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Lev
October 18th, 2006, 04:09 PM
Google Unveils AdWords Landing Page Testing Tool

By Kate Kaye | October 18, 2006

In a move that could ruffle the feathers of some e-commerce Web site consultants and analytics software providers, Google has unveiled a site optimization tool that enables advertisers to test landing pages. The Website Optimizer, released in beta today, lets online sellers test separate landing page components such as headlines, product features and images to determine the page with the best conversion rates. The new tool complements Google Analytics, a system for tracking AdWords campaign effectiveness.

AdWords and Google Analytics account holders are eligible to use the tool for free "on an acceptance basis," according to the company. The system allows site operators to run experiments to isolate the landing pages and their content components that deliver the highest sales and sign ups. Once they've created landing page variations, advertisers tag them with code formulated by the system. When users click on the advertiser's AdWords ads, test pages are served to them directly by the optimization system.

Advertisers can analyze results throughout the experimentation phase, the duration of which depends on traffic rates and complexity. In addition to measuring landing page conversion rates and pageviews, the tool's reports gauge how site variations work in conjunction, and separately. Reports show estimated conversion rates, probability of success through altering page elements, improvement over the original landing page, and the significance of specific page features.

Google is partnering with Web analytics consulting firms EpikOne and Optimost to provide professional services to clients requiring more in-depth services.

Firms providing Web analytics software or those serving small businesses could feel a pinch as customers move to the latest free AdWords apparatus, said Mark Wachen, CEO of Optimost. However, companies like his that service large clients and don't offer a do-it-yourself product won't be affected negatively, he added. Optimost counts IAC, HP and Delta among its current roster of clients.

"We don't really view this as competition," he said. "Google's going to build awareness for the category."

http://www.clickz.com/showPage.html?page=3623724

BoogalooDude
October 18th, 2006, 04:40 PM
COOL! I think, everythings going to done the Google way in the end...

Can't wait to test this and see what difference it makes to keyword bid prices. I don't get why they'd want to help people spend less though...

melanied
October 18th, 2006, 04:46 PM
WOULD people spend less, though? or would it be so effective and make them so much more money that they'd spend MORE?

BoogalooDude
October 18th, 2006, 04:57 PM
WOULD people spend less, though? or would it be so effective and make them so much more money that they'd spend MORE?

I was thinking that since the Google Slap keyword bid prices have relied on the keywords being on the landing page. So a tool that helps you optimise the landing page would result in lower keyword bid prices right?

If that's the case, I don't understand why they'd want to hurt their own income.

xor0
October 18th, 2006, 05:20 PM
My reading of the report is that the tool helps optimize conversions and such. Doesn't say anything about quality score.

BoogalooDude
October 18th, 2006, 06:38 PM
My reading of the report is that the tool helps optimize conversions and such. Doesn't say anything about quality score.

Surely it's related.

Your ads will cost to much to run to send traffic to your Google optimised page unless it's tied in with the ad itself.

I'm still trying to figure out the upside for Google unless it's just better quality landing pages for their search traffic.

xor0
October 18th, 2006, 08:54 PM
Your ads will cost to much to run to send traffic to your Google optimised page unless it's tied in with the ad itself.

You mean more than they do initially? Why?

I don't see how optimizing the page for conversions necessarily means optimizing for lower CPC.