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Google
Adwords works differently than most of the other PPC search engines
such as Overture, FindWhat etc. Typically, you can not really control
the position of your AdWords listing and when it will be shown because
the position is not only depended on the amount of money you are
willing to pay per click. Your ad's position is also determined by
many factors, the most important factors are: your daily cap, maximum
cost-per-click(MaxCPC), your ad's actual click through rate(CTR)
and your average position.
You can not directly control your ad's actual click through rate and
position, so that in order to manage your keywords on Google AdWords
is a big challenge and consume a great deal of time. If you do not
manage your keyword bids properly, you will waste a lot on your
advertising money on Google Adwords.
We have
developed an intelligent bidding formula in Dynamic Bid Maximizer™
that allows you to control what position you want to bid and when it
will be shown. By using Dynamic Bid Maximizer™, you will save up to
80% of the advertising cost on Google Adwords and increase your ROI.
It will also save you a lot of time compared to managing your keywords
manually.
Here is a
screenshot of the Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ interface for Google
AdWords:

The
bidding formula for Google AdWords is very complicated. Basically,
Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ will control your position by increasing and
decreasing the bid amount according to the bidding formula below:
MaxCPC
= (Current position - Desired position) x Preserved Bid Value
For
example if your desired position is "1" and current position
is "5" and the preserved Bid Value is 2 cents, then the
program will increase your bid by 8 cents in order to obtain the
desired position in this situation. After the bid increased, the
program will check what position you currently in and change the bids
according to the new keyword lookup results until either you have
reached the desired position or the upper limit. However, during
certain times, your current position may be above your desired
position, in this case, the Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ will lower your
MaxCPC amount to save you money while maintaining your current
position.
Step by
step of Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ bidding process for Google AdWords:
Step 1.
Check your current position in relationship to your desired position,
if your current position is equal to the desired position, do nothing,
otherwise go to step 2.
Step 2.
Your site is currently not displaying, this means your ad is not in
the search results that currently shown by Google for this particular
keyword. In this situation Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ will increase your
bid by the "Preserved bid value" until your ad are shown or
you have reached your upper limit.
Step 3.
If your desired position is lower than the positions that are showing,
then the program will attempt to bid you to the last position that is
showing for that particular keyword by utilizing the steps described
in step 2 providing that the bid did not exceed the upper limit.
Step 4.
If your ad is already showing but still different than the desired
position, then the bidding formula described previously will be
applied to calculate the bid changes.
Step 5.
Because your position is also depended on your CTR, at certain time,
even you do not increase your MaxCPC, Google AdWords may raise your
position automatically base on your CTR, so that your current position
may be higher than your desired position. In this situation Dynamic
Bid Maximizer™ will decrease your MaxCPC to save your money while
maintaining your desired position.
To
summarize Google's bidding algorithm, Dynamic Bid Maximizer™ will
attempt to make your ad show first under any circumstance providing
that it did not exceed your upper limit setting, then it will apply
the bidding formula described above. The important point to remember
here is that your position is determined by more than just your
bidding price. You may be paying more than the ad that ranks above
yours and still showing at a lower position. Conversely it can also be
true that you will be showing at a higher positions with a lower
bidding price than the people who are under you.
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