New AdWords Feature: A Drill Down into Drafts and Experiments

New AdWords Feature: A Drill Down into Drafts and Experiments was originally published on BruceClay.com, home of expert search engine optimization tips.





Editor’s note:

On Tuesday, Google AdWords announced a number of new features and abilities for Google advertisers would be rolling out in the next few weeks, with standouts including:




bulk action editing
offline reporting capabilities
ads for apps and in-app purchases
bid automation
drag-and-drop report creation
draft mode for ad and campaign changes


Today’s post is by 3Q Digital Senior SEM Manager Eric Smith. You can catch 3Q Digital’s expert search marketers on the Bruce Clay, Inc. blog every other month, and we on their’s, in our ongoing search blog partnership. Eric has drilled down into one of the new features that Google advertisers will see coming to their AdWords Editor in the coming weeks: Drafts and Experiments.




drafts and experiments logo - 042514


This week’s AdWords Performance Forum featured a lot of great new and upcoming features; a livestream of the first overview session can be found here.


It wasn’t much of a surprise to many advertisers that Google is continuing to focus on mobile and bid automation as two key areas of improvement, and updates here are likely to be very positive. One of the most exciting announcements, however, was the unveiling of Google’s new “Drafts and Experiments” functionality.


As the name implies, there are two main product improvements here.


Drafts and Experiments: Draft Mode

The first is “draft mode,” which allows users to make and save edits within the AdWords UI without pushing them live to an account. Third-party management tools and AdWords Editor have functionality around this already, but it wasn’t previously possible through the user interface.


Draft mode is particularly handy when you’re:



Rolling out large-scale changes that take multiple sessions to complete
Planning to update bids and ads based on seasonal factors such as holidays
Or working on accounts where multiple people are involved and want to stay abreast of changes before they are executed

drafts and experiments interface - 042514


Rolling out changes made within draft mode can be done in two ways, and this is where things get interesting.


The first way changes can be made is intuitive; edits made in draft mode can be pushed live to the account, and the result is just the same as making an edit in the UI or through AdWords Editor.


Draft Mode Experiments vs. AdWords Campaign Experiments

The second option implements changes made in draft mode only to a certain percentage of traffic. If you’ve spent a lot of time in AdWords, this should sound vaguely familiar. A while back Google introduced AdWords Campaign Experiments (ACE), which allows you to set a percentage of traffic as an experiment group and test (among other things) ad text or keyword level bid multipliers.


ace interface - 042514


If you haven’t had the opportunity, playing around with ACE is highly recommended. Being able to segment a portion of your traffic is a big deal and Google, as the ad publisher, is uniquely positioned to do this — this functionality is not found anywhere else. Side-by-side comparisons don’t allow for week-over-week variations to influence any of your tests, and having smaller experiment groups mitigates risk of disrupting performance through testing.


ACE has some drawbacks (clunky setup, reporting can be tedious) though it looks like that is what Google is trying to address here. There are also a lot of important things ACE can’t test, such as any type of campaign setting, targeting method, or bid strategy. Bids themselves can only be tested through % multipliers.


Although Google hasn’t released all the details, the most exciting part about the Drafts and Experiments announcement is that it seems like all experiment limitations are going to go away. From the AdWords blog:


“You can experiment with almost anything in your campaign, including bid changes, new keywords, different campaign settings, special bids for times and locations, different kinds of ad formats, and more. We think you’ll like it!”


This is really great news, and I for one can’t wait to get in and start testing!

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Published on April 25, 2014 11:19
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