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How to Test the Effectiveness of Your Online Ads

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Updated:  
2016-03-26 16:11:27
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Testing ads is extremely important to web marketers. Google and MSN both offer a way to conduct an A/B test for your site. Different industries have very different keyword lists, and users themselves behave in very different ways when conducting searches and completing actions, such as sales or downloads.

The ads and keywords you would use for the wedding industry, for example, attract a certain kind of user who displays specific behavior on a website; you’d need to use different ads and keywords for the different type of user in the heavy-machinery industry. To determine which ad will generate the most successful actions for your industry, you need to conduct tests to find your most successful combinations.

The most basic test and best practice is A/B split testing, in which you create two slightly different ads and run them both at the same time, with the same destination URL, splitting the traffic between them.

A/B tests range from simple to complex. The best practice is to start simple and work your way up in terms of complexity. The more variables (differences) you have in your ads, the harder it will be to track down the most successful variable. If you run two different ads against each other, one will inevitably outperform the other, but you’ll have to do some guesswork about the determining variable.

How to set up an A/B test in Google AdWords

By default, Google AdWords is set to optimize, so it determines which of your ads is best and shows that ad most often. To do an A/B test, you need to set it to rotate.

To set up an A/B test in Google AdWords, follow these steps:

  1. Open the desired campaign, and click the Settings tab.

  2. Scroll down to Advanced Settings, click Ad Delivery, and then click Edit for Ad Rotation.

  3. Select the Rotate radio button and click Save.

How to set up an A/B test in MSN adCenter

MSN automatically rotates ads when an ad group contains multiple ads, eventually selecting the ad to show most frequently (based on impressions, clicks, and age of ads). You have no way to change this setting. Every time you change an ad, however, MSN resets the ads to rotate.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

John Arnold is a renowned marketing trainer and speaker as well as an entrepreneur and small business advisor. Arnold continues to train and advise small business owners as a Constant Contact regional development director.

Michael Becker is the managing director of North America at the Mobile Marketing Association. Becker has written more than 80 articles on mobile marketing and is an adjunct professor of mobile marketing at Golden Gate University.

Marty Dickinson is the president of HereNextYear.com, a company that combines writing, speaking, and internet strategy to help clients become recognized authorities in their fields. Dickinson also works as a business consultant to web designers and SEO specialists.

Ian Lurie has been a digital marketer for over 25 years. He created and sold the digital agency Portent, Inc. and provides consulting and training services.

Elizabeth Marsten is the senior director of strategic marketplace services for Tinuiti. Marsten has experience in Google AdWords, Microsoft Ads, Amazon Advertising, Facebook, and other platforms.