The Dreaded Content Network
-
Everyone seems to be afraid of the content network because of the rumours going around about how hard it is to get a successful campaign going. This post is on my experience so it will be different to the usual “content is a goldmine” posts you will have read before.
Don’t get me wrong, I have seen massive potential in the content network, it’s just that the few campaigns I’ve recently launched didn’t seem to take off due to lacking volume. I’m having a final attempt at it today as I finalised another campaign (which is built better in my opinion
) so I can see how that goes. If it does flop I will come back to it at a later day when I have some more experience.I don’t have a great deal of tips to give out but I will list everything that I have read and put into action to try and improve the outcome – you may learn something, you might not:
• Group your ad groups by theme, I generally try to get at least 10-15 keywords that are all related to get your ad on the most suited sites (more won’t hurt)
• Your ads need to stand out, remember you are interrupting people from the content they are reading. I know the blog stories are doing well in almost any niche
hint hint
• Don’t be alarmed about a low CTR. 0.10% is good, anything over 0.25% is great and if you can manage anything over 0.50% you are doing something right
• Pay attention to your bids, if you lose money in the first day slash them across the whole campaign and see what happens the next day
• Track the referrers, your keywords are irrelevant to a certain extent in the content network, you will want to create placement targeted campaigns down the line where you can state which sites your ad will appear on – you just need to find the sites that are sending you conversionsRegarding that last point, if you are having trouble tracking things like that then I strongly suggest you use prosper202 or at least tracking202.














December 17, 2008 at 10:42 pm
Yeah, I definitely need to experiment more with the Content Network. I always ignore it, saying I’ll come back and setup things for it once the Search Network part of my campaign is all tweaked, and then I never do it.
Thanks for the tips!
-Paul
Reply to this comment
December 18, 2008 at 10:58 am
Just thought I’de post the first days results, I put my bids on $1 thinking that I might not get enough traffic to warrant a good test – boy was I wrong!
When I checked after a couple of hours I had already racked up about ~$70 in costs as I was spending almost the whole $1 per click, I think it was averaging at about $0.80/click.
I didn’t have the funds to keep that pace so I decided to slash the bids across the board to see what happened – traffic died! I cut them too much (to $0.50).
This morning after checking the stats I can actually say that it made a profit, even at the initial $1 bid. Today I have upped the bids to $0.90 and deleted the adgroups that had high impressions and 0 clicks.
I’m happy to say that the ~20 adgroups I have left have some really good ctr, only 1 has under 0.10% and some even stretch out to 0.50-1+% ctr – it’s still early days though and the leads yesterday could have been lucky ones.
Today will tell!
Reply to this comment
July 11, 2009 at 3:42 pm
interesting…
is this on YSM, Google or MSN content network?
I am preparing for a launch on both YSM and MSN (Bing), and I am being told by MSN customer reps that I should have only 1 adgroup with 3-4 keywords in it, that is for a Content network campaign.
Kind of different from what I know works on Google’s Content network, where you can have several adgroups with 20-40 kws related by theme…
would be glad to have your opinion on this.
Reply to this comment