Your PPC account is never perfect. Hopefully, that doesn’t
come as a surprise to you. The truth of the matter is that no matter how hard
you work on building an account and optimizing it according to best practices,
you will probably miss something. An even truer statement is that the longer
you work in an account, the easier it is for things to slip past your
ever-watchful eye.
What is a PPC account audit?
An account audit is a dive into your account to determine
areas that could use further attention or work to improve performance. We’ll
outline the actual process of the audit shortly.
When and why should I audit?
There’s never a bad time to audit your account because
you’ll typically find something to help improve performance. However, you don’t
particularly want to audit your account after a recent strategy change or
account update. You could be auditing based on skewed information and nobody
wants that.
The most important time to audit your account is if you’re
having performance issues. It’s also a good idea to periodically audit an
account if it has been managed by the same person or team for a long time.
Who should perform the audit?
This is a tricky question, because it really depends. If
there is a particular issue in the account that needs auditing, take the time
yourself and dig in to the areas that may be impacting performance.
However, if you’re talking about a more comprehensive check,
it may be better to outsource the project and get fresh eyes. No matter how
much you try to deny it, as an account manager you have a slight inability to
look at something you uploaded and thought would work and say “Nope, not
working, have to stop it.” And as we’ve already mentioned a couple times, it’s
very easy to overlook the “basics” and assume you have everything set up
correctly or just skip stuff because there’s no way you’d set your campaign to
target the Search and Display networks at the same time, right?
Where should you be looking?
Let’s get to the meat and potatoes of this guide, shall we?
The following checklist outlines all the different account areas you can dive
in to during an account audit and what kinds of items to look for.
The Basics of an Account Audit
Date Range
First things first as you need to make sure you’re looking at
a long enough range of time to analyze relevant data. It doesn’t do you any
good to look at 30-day’s worth of conversion data and to make changes based on
solely that information. Odds are that data isn’t statistically relevant
enough. At the very least, we like to observe at least 3-months’ worth of data.
If we’re diagnosing a specific issue, a year’s worth of data is preferable when
doing a general audit.
KPIs
Knowing the most important metrics to a client is the best
way to ground your audit in success. If it’s an account you’re managing, we
would imagine you have KPI’s picked out. It may be worth a quick check with
your client to make sure you’re focusing correctly. Also, if you’re helping a
fellow account manager whose account you don’t typically look at, determine the
key metrics to dive in to.
Settings
This is usually one of our favorite areas of an account to
audit because specific settings tend to be something that are set up when a
campaign is started and then never looked at again. A big win in this area is
if a campaign is targeting Search and Display traffic within one campaign,
which we find more often than you may guess. From here you can also check out
device bid modifiers, ad delivery method, ad rotation (optimizing for clicks
when goals are based around conversions?), location/language targeting, and ad
scheduling. Modifiers can sometimes impact performance more than expected. It’s
worth double checking to see if changes were made when performance came into
question.
Account Structure
Campaigns
The first item to look at with campaigns is whether the
naming structure makes sense and is easily understandable. Essentially, are the
campaigns numbered 1-20 or do they have unique names that explain what kind of
ad groups I’m going to find? As we talked about before, are the campaigns opted
in to the Search or Display network only? Are Interest Category or Topics
campaigns broken out in to their own campaigns or folded in to a general
Display campaign?
Reviewing campaign structure is where we start to determine
if the rest of the account structure is going to follow a sensible method or if
the remainder of the audit is going to require some Sherlock Holmes-style
decoding on our part.
Ad Groups
Assuming the campaign structure is laid out in a regimented
way, the next item to look at is how the ad groups are set up. For instance, if
you’ve got general product categories as your campaigns, are the ad groups the
subcategories for the main category? Does each ad group have a maximum of 20
keywords in it? You want to make sure you don’t have an ad group that’s too
wide reaching, as it will make ad copy writing to match the terms difficult.
Keywords
When auditing keywords, you want to review the match types.
If most the terms are broad match, some expansion for increased ROI could be
completed by adding modified broad, phrase, and exact match terms. If the
account is relying predominantly on broad match, is there a logical negative
keyword strategy in place to weed out irrelevant traffic? Further, has broad modified
match been implemented? Are bids set too high or low to produce results or
maintain goals? Finally, we like to take a look at a search term report and see
if some keywords that bring a lot of traffic or conversions to the account
still need to be added to the account structure to increase profitable reach.
Quality Score
When it comes to Quality Score, you must realize what you
may uncover here could take some time to correct. So, unlike settings or some
structure issues, there isn’t a single way to begin correcting course. The most
important part of this portion of the audit is to pull a few key reports and
analyze them.
The team at PPC Hero adamantly stands by using pivot tables
to dig in to determining your Quality Score picture on an average position
level. Be sure you save all this work and reporting (not that you shouldn’t be
doing that with everything) so you can come back in a few weeks or a month
after making Quality Score relevant changes and compare your progress.
Remarketing
First things first, are remarketing campaigns implemented?
If there are, go to the shared library section of the account and look at the
audiences that are set up for remarketing. Are they all collecting members? Is
there an audience set up for each abandonment level? Can you find the cookie
codes in the website code? Have all the cookies been set up with lengths that
make sense?
Analytics
Not all accounts will have Analytics. Yes, this sounds
crazy, but you first need to determine if there is an Analytics account (Google
or otherwise) and if not, why not. Get one. It’s more than worth it. If there
is an account, make sure it’s accurately attached to the paid search account.
Has tracking code been placed on the website (ecommerce enabled, if
applicable)? Are conversions or goals set up? Does the conversion data in
Analytics match the engine interface (or at least close to it)? How are metrics
performing (bounce rate, time on site, etc.)? Pull a site search report and see
if there are new keyword opportunities to add to the paid search account. Have
you looked through multi-channel funnels for any insights?
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