We now have a lot more space to explain our products, services, and
value proposition in every ad. Hurray!
However, there is some bad
news: When the traditional text ad format was retired, so were many of the best
practices of the past 15 years, and advertisers have been scrambling to figure
out the best use of 50 more characters.
Wondering
how your PPC account measures up to the competition? Grade your account for
free!
1. Write NEW Ads! Use the extra characters to say
something new. Don’t just add a second headline.
I get
it, you’ve worked hard perfecting your current ads. There’s a big temptation to
take the ads that are working well now, combine your existing description
lines, add a second headline and sit back and let the shiny new ad format do
all the work for you. Even Google basically did this when they first showed
this Guitar Center expanded text ad during their May announcement:
The
problem with this tactic though is that you’re just using more words to say
effectively the same thing. Guitar Center adding a second headline saying “The
Destination for Music Gear” doesn’t make this a more compelling ad and doesn’t
enhance the offer at all. Although we’ve seen most advertisers see at least a
28% CTR gain from expanded text ads, we’ve
actually seen many advertisers who just add a second headline to their existing
ads see their CTRs decrease.
As
you write new expanded text ads, use the extra characters to supplement your
existing offers and calls to action and include more value propositions than
you could with a 95-character limit. Consider an ad like this in the old
format:
The
results speak for themselves – the new
ads have a CTR 400% higher than their old ads!
2. Include your most important messaging in the
headlines.
Even
though your new 80-character description is by far the largest field in your
new expanded text ads, they still command the least attention. The messaging of
the two headlines of your expanded text ad are the most influential in
improving the CTR of your ads.
3. Remember: Headline #1 is far more important than
headline #2.
Although
both headlines can technically be up to 30 characters long, there’s no
guarantees on exactly how or if the second headline shows. The second headline
may extend the length of the first headline:
The
second headline may appear after a line break:
4. Don’t pause your old ads right away.
Expanded
text ads are eligible to show for all the keywords in your ad groups all the
time, but you may want to hold off on pausing your old ads, at least for a bit.
As with everything in paid search, just because expanded text ads are new
doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll outperform your old ads immediately. Some
advertisers saw their first try with expanded text ads have lower CTRs than
their old ads.
When
you create your first expanded text ads, introduce them to your ad groups
alongside your old ads. If their performance isn’t as good as your old ads,
keep testing new expanded text ads. Once the performance of your expanded text
ads is comfortably better than the old ones, you can pause your old traditional
format ads.
5. Write your all your ads to speak to users on all
devices.
Since
more than half of all Google searches occur on mobile devices, it’s important
that your ads can speak to all users across desktop, mobile, and tablet.
Google’s new expanded text ads will serve to searchers on all devices, 90%
of whom will use multiple devices before completing their final goal.
6. Include top keywords in the path fields.
Google’s
new expanded text ads automatically pull their domain for your display URL from
your final URL, so advertisers no longer need to specify the domain in each and
every ad they write moving forward, which should save a lot of meaningless work
for SEMs. Advertisers can also optionally add up to 2 fifteen-character path
fields to append to their display URL.
Although
optional, I highly recommend using these additional fields in your new expanded
text ads. Not only does it reassure searchers that your ad will take them to a
specific landing page relevant to their interests and boost your ad’s CTR and
CVR. More importantly, though, including a top keyword in your display URL’s
path, you make your ad more relevant to the keywords people are searching for
and you can improve your ad’s quality score and consequently reduce your CPC.
7. Update your ad extensions.
SEMs
have always used ad extensions to promote alternative offers and
highlight important value propositions that they couldn’t include in the ads.
We know that including ad extensions to appear alongside our ads can
considerably improve our ad’s CTR and Quality Score.
However,
as you create new expanded text ads and add more detail to your offers within
the body of your ads, you’ll likely make many of your old ad extensions
redundant. Google won’t serve your ad extensions if they only serve to repeat
the text already included in your ads, so make sure as you update your ads you
refresh your ad extensions with new, unique content to promote alongside your
new, larger ads.
Advertisers
should be excited to test out Google’s new expanded text ads as soon as
they can, but don’t forget to do your work as a marketer and write great
ads. As we test more, we’ll develop more best practices and publish them to our
blog so be sure to check back regularly. What do your best expanded text ads
look like?
7 Expanded Text Ad Best Practices: Summary
- Write brand new ads
- Include your most important message in the
headlines
- Remember Headline #1 is more important
than Headline #2
- Don't pause your old ads right away
- Write ads that speak to all users on all
devices
- Include your top keywords in the path
fields
- Update your ad extensions