For an example, I create a website to sell widgets in which the index page is a default URL. The ad group consists of the keywords:
free widget(s)
expensive widget(s)
blue widget(s)
red widget(s)
black widget(s)
foreign widget(s)
....
Each keyword has its own landing page and, therefore the individual URL in the ad.
This design works well for google and partner search network.
How about content network? How does Google match the content page with these individual URLs?
If Google produces a well-match for
1. ad w/ blue widget URL---> sites of blue widget (specific)
2. ad w/ free widget URL ---> sites of free samples, freebies (type match)
3. ad w/ default URL ----> any sites of widgets mentioned more than one specification.
Since most of the content sites will fall in the category #3, therefore, the content network will show the default URL most of the time.
This may be one of the reasons why the content site gives lower conversion rate than the search network. If this is the case, we need to find a way to design an ad with costumed URL for the content sites to improve the conversion.
Does anyone agree with the above thoughts? Why not give yours?
As to tracking the conversions for content sites, Google tracking does this.
Or you could separate your campaigns, one for searches (with url #1 as default per adgroup) and one for content sites (with url #2 as default per adgroup)
(for separating content from search campaigns, see Beren's method which is parapharased here: [webmasterworld.com ] post#5)
Does this help?
It is my understanding (but I am not 100%) that ad triggers on content sites are not indivdual words, but how all the words in an ad group 'relate' to the the page in general. So I doubt indivdual URL's would be used, but rather the general one for the adgroup.
Nyet, you are correct in the first sentence above. When it comes to placing your ad on a content site, all keywords in the Ad Group, taken together, are considered.
However, when keywords have individual destination URLs, the system will assign the click to the keyword which is the best match to the actual page the ad is placed on - and send the user to that destination.
So, FromRocky was heading in the right direction in post #4.
AWA