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Showing posts with label Bing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bing. Show all posts

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Share Conversions And Remarketing Lists Across Paid Search Accounts

Managing multiple search accounts for a single domain doesn't have to mean juggling tons of conversion and remarketing tags. Contributor Amy Bishop shares steps to seamlessly share data across accounts without cluttering your website's code with duplicative tags.

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At some point or another, anyone handling paid search at an agency has likely managed a client that had multiple accounts. Before concerns are raised at the idea of double-serving, let me explain that there are a lot of different legitimate reasons for why and how this can happen, none of which promote double-serving or are meant to game the system.
Here are some of the scenarios that could cause a client to go this route:
  • separated search and display accounts;
  • an account for each different product;
  • a brand account and a non-brand account; or
  • accounts for different geographies.
These accounts aren’t built to compete with each other; they are just used to organize large accounts with a lot of campaigns.
There are pros and cons of splitting things into multiple accounts — a discussion of which could be its own post — but one of the previous cons was that it required you to place a ton of tags. Luckily, that’s not the case nowadays.
Thankfully, the engines have made it easier to share tags across accounts so that you don’t have to place duplicative tags from each account in order to pull in data. In this column, I’ll explain how to accomplish this.

What can you share?

You can share remarketing lists and conversion data across accounts, as opposed to setting up multiple tags to build lists and track conversions in each different account.

How to implement

The implementation process is different in Google and Bing –- and Google offers a few different options — so let’s walk through each separately.

Sharing data in Bing

Sharing conversions and audience lists in Bing is pretty straightforward if the accounts are in the same customer ID (CID).
When you set up your conversion event or audience, the last question in the setup form asks whether you’d like the conversion or audience to be shared among other accounts. If you don’t want this, you simply click the radio button by the account. If you do, you click “Across all accounts.”
By “All accounts,” it means any accounts that are housed within the same CID — not the entire Account Summary (Bing’s terminology for its answer to AdWords’ My Client Center).
Bing_Conversion_Sharing
When you set up your tags, you need to know whether you intend them to be used by a single account or to be shared across all accounts, because once the tags are created, that setting cannot be changed. In order to change it, you’d have to create a new tag and start from scratch.

Setting up lists and conversions to be shared from a Google AdWords Manager account

If you are creating a new My Client Center (MCC) with new accounts, the easiest thing to do is to create these data points at the MCC level, as opposed to creating them for each account.
To do this, follow these instructions:
  1. Set up your MCC with the Accounts that will utilize the data.
  2. Go to the “Accounts” tab in the MCC, and then choose “Audiences.” Set up the Remarketing tag the same way that you would for any Google account. You’ll use this tag as opposed to setting up different remarketing tags for each account.
  3. Create your lists just as you normally would.
MCC Level Remarketing Tag

  1. Make sure that your accounts are set up to share lists by going back to the “Accounts” section within the MCC and then selecting the Admin tab. Choose the accounts that should share remarketing lists.
  2. Click Edit and choose “Remarketing account” > “Change to this manager.”
Sharing Remarketing Lists

Setting up conversions at the MCC level is an equally simple process:
  1. Just go to the “Conversion actions” section within your MCC and place the conversion tag.
  2. Set up conversions as you normally would.
  3. Go back to the “Accounts” section within the MCC, and then go to the Admin tab. Select any accounts that you would like to utilize the conversion actions that are set up at the MCC level.
  4. Then click “Edit” and choose “Conversion account” > “Change to this manager.”
Note: It sometimes takes awhile for lists and conversions to show up in the account after you set them up, so don’t panic.

Sharing existing conversion and audiences between client accounts

If you already have remarketing lists set up in an account, then you probably don’t want to start over –- especially if you’re working with a website that only rolls out changes (aka new tags) one or two times per month. Once you already have an audience built up, you just want to use it, right?
Sharing data from one account to another is pretty easy in AdWords if you know what you are doing. It isn’t nearly as intuitive as in Bing, though, if you don’t know what you are looking for.
If you’ve already set up remarketing lists in one account that you’d like to share with other new or existing accounts, you can do so by following these steps:
  1. Go to the MCC in which the accounts are contained. If you don’t already have these accounts in an MCC, you’ll need to put them in one.
  2. Go to “Accounts,” and then click the Admin tab.
  3. Select the accounts that you’d like to share or receive lists. Then click the “Edit” drop-down and choose the “Change to this manager” option under “Remarketing account.”
Sharing Remarketing Lists

Go into the account that you plan to share lists from. Go into the Account Access page within Account Settings. Toward the bottom of the page, you’ll see a request to opt this account into sharing lists. Change the “Remarketing list sharing” option to “ON.”
Remarketing_list_Sharing_On
Go back to the MCC. Within the MCC, go to the Audiences section (on the left-hand panel) and choose “Share lists” under “Existing lists.”

Share An Existing List

  1. Add lists to the sharing pool by choosing the account that you want to share lists from.
  2. Select the lists and click “Share.”

Bonus: Importing data from Google Analytics

In addition to sharing lists across AdWords accounts, you can also import Google Analytics data with ease. There are a lot of benefits to creating goals and remarketing lists in Google Analytics and then importing them into other channels.
For one, you can create hyper-segmented audiences with all of the data that you have at your fingertips. Likewise with conversions, Google Analytics offers a lot of options for setting up goals. An added benefit of Google Analytics goal-tracking, of course, is that it allows you to track performance across all channels with one consistent attribution model.
In addition, you can access Google Analytics lists from multiple accounts without having to place additional pixels. As if that’s not enough, Google took an extra measure last November to make it even easier to import data from Google Analytics to multiple client accounts.
With this change, you can link Google Analytics directly to your AdWords MCC using the setup wizard in AdWords within the account settings section.
This process allows you to link the MCC to Google Analytics, as opposed to linking your AdWords accounts to Analytics one by one. This is useful if you want all of the accounts in the MCC to be linked to the same Analytics Property (or properties). With this feature, you can pull in remarketing lists and goals one time for the whole MCC, as opposed to importing them one by one in each account.
If your accounts are in an MCC with other accounts, you can put them in a sub-MCC to make this work. Otherwise, you can choose to link multiple AdWords accounts to Analytics at one time, as opposed to linking the whole MCC.  You can find instructions for linking options, here.

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Bing launches UET Tag Helper, a Troubleshooting Chrome Extension

Now quickly check if UET tags are set up correctly without having to wait for validation in the UI.

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To help marketers ensure their Universal Event Tracking (UET) tags are properly implemented, Bing Ads has launched a Chrome browser extension called UET Tag Helper.
UET tags are used to capture conversion events from Bing Ads campaigns and power Bing Ads remarketing.
In Chrome, the new extension can be used to:
  • validate UET tags in real time instead of having to wait a few hours and go back to the account to check on the status;
  • check to see if you’ve implemented the UET tag correctly without having to wait for an event to occur; and
  • troubleshoot common errors with the UET tag.
The extension is now live in the Chrome web store. The video from Bing Ads below shows how to use the UET Tag Helper. For more info on how the extension works, check out the help page.


Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Bing Ads Editor 11.0 Debuts With Multiple Account Management,Better Search, Easier Login

The new version takes its cues from AdWords Editor, but it has a few notable differences.

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Bing Ads has rebuilt Bing Ads Editor in much the same vein as Google overhauled AdWords Editor 11 — but with some differences, including better advanced search.
First, if you’re keen on the left-hand navigation set up in AdWords Editor, then you’ll be thrilled that BAE followed suit. For the rest of us, maybe version 12 will be our time. So moving on, here’s a rundown of some of the strong new features in BAE 11.

Multiple account management

The biggest new functionality of Bing Ads Editor 11.0 is the ability to manage multiple accounts simultaneously. From the Account Manager window, you can add an unlimited number of accounts. Then, you can download multiple accounts and work in others at the same time. Like AWE, you can essentially have as many account windows open and active as you want.
Multiple account management opens the door to new functionalities like the ability to cut and paste across accounts.

Streamlined advanced search

BAE 11.0 features the same navigation layout as AWE 11 with campaigns, ad groups, keywords, extensions and targeting in a menu on the left instead of at the top of the main window.
Where BAE stands apart from AWE is in advanced search. The new Advanced search window is much more streamlined than in the older versions of BAE, and it’s more intuitive and easier to build out layered search criteria than it was in AWE 11.
advanced search in bing ads editor 11

bing ads editor 11.0

Advanced options

One thing you’ll want to be sure to note is that options like Additional targeting, Exclude website and Append/Replace text no longer appear in blue links at the bottom of the Editor pane. They’re all now housed under a new Advanced options tab at the top of the Manager pane.
bing ads editor 11 advanced options

Simplified login

And finally, there is no more confusing login! Now, you’ll just see a single username field when signing in. Whether you are using a Microsoft account or a Bing Ads username (because who wants to be bothered with remembering that?), BAE will figure it out and direct you to the proper window to enter your password.
Bing Ads Editor is now available for download. The old version of Bing Ads Editor won’t be uninstalled from your machine. Bing Ads says older versions will continue to function for a few more months but will not be updated.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Bing Ads bans ads from third-party tech support services

Citing "serious quality issues", Microsoft updates the Bing Ads global ad policy to disallow all ads from third-party tech support providers.


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Microsoft’s Bing Ads has announced it will no longer accept advertising from third-party tech support companies. The change to the company’s ad policies affects all markets where Bing Ads is available.
In a blog post, Liz Walsh, demand quality project manager for Bing Ads, said,
“This policy change reflects Microsoft’s commitment to lead the industry in providing a safer experience for all of our end users, including populations most vulnerable to online scams and other fraud activities.”
Earlier this month, Bing reported it had blocked more than 15 million ads and 25,000 sites for third-party tech support scams — more than any other group of bad actors. The ads are often written to look like they are from the tech companies themselves. With the objective of getting consumers to call for support, a typical scam involves the call representative claiming to represent the tech company the consumer wants support from and then convinces the caller that his computer is infected with malware, scaring him into paying exorbitant fees to fix a non-existent problem.
The new Bing policy states that “Advertisers may not promote online technical support to consumers for products or services that the advertisers do not directly own.” And “Advertisers must not claim to provide a service that can only be provided by the actual owner of the products or service advertised.”
In 2014, the US ordered six international tech support scam operators were to pay more than $5.1 million in fines. At that time, Search Engine Land looked at the state of tech support ads on Google and Bing  and found that despite crackdowns, tech support ads in search were still cause for consumer confusion.
Google has not banned ads from third-party tech support firms outright, but it is much harder to find them today. Search Engine Land did find ads displaying on a search for “outlook support” on both desktop and mobile.
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tech support ads google

Source: http://searchengineland.com/bing-bans-third-party-tech-support-ads-249356

Copy & paste comes to Bing Ads UI

Easily add keywords and ads to new ad groups from the web interface.

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Bing Ads has rolled out a handy update, bringing the ability to copy and paste keywords and ads within the web interface.
You’ll now be able to add keywords and ads to new campaigns and ad groups without having to either use Bing Ads Editor or enter everything in manually in the UI. Just as in Google AdWords, there are now new copy and past options under the “Edit” tab on the Campaigns tab. Control+C and Control+V also work.
Once you copy the ads or keywords you want to add, just navigate to the ad group where you want to include them and paste. You can opt to pause them once added and choose whether to include the keyword bids and destination URLs.

Source:http://searchengineland.com/copy-paste-comes-bing-ads-ui-249237

Bing Ads makes it easier to segment performance data like time of day and device

The feature is now live in all accounts

data segmentation in bing ads

Performance analysis in Bing Ads just got easier with the addition of a new Segment tab in the campaigns page.
You can segment your campaign data by time (of day, day of week, and even by month, quarter or year), network, device and top vs. other from the main interface, rather than having to navigate to the Reports section.
To download segmented campaign data, you’ll need to select the option you want from the Download report window (just like in AdWords).
Note that if you’re looking to see segmentation by time, there are some limits. For example, if you select “Day,” the maximum data range you can look at is 16 days.
The feature is now available to all accounts. (Originally, this article stated it was only available in the US and UK.)


Source: http://searchengineland.com/bing-ads-segmentation-data-248788

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Bing Bad Ads Report: 250 million ads rejected, 150K advertisers banned in 2015

Tech support scams remain at the top of the list of bad actors that search engines have to keep fighting.

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In the constant battle against bad actors, including scammers and hackers, Bing says it rejected 250 million ads, blocked 50,000 sites and banned 150,000 advertisers in 2015.
The usual suspects continue to take up the bulk of attention. Tech support scams, a perennial problem, plague the system. Bing says it blocked more than 15 million ads and 25,000 sites promoting shady third-party tech support services.
Bing has relatively lax trademark usage policies, but says it still dismissed more than 50 million ads last year for trademark infringements. Phishing attacks and ads for pharma and counterfeit goods were also at the top of the list. Additionally, more than three million misleading pages and 30 million ads were blocked for spam and misleading content.

Source: http://searchengineland.com/bing-bad-ads-report-250-million-ads-rejected-150k-advertisers-banned-2015-248534

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Callout and Review extensions now available in Bing Ads

Advertisers can add the extensions at the campaign and ad group levels.

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Bing Ads rolled out callout and review extensions last week. The new ad extensions are available in all Bing Ads markets, with the exceptions of Hong Kong and Taiwan. The ad shown above features both of these new extensions.

Callout extensions

Advertisers can add up to 20 callouts in their campaigns and ad groups and must have a minimum of two callout extensions for them to display.
One thing to note: Bing says the format in which callouts show can vary. In the ad above, there are actually two lines of callout extensions showing — one with dot separators (starts with “Free Cancellation”) and one with dash separators (starts with “The 20 best hotels in Chicago, IL”).

Review extensions

Reviews for review extensions must come from “reliable, well-established and trusted sources.” The review must appear on the review landing page — and advertisers are not charged for clicks on those links. The reviews can be paraphrased, but they must accurately represent the original review.
The ad above — with two lines of callouts and extended sitelinks — has a review extension enabled with a review from the World Travel Awards.
You can set up both of these from the ad extensions tab in the Bing Ads UI.

source: http://searchengineland.com/callout-review-extensions-now-available-bing-ads-248426

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Searching for searchers: Audiences are the new keywords

As we continue to shift towards audience-centric marketing, columnist Christi Olson of Bing notes that we can create more effective remarketing campaigns by asking the right questions about our searchers.


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Search as we know it is changing, with keywords and match types giving way to a more audience-powered approach. It’s a transition that has been slowly coming, but now that remarketing and remarketing lists for search ads (RLSA) are available on Bing and Google, search marketers can no longer afford to ignore audience-based buying.
In the new search world order, searching for searchers will increasingly be a part of every successful marketer’s integrated search strategy.

Welcome to the new world of search

In the early days of search, keywords and match types were the main levers search advertisers used to find customers. Keywords allowed us to reach the consumers who were searching for our products and services, while match types allowed the query-to-keyword relationship to be more or less relevant, a kind of volume and relevance throttle.
Today, audiences enable advertisers to target the right message to the right person — at potentially the right time — in a way that keywords cannot. Keywords can give you intent and interest levels, but search is now on the cusp of something greater: the ability to create campaigns to specifically meet customers, wherever they are.
Just as exciting, we can use audiences to help us stop wasting digital marketing spend… and those audiences don’t have to be limited to users who have engaged with us from a search standpoint.

Could all search campaigns be remarketing campaigns?

I’ve been noodling on the idea for a while that all campaigns are remarketing campaigns. You might disagree with me, especially since Bing only allows a -90-percent bid modifier. But… a -90-percent bid modifier is still fairly close to creating an exclusion or a negative campaign.
Why is this important? It gives you the ability to segment your customers, adjust your bid strategy to reduce acquisition costs and adjust your messaging based on the audience segment.
Consider this scenario:
In the paid search brand campaigns I managed, I noticed that over time, my CPAs were steadily increasing. Using analytics to investigate, I found that there were a lot of return visitors on our brand keywords. I was paying to re-engage existing customers who were lazy and clicking on my paid search ads to navigate to the site or get a specific offer/deal instead of navigating through organic links or going directly to the website.
This, in conjunction with more competition bidding on my brand keywords, was causing my CPCs and my CPA to increase. My goal was to decrease my CPA and CPC and target net new customers to increase our overall awareness.
I decided to segment the brand campaign into two groups:
  • Engaged Visitors. Site visitors from the last 30 days who didn’t bounce right away, purchasers, visitors who touched other high-cost channels.
  • Net-new or Low Engagement Visitors. Visitors who haven’t been to the site in more than 30 days, visitors who bounced within x seconds in the last 30 days and people who haven’t been to my site.
Each group had different bid strategies and messaging.
With the Engaged Visitor segment, I reduced my bids, allowing my ads to go into a lower position, knowing that I ranked well organically. I also adjusted my messaging to our existing customers to not promote discounts/sales.
For the Net-new and Low Engagement Visitors, I did the inverse, increasing bids to make sure I was in prominent positioning with value-based customer messaging.
Making these adjustments, I was able to decrease my CPA for existing customers. And by focusing less on discount or promotional messaging to existing customers, I wasn’t paying to reacquire them every time they wanted to make a transaction. Instead, I could focus on building a new customer base that had a higher lifetime value to my client’s business.

Asking the right questions

I was able to use remarketing because I started to think more strategically about how I was targeting different customer segments.
Think about what other questions you can ask to segment out consumers and what you might do differently in terms of bidding, targeted keywords (head vs. tail) and the overall messaging (ad copy, ad extensions) and user experience. Learn to ask the right questions so you can develop remarketing strategies that align to your business goals.
Ask questions like:
  • Would you create different user experience for new vs. existing customers?
  • Has a customer been to your website previously?
  • Have they engaged through other high-cost channels?
  • Have they engaged multiple times across multiple marketing channels?
If you are strategic and smart about the questions you ask, you might change your perspective about how you use audiences and RLSA to make your search campaigns more effective.

Be customer-obsessed

There are a million ways to segment your search campaigns based on audiences — and they all lead to better experiences for your customers. But by using audiences to segment users and create custom messaging and experiences for specific audiences, you will dramatically increase the scale and size of your search marketing campaigns.
Of course, there is a cost associated with managing this; but in most cases, changing your bid strategies or re-attracting and engaging with consumers who are more likely to convert will lead to both campaign spend savings and higher-value relationships with your customers.
Mind blown? It’s because you’re searching for an audience that is using keywords, not just keywords themselves. The new world of search means putting the customer (audience) first and trying to create a great user experience specifically for them.

Source: http://searchengineland.com/searching-for-searchers-audiences-are-the-new-keywords-247757

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Bing Boasts Continuous Updates To Their Search Engine Daily

Bing deploys multiple updates per day in an effort to constantly improve the search results and features.


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Dr. Jan Pedersen, Chief Scientist, Bing and Information Platform R&D, wrote this morning on theBing blog that Bing is continuously updating their search engine “multiple times per day.”
Some may think that Microsoft is a big company that’s slow to make changes, but the blog post explains that is at least not the case when it comes to Bing, their search engine.
“Four years ago, Bing engineers deployed new features once a month,” they said. But now Bing ships “features to production multiple times per day,” he added. This is based on Bing taking a different approach through what is known as agile development.
Now Bing has 600 engineers, six times the number they had four years ago. They are running 20,000 tests, a 10-fold increase, per submission attempt, and have kept feature submission times below 30 minutes.
In short, Bing is doing a lot, constantly improving, testing, updating and investing in their search technology in order to compete with Google’s incredibly frequent updates.

Microsoft Partners With Hackerrank To Deliver Executable Code In Bing Search

Bing's group engineering manager for UX features and shared tools calls the new feature a Rosetta-stone model for programming languages.


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According to a report from TechCrunch, Microsoft has partnered with the programming community website HankerRank to bring code snippets into Bing’s search results.
TechCrunch says the partnership makes it possible not only to locate code quickly via search, but also edit and execute code right from the search results page.
Search for something like “string concat C#” or a similar question and Bing will pop up the editor for you. Using the widget, you can also switch to other languages as well. Depending on the algorithm you’re looking for, the options here include C, C++, C#, Python, PHP, and Java.
TechCrunch
HackerRanker co-founder Vivek Ravisankar told TechCrunch that Bing search results will return more than 80 code snippets based on the most commonly searched terms. Marcelo De Barros, Bing’s group engineering manager for UX features and shared tools, also spoke to TechCrunch, calling the new search feature a “Rosetta-stone model for programming languages.”
“In addition to learning how a certain algorithm/code is written in a given language, users will also be able to check how the same solution is constructed in a range of other programming languages too,” said De Barros.
Here’s an image from the TechCrunch story showing how the code snippet works:
bing code search TechCrunch

Source: http://searchengineland.com/microsoft-hankerrank-partnership-delivers-executable-code-via-bing-search-results-246908