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AdSense |
A contextual
advertising program by Google |
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AdWords |
A system to advertise on Google & partner sites
on a CPC (cost per click) basis. |
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Affiliate |
Someone who sets up a business
that is in-between the original manufacturer and
the end customer. Often these are not wholesalers,
but store fronts. Most often, affiliates do not
handle product delivery or customer support |
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Auto Bidding |
A type of keyword bidding in which
an advertiser sets a maximum bid for a specific
keyword but may pay less for each click through
of that keyword. For example, if Advertiser A bid
$0.10 on a keyword, but the next highest bid (Advertiser
B) on that keyword is $0.05, then Advertiser A will
pay only $0.06 for each click through. However,
if Advertiser B changes his/her bid from $0.05 to
$0.09, then Advertiser A will pay the full $0.10
(Advertiser A's maximum bid) for each click through.
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Bid Gap |
A Bid Gap is the difference between
what you are currently paying for a click and the
minimum you need to pay to still remain above your
next highest competitor in the search results. |
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Bid Jam |
Jamming the Competitor such that he pays the maximum
amount that he is bidding |
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Bid War |
A situation where all the advertisers compete for
the top slots by bidding the same maximum CPC |
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Budget |
The amount of money that an advertiser
sets aside for an advertising campaign. Different
publishers allow for advertisers to set daily, weekly
or monthly budgets. |
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Click Index |
Scoring system to help understand the performance
of our listings as compared to the competitor. |
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Click Rate |
Same as CTR. The ratio of impressions shown to
the number of clicks. |
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Click-Through |
When a user selects a hyper text
(web page) link. The Click refers to the noise an
input mouse makes when a button is depressed. The
through refers to the act of going "through"
the link. Many web statistics are kept on click-throughs
(sometimes abbreviated as Click-Thru). Some advertising
systems are based on paying sites when someone actually
Clicks-Thru to a new site. |
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Click-Tracking |
The use of scripts in order to track inbound and
outbound links. |
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Content Match |
It is a source of lead that displays listings when
users are viewing related content on a partner site
page |
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Conversion Counter |
Conversion Counter is the Yahoo!
Search Marketing free, easy-to-use conversion tracking
tool. Conversion Counter tracks the number of conversions
(such as sales, registrations, newsletter sign-ups,
etc.) generated by your Yahoo! Listings. |
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Conversion Rate |
The relationship between visitors to sales or actions.
If 1 person out of 100 purchases a sites product,
it has a conversion rate of 1 to 100 |
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Conversions |
If I click an ad and then make
a purchase with in the same session that the click
took place in, that would be deemed to be a conversion.
Conversions can be recorded in different ways -
some PPC accounts only measure the amount of contacts
instead of actual sales made. |
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CPA |
Cost per Action. Where you pay for a specified
action such as a purchase. |
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CPC |
Cost per Click. With this you are charged for every
click your link on someone's website receives. |
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CPL |
Cost per Lead. Where you pay for a lead |
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CPM |
Cost per Thousand. Where you pay for each 1000
impressions. |
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CTR |
Click Through Rate. The rate at
which people click on a link when displayed on a
page. The figure most often cited is a percentage
of the page view rate. If a page is viewed 10 times
and a visitor clicks once, then the CTR is 10% |
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Delisting |
The removal of a listing as a result of inaction
or poor performance. |
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Destination URL |
The page to which a user is directed to when he
clicks on the ad. |
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Direct Keywords |
These keywords are directly related
to your products or services. They usually include
a descriptive term. These keywords make up the bulk
of most campaigns, and usually have a positive ROI.
They are not searched for as often as broad keywords,
so sometimes a campaign can be helped by the increased
exposure from broad keywords. |
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Display URL |
A display URL is the web address that will be shown
to viewers. |
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Fast Track |
Overtures Bid management program. |
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Geo Targeting |
An advertisement targeted at a specific geographical
region, area or location |
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Google |
A famous Search Engine. |
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Impression |
The number of impressions is the
number of times an ad is displayed on Google or
Overture or on sites or products in their ad network.
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Jump start |
Jumpstart is a full service method of signing up
for Google AdWords, where Google specialists set
up your AdWords account for you |
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Keyword |
A singular word or phrase that is typed into a
search engine search query. Keyword mainly refers
to popular words which relate to any one website
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Keyword Buys |
Some search engines tie keywords
to advertising sales. When a user searches for a
particular keyword, the results page often have
a banner advertisement displayed buy advertisers
that purchased the keyword |
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Keyword Phrase |
Refers to two or more keywords combined to form
a search query. |
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Keyword Research |
Doing research on a single keyword
to find its relatives and related keywords. This
is often done to find the highest producing keywords
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Keyword search |
A search for documents containing one or more words
that are specified by a user. |
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Landing Page |
The specific web page that a visitor
ultimately reaches after clicking an advertisement.
Often, this page is optimized for a specific keyword
term or phrase. |
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Manual Bidding |
Monitoring or Updating your bids Manually. |
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Match Driver |
Match Driver counts the misspell keywords, the
combinations singular/plural, the accents and other
variations to put them in correspondence with a
key word root |
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Match Types |
Match Type or Keyword matching options are different
methods of targeting your ads to users. |
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Maximum Bid |
The Maximum amount an advertiser is willing to
pay for a each click on the ad. |
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Maximum CPC |
It is the Maximum price that you pay when a user
Clicks on your ad. |
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Minimum Bid |
This is the minimum amount of money that you are
willing to pay for a single click on an ad. |
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Misspellings |
Intentionally making a spelling mistake in meta
keywords or meta tags to catch search engine users
who also misspell words when searching. |
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Natural Search |
Search results that are shown due to relevancy
to the search terms, not by sponsored placement.
Also referred to as "organic", "natural"
or "algorithmic" search |
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Negative Keywords |
These are filtering words. If your
keywords contain a negative keyword, and that word
is included in a search term, your ad will not show.
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Organic Listings |
The Free listings that are displayed in the Search
Engine are called Organic Listings |
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Overture |
A Yahoo! owned PPC company. As
well as providing Yahoo! with their PPC listings
they also supply several other notable search engines
and portals with PPC listings such as MSN |
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Page View |
Web Page Hits or number of times a page is viewed
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Pay Per Lead |
The amount a website spends to acquire leads |
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PPC |
Pay Per Click. A Pay-Per-Click
search engine charges websites on a per click basis.
Often, an auction is held to see who is willing
to pay the most for users |
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Premium Listings |
The listings in Search Engine for which the advertisers
has to pay some amount for every clicks that the
ad gets. |
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Rank |
How well a particular web page or web site is listed
in a search engine or advertising results |
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ROI |
Return On Investment. In relation
to search engine advertising, it often refers to
sales per lead.. |
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Search Engine |
A site which searches the web for sites which are
relevant for a given search query. |
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Search Term |
The words that are typed into a
search engine search box. Also called Search Words,
Keywords, and Queries |
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Traffic |
The visitors and page views on a website. |
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URL |
Uniform Resource Locator |