Can You Have Multiple Adwords Remarketing Codes On A Page- Yes!

As many know, using Adwords Remarketing (also called retargeting) to get your message across to people who visited your site but did not convert is awesome.  It's a great way to market to people after they leave your site- and it works! 

However, a common question is in setting things up is:  How can I make sure that people who have converted (bought something, signed up for something, etc.) no longer see my Remarketing codes?  You'd set up a Custom Combination.  You could have this combination set up like so:  Show my ads to everyone who visited the site but did not convert.  So you'd put one code on your site that shows up on every page, and one code that shows up only on the "thank you" or "order confirmation" page. 

Here's the even more common question:  If you put the code on every page of the site and another code on the "thank you" page, wouldn't you have to make sure that the code that's on every page of the site is not on the thank you page, aka wouldn't that confuse Google's tracking to have them both on the same page, and how do you do that? 

This is a valid question as you don't want the two codes not working correctly.  Also, usually when you put a code so it shows up on every page of the site, you usually drop it in the footer, header or some part of a template that automatically shows up on every page on the site so you don't have to paste it in each page, one at a time.  Finally, if you did have to exclude a code that shows up on every page of the site from just one page such as a thank you page, it may be a paint to do this or impossible?  So with these thoughts in mind here's the answer right from Google regarding the question:

If you put the code on every page of the site and another code on the "thank you" page, wouldn't you have to make sure that the code that's on every page of the site is not on the thank you page, aka wouldn't that confuse Google's tracking to have them both on the same page? 

Answer:  No, you can multiple Remarketing codes on the same page.

Answer straight from the Google team:

Thanks for writing in.

Yes, you can have multiple remarketing codes on a single page as long as

they are tracking multiple actions.
Thus in this case the codes will work
fine, since the 'all visitor' tag is placed on all pages. Thus a user
would be part of this list even before he lands on the thank you page.

Once on the Thank you page, the user gets added to the 'signed up' list.

The custom combination you have created is also perfect since it includes
all users in the all visitors list and excludes all users in the 'signed
up' list.

Some other cases where you can have multiple lists on same page:

1. Track users for multiple attributes - list for all users who visit the
website and all users who a certain page. Using this we can
create lists for users who visited the website but did not go to that certain
page.
2. Track users in specific duration - list for all users who visited the
website in last 60 days and another list for users who visited in last 30
days. Using this we can create custom list of users who visited the
website in between 60 and 30 days.

Thanks Google! 

So, in review:  If you need to put a remarketing code on every page on your site, paste that in.  It may also show up on the conversion page, no problem.  Then drop the code for the conversion page on that page only.  Wait until your audiences get 100 total visitors between the two codes.  Create a Custom Combination of everyone who visited the site but did not convert.  Make some ads- Start remarketing to those potentially lost visitors.  Done!

Knowing this definitely simplifies the putting of Adwords Remarketing codes in, doesn't it?

What has been your experience using remarketing?  Let us know!

Repeatable Remarketing Results Revealed- Meetup on 4/19/12

Great News!

Have you ever wondered how to use Google Adwords Remarketing to capture lost sales, or visitors to your website?  We'll, Hippo Internet Marketing & Training in Huntersville, NC (North of Charlotte) will be having a meetup to cover this exciting topic.  Here are the details:

This is going to be great stuff.  Hope you can make it!

Forex-ninjas.com & Other Refferal Sites- What You Need to Know.

You may have noticed in your Google Analytics reports of sites like the infamous forex-ninjas.com sending all sorts of traffic to your site. 

What's the deal with this and why is this happening?  Here's what you need to know:

Basically, when you see a site like forex-ninjas.com in your Google Analytics referrers its called referrer spam.  Here's how it work via a post by Martha Seroog:

  1. A website wants to increase its traffic artificially
  2. They visit your website, view your source code and grab your analytics code (yes, it's visible to anyone)
  3. They post your code onto their website (along with thousands of other site's codes)
  4. They visit their own site and ta-da...they appear in YOUR analytics report as a referring site.

What does this mean to you and what can you do about it?

You could perhaps make a filter for traffic from such sites.  But so many people have noticed this that you have to believe Google is on top of this and will be putting an end to forex-ninjas.com's sneakiness.

The down part of this is that all your clients will be asking you who forex-ninjas.com is and that it may artifically inflate your reports and/or make your bounce rates look strange. 

Any thoughts on how you are handling referrer spam?

p.s.:  Hat tip to these excellent posts.  Check them out:

http://dmjcomputerservices.com/blog/2012/01/13/forex-ninjas-in-your-analytics-you-have-referrer-spam/

http://www.sitepro.com/index.cfm/blog.entry/entryId/709/

Teaching Google Adwords Class in Charlotte

Hello,

Just wanted to drop a line and pass along some great info for either yourself, clients or business contacts that you might find interesting. 

I'll be teaching a class on Google Adwords Friday with Corey Creed in Charlotte.  The class two days, this Thursday 26th- Friday 27th.  It will go from more beginner on Thursday to more advanced on Friday.

 If you're wondering how to understand and use Adwords to market your business online, this is the class.  Excellent, useful material and Corey is an engaging teacher.  Even if you have to drive a bit to get to Charlotte, its well worth it.

 

Full details with links for registration here:   http://www.thejunglemap.com/post/979

Hope you can make it!

How Much Advertising Does Google Control? And Why Should it Matter to You?

Its amazing in just under about a decade and a half the growth of Google as the one of world's largest advertising platform.  This of course, has coincided with the move away from traditional print advertising and the worldwide acceptance of the internet as the go-to place for information. What are some brief takeaway for business owners?

How Big is Google's Advertising Platform?

This includes Adwords, Doubleclick and other Google properties.  Let's put it into perspective:

1.  Google receives almost $5 of every $10 spent on online advertising worldwide. Its total income from advertising last year was over $29 billion. To put this number in perspective, the total advertising revenues of all US newspapers combined last year was less than $22bn. And the major US television networks (excluding cable and local stations) earned  $21.7 billion in advertising.  (-indra de lanerolle).

2.  As far as online advertising goes, ZenithOptimedia has issued a report that tells us this:  Google controls44 percent of global online ad revenues.  AKA:  Way ahead of its competitors and the dominant online force (including Android/mobile).

What does this mean for business owners? 

There's good news and bad news:

1.  Bad news:  The days of set it and forget it are over.  Remember when you could just put an ad in the newspaper?  Or had to meet once a year with the Yellowpages guy to update your ad?  Those days are over (See picture to the right).  People search for EVERYTHING online. 

What does this mean?  Businesses have to either:

A.  Learn how to market their website and business online, which means paid search, organic search, local listings, social media and constantly changing and adjusting things. 

Or if you don't have the time (or desire) to do this: 

B.  Learn enough so you can understand some of what goes into online advertising so when you hire a professional internet marketer who can know enough to hire someone who is actually knows what they're doing and won't rip you off (very difficult) and will get you the calls, emails and leads you need to keep your business growing. 

The Good News: 

If you find a professional to help you OR learn how to market your site online yourself you can:

1.  Beat out your competitors not just because you outspent them for the largest Yellowpages ad.  No, online advertising whether paid or organic search rewards the smart advertisers.  It is not always he who spends the most wins, but he who understands (or hires someone who understands) how to market their business online wins.

2.  Get extremely qualified calls, leads, emails.  After all people aren't just picking up the paper or yellowpages.  They typing in very specific terms.  If you come up in the search results instead of your competitors for those terms.  They will call you.

Bottom line is this:  Businesses need to at least start putting into motion how they'll market their site either by doing it themselves or hiring a pro.  This begs the question:  How can you find the right person to hire for marketing your website.  You should call or email us ; ) ! 

Failing this, our next post will be about how to hire an Internet Marketing pro who will help your business and not just take your money.  This is a very requested subject, due to the number of people we've talked with who have been ripped off and the number of accounts we've taken over that had very poorly done marketing work.  What are you thoughts on the above?  Stay tuned...

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