Evan Roberts, a PPC Hero!
Haha, ok that maybe a bit of an exaggeration to everyone other than myself but the folks over at PPCHero Blog emailed me and asked me to answer a few questions for an e-interview.
You can read my wisdom at PPCHero here
Haha, ok that maybe a bit of an exaggeration to everyone other than myself but the folks over at PPCHero Blog emailed me and asked me to answer a few questions for an e-interview.
You can read my wisdom at PPCHero here
The adCenter blog announced some new features being launched for adCenter beta. The upgrades are Easily go to any Campaign or Ad Group in your account via our improved navigation ? Import your other search campaigns, including third-party campaigns, into adCenter with one Excel spreadsheet or comma-separated values (CSV) file. ? Delete poor-performing keywords right…
The question of whether or not an advertiser should bid on branded terms is a debate that has been going on for a while. The argument against it is the fact that Google is doing such a good job ranking branded terms that its not needed to bid on them. Well, Johnathan Mendezs has a…
Google annouced yesterday via Adwords Blog, that there is a “new tool” in your account that will show you in real time the number of ivalid clicks that affect your account. I use the term “tool” loosely even though industry experts around the web have dubbed it “Google’s Click Fraud tool.” While I don’t consider…
According to the Adwords Blog Today, we began rolling out improvements to the Quality Score algorithm, which will update the Quality Score for keywords in your account over the next 3 to 4 days. As I mentioned last week, the goal of this change is to improve the quality of ads that we serve to…
Greg Sterling points out this press release by Click Forensics that documents the rise of click fraud. According to Click Forensics Google and Yahoo are better at weeding out click fraud than smaller Web sites, but Click Forensics still concluded both companies are being hard hit. About 12.8 percent of the clicks on ads served…
BusinessWeek.com has a nice follow up to the forgotten click-fraud case that pitted Google versus a click-fraud extortionist. To make a long story short, back in 2004, a guy named Michael Anthony Bradley rolled up to Google, showcased his click-fraud program dubbed “Google Clique.” Showing off his program that could generate millions of false clicks…