well documented successes in developing countries as well as in Australia and other countries overseas, most banks are not looking to social media as a transaction tool at this time. This may change as perceived security of these channels improves, but demand for integrated social banking does not appear to be strong in many countries.


Social Media 'Plateau' in Banking

Given the doubts surrounding the value of using social media extensively for bank marketing, the researchers involved in the Efma study believe the use of social media by banks has reached a 'plateau'. "While some banks are of course just catching up, the leading banks are still working out how to best use social channels in the future, conducting experiments, and looking for indicators from other industries," states Efma.

Other social media observations include:
      • Social media is proving useful as a customer engagement tool.
      • Most banks do not see social media as a strong ‘channel’ for product sales in the near future.
      • Banks are considering using social media to ‘promote’ their services through advice and support, such as forums around house purchase
      • Some banks are looking at how to make use social media for advocacy – using promoters to get positive messages out relating to new products or service
      • Measurement of the effectiveness of spend on social media has been relatively basic, looking at high level metrics such as the number of “likes”on Facebook. (many banks are beginning to view these metrics as misleading)
      • It is unlikely that most banks will try to offer transactional services through Facebook or Twitter in the near future, although some will make it possible to do small person-to-person payments to Facebook friends.
Note: A very detailed look at current social media initiatives globally is provided within the EFMA/Wipro research report available here.

Big Data in Banking


Despite a lot of noise and trade press that may give financial institutions the thought that they are 'falling behind' in the capture and use of 'big data' (no definition attempted here), the Efma/Wipro survey shows that only a few retail banks have begun to work on big data projects. Of those that have initiated big data projects, the effectiveness for increasing revenues or reducing costs is relatively modest so far.



In my travels across the country and in speaking to many marketers at some of the largest banks, it appears that most banks are using new technology to gather and analyze new 'small data' sources such as transactional data and money in / money out movements. While these would usually be considered 'structured' data uses, most banks want to maximize value of these data sources before tackling 'unstructured' data.

In other words, with digital marketing, social media marketing and big data, taking small steps may make sense before trying to 'boil an ocean'. The key is to not move too slowly . . . since the marketplace is moving at breakneck speed.

Additional Resources


Bidding Best Practices (Part 4): Setting your bid adjustment for time

Today’s post will provide guidance on using time bid adjustments.  It is the fourth post in a bidding best practices series. Previous posts covered optimization strategies for setting location and mobile bid adjustments as well as prioritization.

In our constantly connected world, people are searching on multiple devices throughout the day for places to go, things to buy, and ways to stay entertained. People often use similar search results in different ways depending on the time of day that they search. For example, if someone is searching for “Hawaii vacations” during the workday, she may just be doing research for an upcoming trip.  When she returns home and conducts the same search in the evening, she may be more likely to have all the info she needs to book the flights and hotels.

With this constant connectivity, search marketers can now receive web traffic from across the globe and around the clock. Most businesses can still identify peak days and times when they see better ROI and lower costs.  At other times, customer activity might be slower and some businesses may wish to drive additional visits even if the cost is a bit higher.

If your business sees regular cycles of customer behavior and AdWords performance during the week, then using the time bid adjustment feature in AdWords enhanced campaigns may make sense for you.  This feature can help you improve results by allowing you to increase or decrease bids by day of the week or time of day.

Getting started with time bid adjustments
Before making any adjustments, it’s important to choose the right level of granularity for analysis.  For example, will you adjust bids by day of the week, eight hour increments, or down to the hour?  While you may be tempted to optimize down to the hour, it’s important to ensure that you have sufficient data to make decisions for each time period.  A general rule would be to have 1,000 clicks and 30 conversions for each time period you’re looking to optimize.

Calculating your time bid adjustments
Once you decide that using time bid adjustments are right for your business, compare the performance of your ads at varying times to your overall performance goal.  This will allow you to easily determine the right bid adjustment for each time period.

If you are setting a goal using a cost per action target, your bid adjustment can be calculated as follows:

Time bid adjustment = 100%* (( Campaign Goal  ÷ Actual Performance) - 1)

For example, let’s say you are an online retailer who sees better traffic and performance on weekdays as opposed to weekends. You would like to target a $30 cost per acquisition overall, but you are experiencing a $25 cost per acquisition on weekdays and a $40 cost per acquisition on weekends.  To meet your performance goal and maximize efficiency you can use a time bid adjustment.  Simply adjust your bids on weekdays by +20%, and on weekends by -25%.  This allows you to optimize for your goal by bidding more aggressively on weekdays when conversions are more cost effective, and less aggressively on weekends when performance is lower.

Test and Learn
Constant iteration is a key part of the optimization process. To ensure you are optimized over time, check the performance for each time adjustment regularly on the Time subtab in your campaign settings. Raise your bid adjustment where your performance exceeds your goal and lower your bid adjustment where your performance falls short of your goal. This will allow you to optimize your bids and adjust to changing consumer behavior.

Tips
You should also take this opportunity to study your internal data to understand when you have peak activity in terms of conversion rates, order size, and overall volume.  If you have a physical store or run a call center, you may consider using those hours of operation as guideposts for setting your time bid adjustment.  Studying the volume of activity during the times you are open can give you a good sense of when you may wish to raise or lower your bids.  For example, if your call center is closed during the night, you may wish to decrease bids during this time to avoid sending customers to unsupported lines.  By the same token, if you operate a physical store and see lulls in traffic during certain hours, you may wish to increase bids during this time and run ads with promotional offers to drive more people to your business.

Reminders
Time bid adjustments are a key part of enhanced campaigns.  To use time bid adjustments alongside location and mobile bid adjustments, you’ll need to upgrade your campaigns.  Starting on July 22, 2013, we will begin automatically upgrading all campaigns to enhanced campaigns.

Later this week, we’ll dive deeper into ways you can use tools like flexible bid strategies to automate your bid settings based on specific business goals like cost per acquisition.

Posted by Ting Zhang, Global Search Solutions

Getting Started with Analytics Measurement for Marketing Campaigns: A Brief Guide

As an analytics practitioner, one of the most important things I try to teach marketers is how to properly tag their campaigns so we can report on the success of their efforts. To do this, I've created a guide for them to follow to make it easy to choose the proper UTM codes to have consistent campaign tagging across the business. This allows us to begin to assign source and medium values to finance channels and usage metrics to really understand how each campaign performs in terms of our bottom line business metrics. 

OVERVIEW
Setting up tracking and reporting on your marketing campaigns is simple and fun. This guide will walk you through the process and demonstrate with a real-life example.

Part A: Set up UTM tracking code

1. Below are all the elements you’ll need. If you set these up correctly, you’ll be able to report on multiple elements of your campaign:
  • Campaign -name of your overarching campaign - e.g. spring-2013-collection or summer-2013-announcements. Be sure to follow a consistent campaign naming structure.
  • Medium - the medium used to send your campaign. Include “email” for an email campaign, “cpc” for ads, “social” for a social network or “landing-page” if you’re tracking button clicks from a landing page. 
  • Source - used to differentiate the type of medium. If medium = cpc, then source may be google, bing, or yahoo. If utm medium = email, source can be used to call out the action (try, buy, coupon, awareness, etc).
  • Content - this is essentially a bonus field - it can be used to track many differentiating factors for your campaign. For example, you can use this field to track different versions of your email or landing page - e.g. “60-dollars-off” or “15-percent-off”.
2. Make a copy of this template and update it with your campaign’s values.  You’ll likely end up with several tracking links for your campaign.

3. Tag each version of your campaign creative with the matching link. After updating the values, your tracking link should something like this:

https://www.googlestore.com/?utm_source=coupon&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=summer-sale&utm_content=15-percent-off

Part B: Testing reporting

1. Before launching your campaign, verify that your tags are working correctly. Open an incognito window and click on one of the links you set up to track your campaign. If your campaign’s objective is trial signup, try completing the trial sign up form. If your objective is redeeming a coupon, try redeeming the coupon. Try this with each tag created for your campaign (best practice is to clear your cookies in the incognito window before clicking each tag). For landing pages - make sure to go all the way through to your main site or objective.
  • Recommended best practice is to try each link multiple times, dropping off at various points to ensure you can track a funnel flow. 
2. Wait 24 hours (in a crunch data should populate in analytics within 4-6 hours but depends on volume).

3.  Go to google.com/analytics and click Sign in.

4. After signing into analytics you will be on the “Audience Overview” page. Click on “Traffic sources” - > “sources” - > “campaigns”.

5. Type the name of your campaign into the search box in the middle of the page and click on the search icon.


You should now see an overview of all clicks on your campaign. However, since you are in a non-standard report in GA sampling will likely occur (you may not see all - or even any of the test clicks on your campaign). Given sampling,  you may need to export an unsampled report after all filters/segments are applied to your test - see step 9.

Click into this overview.



7. A screen similar to the below should appear, breaking out your campaign performance into different source/medium.



8. To drill down into the different elements of your campaign, click on the “secondary dimension” tab and type in the element - this could be “content” (shown below) or “medium” or “source”.



You will then see your Source/Medium broken down by content. In this example utm_content was used for ad creative, so the Ad Content secondary dimension breaks each Source/Medium down by which creative was clicked.



9. If all of your test campaign metrics are coming up in GA reporting you are ready to launch (be sure to keep track of # of links clicked/steps completed for each test link to match back data). Good luck! And come back to GA to see reports on your live campaign.

Part C: Advanced Reporting

A few more notes on nifty things you can do with GA reporting.
1. Advanced segments enable you to view all data in GA for a target segment in your campaign. 
  • Click on “Advanced Segments” at the top of your GA window.  
  • Click the button “+new custom segment”
  • Using “and” or “or” statements, define the segment of your campaign you want to see GA data for:
  • Save the segment. You can now browse through your Analytics reports, viewing data only for this segment 
2. Set up a dashboard. Under “MY STUFF” on the left-hand navigation. Click “Dashboards”. Here you can customize a dashboard for external stakeholders looking to monitor the performance of your campaign.

Happy tagging and analyzing!

Posted by Krista Seiden, Product Marketing Manager, Google Enterprise

Easily make changes to your ads and ad groups at scale

The ability to make changes to your AdWords account in bulk enables you to spend more time optimizing your campaigns to grow your business, and less time on repetitive tasks.  Just last month, we launched keyword bulk uploads to help you add, edit and remove keywords at scale.  Today, we are happy to announce bulk uploads for ads and ad groups.

Imagine you download a report from the Ads tab and want to test different creatives in ad groups that are underperforming.  You might also want to turn off certain ad groups, or change the budget for others.  Instead of toggling back and forth between AdWords and your spreadsheets, you can now download reports from the Ads and Ad Groups tabs, make changes directly in your spreadsheet, and upload them directly to your account.

Uploading changes to your ads and ad groups is simple.  Just like with keywords, when you download a report you will be prompted to make the report “editable.”


After making your changes, you can save your changes in CSV, TSV and Excel formats.  To upload this file, click “Reports and uploads” on the left navigation panel, and then select the “Uploads” tab.  You will see a new column here titled “Upload type,” shown below.


You can only upload one report type at a time; for example, if you want to make bulk changes to both your keywords and your ad creatives, you would have to do this by editing and uploading two separate reports.

As with keyword bulk uploads, there is no way to cancel or automatically reverse your changes once a report has been submitted.  Please remember to save a copy of your original downloaded report if you need to know what your settings were before you made changes and submitted a bulk upload.  You can also view your change history and reverse any unintended changes manually.

To learn more about bulk uploads for ads and ad groups, visit the bulk uploads article in our Help Center or discuss in our AdWords Community.

Posted by Prashant Baheti, Product Manager, AdWords

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Explore the Future of Digital Marketing with DoubleClick and Industry Executives on June 4th

On Tuesday, June 4th DoubleClick will host its annual digital leadership summit, thinkDoubleClick, with provocative conversations about the future of digital marketing and media, and you’re invited to join via live stream by registering here!


Hear executives from advertising, agencies and publishers discuss some of the big questions in digital such as:
  • How do creatives leverage, but not be overwhelmed by, technology to deliver next-generation consumer experiences?
  • What unique experiences are publishers developing that add value to consumers and advertisers alike?
  • How do CMOs best use social with other marketing channels to build strong brands?
The full agenda for the thinkDoubleClick event is listed below.  You can join in the conversation on June 4 by using the #thinkDCLK hash and commenting during the live stream.

Register here for the thinkDoubleClick summit
June 4, 2013
9 am - 12:15 PDT

9:00 - 9:30 am
Connecting Digital, Accelerating Growth
9:30 - 10:00 am
The Coca-Cola Company's Liquid & Linked Marketing: How a 127-year-old company is pivoting for success in a real-time, socially-connected world

The Coca-Cola Company sells over 500 brands in 207 countries, with over 700,000 System associates and 1.8B+ servings of their beverages everyday.  Hear insights and lessons learned on how the world's most valuable brand is remaining relevant by becoming more connected, transparent and nimble in real-time.

10:00 - 10:35 am
Advertisers Must be Inventors

This year, Volkswagen and Deutsch LA partnered with Google to work on a brief to re-imagine how to build a stronger, bigger community around its brand.  In today’s connected world, telling stories alone isn’t enough; we need to create tangible value and utility to bring the brand’s promise to life. In this session the creative team from Deutsch LA will be talking about the process for developing more rewarding and shareable experience.

10:35 - 11:15 am
Time to Rethink the Marketing Mix?
Emerging trends in digital marketing -- including new ad formats, the rise of social media, and proliferation of channels -- are creating new challenges and opportunities for brand marketers. What are the key trends marketers should be concerned about -- and how should they respond? AdAge deputy editor Michael Learmonth poses the hard questions in an executive dialogue on what’s next for
brand marketing.

Fireside chat with:
11:15 am -
12: 15 pm
New and Native: Extending the Conversation
Technology has had a profound impact on the media industry. This disruption, though, has brought along significant opportunities for creative publishers to thrive. In this session we’re bringing in three executives to show how they’ve leveraged the digital revolution to deliver more engaging content and differentiated solutions to advertisers.



We look forward to seeing you on June 4th at thinkDoubleClick.

Posted by Rob Newton, Inside AdWords Crew

Google Analytics User Conference: Australian Tour

The following is a guest post by Benjamin Mangold, Search & Analytics Director at Loves Data, a Google Analytics Certified Partner.

The Google Analytics User Conference is back in Australia for 2013, hosted by Google Analytics Certified Partners. This year the conference will be held in both Sydney and Melbourne.

Join local and international Google Analytics experts in Sydney on 19 June and Melbourne on 21 June. Google’s own Analytics Advocate, Justin Cutroni is returning as keynote speaker to present his expert advice and insights into Universal Analytics, a great new Google Analytics feature for onsite measurement across desktops, smartphones and tablets, and even the physical aspects of offline campaigns such as loyalty cards and billboards!


After the sold-out success of the conference last year, Loves Data is keeping the momentum going with a great speaker line-up of Google Analytics experts from the US, Singapore and Australia, a special slot on YouTube Analytics and marketing and technical slots by experts from industry. View the conference program and check out the conference speakers.

Topics include:
  • Attribution modelling
  • Multi-screen measurement
  • Driving action with dashboards
  • Leveraging online and offline data
  • YouTube Analytics
Book your conference ticket today before it’s sold out.

For conference updates follow Loves Data on Google+.

Posted by Benjamin Mangold, Google Analytics Certified Partner

A Cheat Sheet to Perfect Creative

Give your creative the FREEDOM of a tight strategy.

What I love about what we do is that there are infinite ways to address the same problem.  There are few rules and usually, the crazier the idea, the better.

You want your creative to stand up and take notice.  You need it to be clear and concise.  To get there, you have to be focused!  

That's the job of the creative brief.  In one to two pages, describe exactly what needs to happen.  A great creative brief can lead to killer creative.  It's also your sanity check to know whether the creative is simply entertaining or on strategy too.

Here are the 5 areas to focus on when you're focused on creative:

1. What do you want to do?
Why are you spending this money?  What do you want the effort to accomplish?  How will you quantitatively know if it worked or not.
  • What does the advertising do for the brand?
  • How will the objective be measured?

2. Who are you talking to?
It's easier to write to a person than to a nameless group.  Who do you want to talk to?  Give them a name, a face, a personality and needs:
  • What do they look like? What do they like to do? What is their economic standing?  What makes them tick? (be as specific as possible)
  • What motivates them?  Why are they making this purchase decision? What's going on in their life?
  • When they buy, why do they choose you?
  • When they don't buy with you, why not?
  • How do they FEEL when they make the decision?  How do you WANT them to feel (tone)?

3. The ONE Big Thing
Let's face it, we're lucky if anyone ever sees our work ... we're blessed if they care ... and if they take away ONE message, we've done our job.  What is the ONE big thing that you want them to know?
  • How does it make you different from the competition?
  • So what? (Benefit) What problem are we solving?  Why should anyone care?
  • Prove it (3-5 supports - Prioritize) Why should they believe you?
  • Who's voice is telling them?  Are you the trusted old uncle or the hip young friend or the crazy granny?

4. What do you want them to do?
How will the audience help you achieve your objective?  Do you want them to feel something?  Pick up the phone?  Go to a URL?  Run to your location?
  • Is it easy for the target to do what you want?
  • Who answers the Call to Action?  Are they prepared?

5. Thou Shalts and Thou Shalt Nots
What are the rules? The must and must nots.
  • Budget
  • Schedule and duration
  • Media options: Print? Broadcast? Web? Direct Mail? SEO? Point of Sale? Outdoor?
  • What does the staff need to know or do?
  • Mandatories (logos, icons, legals, etc)

Now go back and start crossing words out.  Keep the brief ... well, BRIEF!  The more focused you are, the less sidetracked the creative ideas will be (You know creatives ... show 'em something shiny and you lose them for hours!).

From the brief, try to come up with at least 3 good ideas:
  • The safe idea
  • One that scares the hell out of you
  • Something in between

Finally, when the work is complete, go back to the brief and start checking off each item.  If the work addresses each element of the brief, then it should be on strategy ... focused ... and ready to generate business.




We bring these marketing philosophies to credit unions and community banks nationwide, and would love to bring them to your institution too.  Contact us to see how.

Nearing 230,000 visits worldwide, we hope that you enjoy this blog.  If you find it helpful, please share it with your colleagues.  Also, check out our YouTube Channel for short video blogs about financial marketing.  

MarketMatch is also a nationally and internationally requested speaker.  Contact us to bring our marketing ideas to your next conference.

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