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PPC Management - A User's Review of MSN
- By Tim Rule
- Published 04/20/2008
- Search Engine Marketing
PPC Management - A User's Review of MSN
This is the first in a series of articles intended to convey my personal impressions of managing PPC through Google Adwords, Yahoo Panama and MSN Adcenter.
Each engine has its pluses and minuses and I thought I would write a short blurb describing my experiences using the interface for each of these. The first engine I will be looking at is the lesser utilized of the three, MSN Adcenter.
Interface
One
of the things I like about working within Adcenter is the clean look.
Although from time to time I wonder if the uncluttered interface is
more a product of its relative youth, there’s no denying it’s easier on
the eyes than either of its competitors. In part, this appears to be
due to the lack of clutter that plagues both
The layout
of subsections is based on 4 tabs; Campaigns, Accounts & Billing,
Research and Reports. Clicking on these takes you to exactly what you
would expect, no more no less. Everything is laid out in a logical
format and it’s pretty quick and easy to find what you’re looking for.
After struggling to navigate through
Campaign Setup
Setting up is a 5 step process.
- First
off, you lay out your basic campaign structure by naming the campaign
and initial ad group. One of the nifty features at this stage is a
checkbox allowing you to copy an existing ad group. I have found this
can be a useful time saving feature. Network targeting, campaign
scheduling, language and regional targeting can all be set up on this
same page. Also, conversion tracking can either be set up here or later
in the campaign interface with a single click.
- The next
step is writing ad copy. The biggest advantage I have found in this
stage is that the interface allows you to paste the entire ad
description in one line rather than having to fuss with the character
limitations for 2 lines of ad text, such as in both Google and Yahoo.
- Now
you can add your keywords. This is a very straightforward process, You
have the option to add your own pre-made list of keywords and/or using
a keyword tool that scans a site, or the ad destination URLs. This tool
can generate a list of synonyms based on a suggested term, including
the number of searches conducted in the previous month.
- The
last main step is to determine pricing settings. This includes setting
a budget (see annoyances and oddities section), bidding and setting
bidding options, such as incremental bidding. Here also you can set
bids specifically targeting for location, day, time, age, or gender.
- The final step is simply a review of all the information entered to this point and the option to change settings. I find this a bit annoying, as opting to change anything takes you back to that stage and after making your adjustment you have to cycle back through the entire process to the review page once again.
Keywords
The only tool this interface has at the moment is the keyword research tool. This can be accessed under the research tab or when editing keyword settings. I have found this far less awkward and time consuming to use than either of the other 2 engines. One thing to note about adjusting keyword settings is
One major difference with
keywords between MSN and the others is the level of editorial control
exerted. Recently I was managing a campaign with a particular ad group
that had quite a few different ads. Some keywords were reported by MSN
as being declined for certain ads, but approved for others. This is
certainly a departure from my experiences with either AdWords or
Reports
The reporting feature is also quite robust. One can run single use reports or create saved templates for performance, accounting or targeting. It allows for quite a number of specific report types from account overview down to specific ad or keyword performance. A report can be set to display information from hourly, daily, weekly, monthly or yearly. Additionally, filters can be set to customize reports to only display information you wish to view. Automated report scheduling is also an option if you wish to receive emails periodically, without having to fetch them personally. The format for these reports are limited. Currently downloading one gets you a zipped csv file. Hopefully they’ll expand that to allow options for other file formats.
Annoyances and Oddities
These are some of the gripes I have with Adcenter.
- For
some reason, they’ve incorporated the option to select campaign
settings for either daily budgeting or monthly. While this isn’t really
a bad thing, if you select daily budgeting, it requires you to set a
monthly budget as well. In my experience, doing this seems to have
little effect on the amount spent on a given day. For example, I had
set a daily budget of $10.00 while selecting a monthly cap of $310.00
to reflect 31 days in a month. Day by day this particular campaign was
spending regularly up to and in excess of $20.00 daily. No amount of
fiddling seemed to change that behavior, so consequently the monthly
budget was used up in half the time.
- Normally, when
optimizing ads and keywords, I like to pause poorly performing ads.
Pausing them, rather than deleting them, allows me to retain the
statistics for later viewing. This is handy because sometimes I do not
wish to drop an ad or a keyword entirely, but just want to turn it off
for a time, for whatever reason. Unfortunately, there is no option to
pause either an ad or a specific keyword. There is no way short of
deletion to stop displaying a specific ad and the only way to “pause” a
keyword without deleting it, is to drop the max CPC to the absolute
minimum.
- There is a limitation on viewing data at
campaign, ad group or even ad or keyword level. One can only view
yesterday, this month, last month, this year, last year or entire time.
I find it very strange that unlike anywhere else in this interface, you
cannot specify a custom date range. To get around this, you have to go
to reports and create and run a report specifying what start and end
date you wish to view data for. This can be time consuming and is an
obvious flaw that will hopefully be worked out soon.
- The timeout is quite short. Many times while working in Adcenter, I’ve tabbed back after only several minutes, only to find the system has logged me out and I have to re-login and navigate back to what I’d been working on.
Summary
Overall,
I’d have to say that MSN Adcenter is quite easy to use. Although MSN
gets the least amount of traffic of the 3 engines, this isn’t entirely
disadvantageous. One result of this disparity is that spend for a given
campaign is generally significantly less than in either Adwords or
Spread The Word
Tim Rule
Tim Rule specializes in Pay-Per-Click account management at StepForth Web Marketing Inc, a web marketing company founded in 1997 and based in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. StepForth provides cutting-edge web marketing services that provide highly successful, targeted results for its clientele. Tim Rule is accredited in Google Adwords and a Yahoo Search Marketing Ambassador.
View all articles by Tim Rule

