Change in Adword top position formula

Google are changing the formula for the top slot Adword position. In essence, if you increase your max CPC you’re likely to get the top slot.If you’ve been performing very well on 2 or 3 ad ranking, you may find your CPC increasing, and your conversion rate decreasing. Watch your stats carefully, or make sure your SEM agency does!Full text here:How is the formula for top ad placement changing?In the coming weeks, we are improving how high quality ads are selected for top positions above Google search results. This change is designed to improve the quality of our ad results, and to give you more control over achieving top ad placement.The core components of the top ad placement formula will remain price and quality. However, we are improving the way we factor price into the formula. We are also adjusting the way your actual cost-per-click (CPC) is determined for ads in top spots. As always, only ads that meet our stringent quality requirements will be eligible to appear in top spots.What are the details?In the current top ad placement formula, we consider your Quality Score and your actual CPC, which is determined in part by the bids of advertisers below you. Even if you have a high quality ad, if advertisers below you are not bidding very much, your actual CPC may not be high enough to qualify your ad to appear in a top position.With this new formula, instead of considering your actual CPC, we’ll consider your maximum CPC bid, which you control. This means that your ad’s eligibility to be promoted is no longer dependent on the bids of advertisers below you. Therefore, if you have a high quality ad, you now have more control to achieve a top position by increasing your maximum CPC.Your actual CPC will continue to be determined by the auction, but subject to a minimum price for top spots. The minimum price is based on the quality of your ad and is the minimum amount required for your ad to achieve top placement above Google search results. As always, the higher your ad’s quality, the less you will pay. And you will never be charged more than your maximum CPC bid.How might this affect me?We anticipate that most of your ads will continue to perform as they have in the past. In some cases, you may see that ads previously shown alongside search results are now shown in top spots, and vice versa. As a result, you may see a change in the average number of clicks and average CPCs for impacted ads.Make sure that you check your stats regularly and adapt your campaigns as you see fit. Here are some quick tips:If you do not want ads that usually appear in high positions alongside search results to appear above search results, check that their maximum CPCs are not dramatically higher than the actual CPCs you normally pay.Continue to make routine quality optimisations to keep your costs down and your performance high.

It did …

James Philip Balderson has been googled!

It’s like being christened, I guess.

The birth of James and the death of Adwords Arbitrage

It’s been pretty quiet on the Baldy Blog. And the blame falls to James Philip Balderson who came into the world a couple of weeks ago. Hopefully, this post will earn him his first Google listing :-)
… A while back, I wrote about the dark art of adwords arbitrage; that murky habit of creating websites that attract unwitting browsers, who click on a link to leave, and earn revenue for this spurious use of Adwords.
For this reason, I usually recommend clients create campaigns that do not run on the Google content network, thus avoiding the embarrassment of your brand appearing on a links site.
Subjectively, I’ve noticed fewer of these link sites appearing in the adwords listings. Partially, because Google is parsing the content of Adwords sites much more agressively, and partially, we hear, because Google has employed an army of content moderators to check that the target websites are legitimate.
Either way, it’s good news for advertisers. As always in the world of Google, creating targeted content sites, that meet the needs of browsers, will be rewarded. In the Adwords world, this translates into a lower CPC and higher Ad ranking for relevant content sites, where ad content, keywords and site content all cohere.
It also means that we need to re-look at the Google content network, but I’ll save that for my next post.