Yahoo! Search Marketing Blog » Your Quality Index

A Quick Guide to Understanding and Improving It

You’ve seen the graphic display of your ads’ quality index in your secure account interface. It’s that little blue bar on each ad detail page that resembles the lighted bars you might find blinking on your stereo.

When all five sections of the bar are colored in blue, your quality index score is high. When three sections are filled in, your score is OK. When only one is filled in…well, you get the idea.

But what is this quality index thing, why does it matter, and how can you make it better?

It’s All Relative (and Relevant)
In a nutshell, an ad’s quality index is a relative measure of how relevant it is to users. In determining your quality index, our system takes into account your ad’s click-through rate compared to its average position in search results, as well as to that of other ads displayed at the same time, other keywords in your ad group, and other relevance factors.

Why Should I Care?
You should care because ads with a higher quality index can receive higher ranking in Sponsored Search results. Our system calculates an ad’s ranking based on your bid, your ad’s quality and other relevance factors. A high-quality ad may be ranked higher than a poor-quality ad, even if the poor-quality ad’s bid is higher.

Please note the graphic above is provided for illustrative purposes only

OK, so how do I Improve My Quality Index?
Your ad’s quality index reflects its ability to meet the needs and desires of users—that is, how well it helps them find what they want, quickly and accurately. If your ads don’t meet the needs of users, users are less likely to click them. Fewer clicks means fewer customers and conversions.

When this happens, nobody wins: not you, not us and not the user. High-quality ads, by contrast, can help create winners out of all of us. The quality index was set up to encourage advertisers to better meet the needs of users—who are, after all, the reason we are both here.

Here are a number of tactics you can use to improve the quality of your ads, and thus, your quality index:

Use relevant keywords—Make sure the keywords in your ad group are highly relevant to the ads in the same ad group.

Include your keyword in your creative—Using the keyword itself in titles and descriptions of your ad. You can use the Insert Keyword feature to help you do this automatically.

Take advantage of excluded keywords—Use this feature to block certain searches that you think may not be relevant. This can help keep your budget focused on more likely prospects. For example, if you sell portable radios but not ham radio equipment, you can block searches that include the word “ham.”

Use ad testing—You may have noticed that when you create an ad in an Ad Group, you are prompted to create another one. You should do this in all of your ad groups, because when you create more than one ad, our system will test the ads automatically. Ads that perform better then begin to appear more frequently in search results, and you can edit or delete ads that perform poorly. Try different copy, different offers or different display URLs to help determine what works best.

Gather intelligence—Almost all’s fair in love and advertising, so you shouldn’t feel shy about spying on your competitors. And by spying, we mean searching for their products or services so you can look at their ads—not breaking into their offices, tapping their phones or any of that illicit Watergate stuff, OK? Take a look at your competitors’ ads to determine if your offers are as strong as theirs.

Offer specials—Consider including special offers in your ad copy. Take a look at a calendar: It’s chock-full of holidays that you should consider taking advantage of. Limited-time offers, free shipping, two-for-ones, free gifts, contests and so forth can be very effective. Remember, it’s not just about your ad, it’s also about the value that users think you can deliver.

Yahoo! Search Marketing Blog » Your Quality Index

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Yahoo Shares Hints on Improving Quality Index [SearchEngineWatch]

Yahoo search ads have been ranked using a quality index since the launch of Panama. This number is important, because ads with a higher quality index can receive higher ranking in sponsored search results. Advertisers can see what their ad’s quality index is, on a scale of one to five, within their account interface. But knowing how to improve that index is another matter.

Yahoo offers some tips to understand and improve your quality index in the Yahoo Search Marketing blog.

Your ad’s quality index reflects its ability to meet the needs and desires of users – that is, how well it helps them find what they want, quickly and accurately. If your ads don’t meet the needs of users, users are less likely to click them. Fewer clicks means fewer customers and conversions.

When this happens, nobody wins: not you, not us and not the user. High-quality ads, by contrast, can help create winners out of all of us. The quality index was set up to encourage advertisers to better meet the needs of users – who are, after all, the reason we are both here.

Tactics to improve quality index include using relevant keywords within an ad group, including keywords in creative, utilizing excluded keywords, and using ad testing. Yahoo also suggests gathering intelligence about competitors’ ads, and including special offers in your ad copy.

 

Posted by Kevin Newcomb at November 9, 2007 11:49 AM

Yahoo Shares Hints on Improving Quality Index [SearchEngineWatch]

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The Five Things That Yahoo! Search Can Do But Not Google | India Inc | Digital Inspiration

The Five Things That Yahoo! Search Can Do But Not Google | India Inc | Digital Inspiration

Google is the world’s favorite web search engine but there are a couple of cool things that you can do only in Yahoo!. Take a look:

1. Compose emails from the Yahoo! search box.

Type !mail abc@xyz.com in the Yahoo! search box and it will automatically compose a new email message for you in Yahoo! mail.

2. Get Lyrics of any song or your favorite artist.

Type madonna lyrics (for lyrics of Madonna songs) or madonna material girl lyrics (for lyrics of a particular song)

3. Specifiy the order of search keywords in queries

Say you want only web pages where word x comes before y but not vice versa, then just put the search query in Square Brackets. An example:

[Sylvester Stallone] - will only return web pages where the word Sylvester appear before Stallone.

4. Search your favorite websites from Yahoo! itself.

For instance, type !wiki google in Yahoo! search box to search Google in Wikipedia.com. Other popular shortcuts are !ebay, !amazon, and !flickr. You can also execute these from the Firefox search box without changing the default search engine.

5. linkdomain - An undocumented Yahoo Web search operator.

A quick question - Can you find the number of articles on Wikipedia website that link to CNN.com ? It’s almost impossible to get this data from Google but you can do so quite easily in Yahoo! with the incredibly useful linkdomain operator. The answer is:

linkdomain:cnn.com site:wikipedia.org

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Yahoo Changes

Couple changes happening with the Yahoo network that advertisers should be aware of:

1) Short descriptions for all ads will be required and if there is only a long description associated with the ad, the long descriptions will be truncated so that the new description is only 70 characters.  This policy will take affect in June so you have sometime.

2) Additionally, if you are a Yahoo Ambassador who has not taken the new Ambassador exam, you we’re required to take the Ambassador exam before March 31 or else you will lose your accreditation.

Popularity: 9% [?]

Yahoo Alpha

Yahoo has just released a clever new type of search engine know as Alpha. Alpha is an aggregate search engine that combines a number of different useful services all on the same page. Though fairly interesting in concept, I doubt Yahoo will adopt the search engine widely. Aside from the Yahoo Web Search, all the other opinion are collapsed (including sponsored search) and I doubt the model could generate any revenue.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Stop the information monopoly

Stop the information monopoly, originally uploaded by Ben Werdmuller.

Interesting promotion by Ask.com (and a lot of experts believe Yahoo.com) to persuade consumers to look at other search engines for information (by other, it’s assumed, not Google).

Most of these early promotions have been found in the London Tube. It will be interesting to see what other channels the PR Company responsible decides to pursue.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Yahoo Panama Increases Profits

Interesting post about how Yahoo’s Panama has improved performance for their advertiser (More Early Panama Results at Clickz).

 Avenue A | Razorfish reported the following statistics about a week ago after the agency switched their clients from Overture to Yahoo Panama:

  • Search Impressions – Up an average of 5%
  • Cost Per Click – Down an average of 6%
  • Click Rate – Up an average of 10%
  • Conversion Rates – Down an average of 5%
  • Overall CPA – Up an average of 6%

Additionally, SearchIgnite and 360i also reported similar results after they switched their clients.

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Search Engine Mashup

LemmeFind

I found this really cool tool to compare all the major search engines, Google, Yahoo, and MSN, and gathers the results. The site actually shows the SERP so you can see exactly where your ads are showing up on each page.

Popularity: 18% [?]

Yahoo Display URLs

While Google does not allow different Display and Destination URLs, Yahoo Panama has not caught up and still allows you to use different Display and Destination URLs. As I posted before, according to my tests, a relevant Display URL can increase click through rate by .5%. So it’s worth checking out and trying a number of different possibilites for your Display URLs.

Additionally, even if your using Google, there are a lot of different ways to present your Display URL and it is worth testing to see what is the most effective.

www.searchenginemonkeying.com
www.SearchEngineMonkeying.com
searchenginemonkeying.com
SearchEngineMonkeying.com

Popularity: 10% [?]

Yahoo Link Network

I’m not a big Yahoo user and I really didn’t start analyzing the site until Panama came out but I noticed something interesting about the structure of Yahoo’s Search Results page that allows you to dominate the SEM listings.

Yahoo Gout Results

When you type in a high traffic keyword, Yahoo usually displays a group of links above the results labeled “Also try:” These links are terms that Yahoo feels is closely related to the original high traffic keyword and that consumers may use to drill down their search results. The thing is, some of the terms are labeled pretty strange and, more important, Yahoo puts the term the consumer clicks on directly in the search box and returns the results related to that term.

Yahoo Gout FreeMind Map
I used a mind mapping program called FreeMind to create an image that represented Yahoo’s link network associated with the main keyword. After I had it all mapped out, I went back and was able to create a campaign and ad groups directly related to these terms that Yahoo places above the search results.

Using this method I was able to totally dominate the market I was advertising in and the keywords barely cost anything. The only downside is that Yahoo is always updating the links so you have to keep an eye on them but for a couple hours work, it was well worth it!

Yahoo FreeMind Map

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