3. Positioning
If you’re a digital ads expert, you probably already know that position matters. However, have you ever wondered what goes first, second or third? Don’t worry, we got you.
Headline 1: The first headline is the main attention-grabbing one. It should directly address your customers search term and the messaging on your landing page
Headline 2: Your USP and what differentiates you from competitors
Headline 3: It’s not always shown so you can add your brand name here or other non-essential information
Description 1: Try to include your keywords here and a call to action
Description 2: The second description is not always shown. Try to include a second call to action here or answer customer questions.
Display path: extremely underutilized part of ad building but still so valuable! A display path is what your user sees when your ad comes up on Google. Use this to highlight your prominent keywords. This will make it more enticing for customers to click on your ad – plus the Google algorithm likes it.
4. Scan the Competition
Use your top 5 keywords to see what other brands are doing:
Step 1: Go to your keywords and figure out what your 5 best converting keywords are.
Step 2: Go to Incognito mode on Google Chrome and type in your keywords into Google search
Step 3: Find out what your competitors are doing
Once you know what kind of ads you’re up against, it will help you figure out how to stand out from everyone else. Use this to your advantage to build ads that are better! Do this at least once a month to keep up to date with what others are doing.
5. Search Vs. Display
When it comes to Display ads, if you have good visuals, you’re 80% there. The remaining 20% is in the CTAs and text you use. Use your existing text ads to leverage your best-performing ads and highlight them in your display ads.
Usually, visitors that come from Search ads tend to be warmer leads than visitors that come from Display. Keep this in mind when writing for display ads. It’s good to highlight any promotions here or things like free shipping and 24/7 servicing.
6. Write like you’re Targeting a 9th Grader
Unlike your high school essays, you won’t have to use a Dictionary here. Put the Thesaurus away! Use simpler words to engage with your customers – the simpler the better. Try to also reduce explanations to singular words and use active voice in your ads.
Examples of active voice:
Monkeys adore bananas.
The cashier counted the money.
The dog chased the squirrel.
Examples of passive voice:
Bananas are adored by monkeys.
The money was counted by the cashier.
The squirrel was chased by the dog.