By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
Interesting question, because although you can follow everything Google tells you to do, you can still experience a 'poor landing page experience'.From your point of view (not what Google say) which basic elements do you look to improve on when your landing page quality seems to be faltering?
What I'm getting at is I grade really well for my sites landing page experience when I check the main elements against Google's to do list, however I still get a poor landing page experience on a lot of keywords.
What is your rule of thumb when it comes to a landing page quality checklist?
Thank you for both detailed analysis of your knowledge and experience, very much appreciated.
Everything you have mentioned I do, so I'm glad that I'm ticking all the right boxes but it's frustrating to follow all the regulated guidelines and still not achieve the goal of a decent landing page.
My pages still convert pretty well, so it tells me people like the page... even though G give me a poor landing page experience, but obviously my overall quality score is lower as a result, so I'm paying more, which is annoying
I guess Google just wants to give me a mark down based on how competitive the keywords are and the fact i'm not prepared to pay the silly money other companies are![]()
I think it's important to mention here that about 70% of what makes up your Quality Score is CTR. If you change the Destination URL of your existing ads (instead of creating new Ads for the new URL) you will lose the good data that you've built up (which is another factor Google looks at for measuring your Quality Score). I'm not saying you've done this, but just a warning!I'm in a similar boat here. A lot of our keywords have "below average" landing page scores despite seemingly checking off every list we can find. I'm searching for what might be wrong but to no avail. I did a bit of testing with a keyword by intentionally putting it in a generic product listing page. For e.g if the search was "red shoes" the user would land on the "shoes" page of the site. I did this to see what the quality score would settle at. Quality score was steady at 5
Last week, we kept everything the same but changed it to a new landing page which was the product page as opposed to the menu. i.e the "red shoes" page. This page mostly ticked all the points noted in the posts above. Page copy similar to ad text and keyword etc etc. So I was expecting it to increase quality score but it went from 5 to 4!
It leads me to believe there must be something fundamentally wrong with our product landing pages for it to drop when, in fact, it should in theory go up. Does anyone have any generic advice on what would be the main things to test on this page?
If you change the Destination URL of your existing ads (instead of creating new Ads for the new URL) you will lose the good data that you've built up (which is another factor Google looks at for measuring your Quality Score)
Yes, it's a nice feature which automatically comes into play later this year. You could upgrade manually now though.I see they are changing this now though, with the new "final URL"... so it allows you to change your destination URL without effecting/re-setting your historic data.
Is adwords right for my business? Please Reply Me.