Treat your paid-search keywords as individuals: visit optimine at smx advanced

A few months ago OptiMine published its first white paper, “Achieving the Gold Standard in Paid Search Bid Optimization”. In it, OptiMine CTO Rob Cooley made the case that using global keyword-level modeling to optimize keyword bidding is superior to other modeling techniques a that employ clusters. The reason, quite simply, is that keyword-level modeling treats each and every one individually, regardless of the number of keywords.

At the end of the white paper a simple question was implied: Why cluster keyword data if you don’t have to?

The answer, also implied: There’s no reason to. 

On June 5th and 6th the only bid optimization system that models every keyword individually will be in booth 24 at SMX Advanced. We invite you to stop and see why OptiMine guarantees paid search financial performance improvements of 25% or more. Yes, it’s all in how we treat the keywords – as individuals. While you’re there, we also invite you visit our competitors booths. Compare OptiMine results to those that use clustering, local, and rules-based optimization methods.

If you can’t make it to Seattle, the OptiMine website lays out the case quite nicely in this video and in several case studies.


 

Keyword Bid Optimization: Choosing the Right Approach

Keyword Bid Optimization

Paid-search bid optimization comes in two flavors: rules-based and model-based. Within the broad realm of model-based optimization, you’ll find three common methods: global cluster-level modeling, local keyword-level modeling and global keyword-level modeling. Each has pros and cons and each offers various degrees of performance improvement.

If you’re not certain what method you’re using currently, or are considering changing what you’re doing, read on for an overview of these different optimization approaches and their relative strengths and weaknesses.

Model-Based Optimization

Global keyword level: Every keyword receives individual analysis and an individual bid so the entire portfolio achieves the stated goal. The approach is difficult to accomplish because the size and complexity of many paid-search programs requires literally millions of pricing decisions to be made each day. But a solution that does accomplish global keyword-level modeling is likely to be pure software and, therefore, fully automated.

Local keyword level: In effect, this is the approach advocated by Hal Varian, Google’s chief economist: bid each keyword separately based on the predicted value. Simplicity is the key because you don’t need to predict behavior across a range of bids – just bid a percent of the predicted value. However, with simplicity comes lower performance and limited settings. In a lot of cases, a local solution leaves money on the table. You can set a target but you can’t layer on multiple constraints.

Global cluster level: Here you still have a global optimization but models based on clusters of keywords are used to handle the sparse-data problem. Some vendors are actually a hybrid of this plus the keyword-level global approach — that is, they use keyword-level for head terms and clusters for the tail. Global cluster-level bidding tends to be stable with results that are repeatable. But what you gain in stability, you lose in performance and automation. Performance suffers because clusters ignore the fact that every keyword is unique and the value of the aggregated data is outweighed by the loss of that uniqueness. A variety of factors such as seasonal changes, expanded keyword lists and changes in product offerings can render clusters obsolete. When obsolescence occurs, statisticians are typically needed to manually tune the models, so cluster-based solutions are rarely pure software applications.

Rules-Based Optimization

The most common solution available, rules-based optimization is touted for being simple and easy to understand. For example, a rule might state, “If ROAS is less than 200 percent, lower bids by 10 percent.” However, when rules are layered upon rules, simplicity and understandability are quickly negated, making it difficult to understand what will happen to the bids. The big loser in rules-based optimization is performance. Rules-based systems are reactive, with pre-defined responses to certain situations. In a rules-based system, historical data is not considered because the situation drives the reaction. Because of their reactive nature, rules-based optimization can be very good at protecting your position, but playing defense rarely leads to optimal results.

For a more granular look at these approaches, download OptiMine’s white paper (no registration required) “Achieving the Gold Standard in Paid-Search Bid Optimization”.

@markpalony

Auto-bidding: a complex paid search issue made clear

If you want a great summary of auto-bidding technology used for paid search bid optimization read this article (plug warning: the interviewee is Rob Cooley, OptiMine’s CTO).

The Q&A comes from Josh Dreller and his In The Trenches column found in search engine land. Josh is a true expert in the industry who “gets” why auto-bid technology is necessary for paid search, but also understands the danger in the set-it-and-forget-it mentality that often accompanies its implementation.

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