The Secret to Tweaking Your Google Adwords Campaign for a Mobile Market Mobile searches are increasing at fast pace but advertising to an audience on the move is different from the same audience at their desktop.

By Brett Relander Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Mobile searches have increased by 400 percent over the last three years. If you are not advertising on mobile, you are missing out on potential customers.

Google Adwords remains the biggest search advertising platform. At a conceptual level, a mobile AdWords campaign requires attention to planning, execution and analytics in the same degree as a regular Adwords campaign but certain aspects are unique to the mobile landscape. Advertisers need to keep these in mind.

Related: 3 Things You Probably Don't Know About Google Adwords

Begin by studying the various mobile advertising formats offered by Google and their benefits. Google has put up several useful articles that outline how to best use a Google AdWords mobile campaign to fulfill objectives such as building a brand, increasing mobile app downloads and driving conversions to generate sales.

Mobile search is more intent-driven than corresponding desktop use. A mobile user who is on the move has different needs that require quick resolution. Advertisers need to keep this in mind when creating ad copy as well as landing pages. You should ideally drive mobile traffic to a mobile-specific landing page that enables quick scanning of information and has fewer fields to fill.

Google AdWords allows advertisers to geo-target their ads and place bids. Similarly, it offers tools to track conversions such as mobile calls, in-store purchases, app downloads and purchases completed using another device. You need to have a clear idea of what your top performance metrics are and focus on improving those. For example, a games app developer can designate app downloads as a conversion metric without worrying too much about targeting locations. On the other hand, a restaurant needs to show up on the sponsored results when a mobile user searches for a restaurant in the area.

Related: 3 Alternatives to Using Google Adwords

Data suggests that an AdWords campaign designed specifically for a mobile audience can generate a CTR of up to 11 percent. But it is worth noting that Google now does not support device-specific targeting of PPC ads. You can still use the feature "bid modifiers" that allows you to direct your spending toward mobile placement. The key here is to optimize by conversion tracking, weeding out non-performing keywords and formulating a holistic plan around the keywords that drive conversions.

Avoid using the same keywords that you would for a desktop campaign. Mobile users avoid lengthy keywords. Shorter keywords are the norm here. This is also important because mobile text ads from Google have a 36-character limit.

An important factor to consider when determining a budget for mobile ads is user behavior. To begin with, desktop user behavior can serve as a measure for adjusting bids for mobile AdWords keywords.

At the heart of your mobile AdWords campaign lies your understanding of what a mobile audience wants. It could be directions, store hours, availability or an online purchase. Your website should enable fulfillment of the search objective quickly and easily with as few clicks as possible. Google has made it clear that it prefers responsive websites to mobile-specific versions of desktop websites. That's just as well, as it frees advertisers from worrying about duplicate content.

Finally, consider complementing your Google campaign with a Bing ads project. It offers the benefit of device-specific ad placement and allows you additional testing and metrics to gather.

Related Book: Ultimate Guide to Google AdWords

Related: Common Google AdWords Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Brett Relander

Managing Director at X1 Sports Nutrition

Brett Relander is founder and managing director of X1 Sports Nutrition (http://X1Fuel.com). He has a degree in exercise science, is certified as a Master Fitness Specialist and in the biomechanics of resistance training, and is an advocate of all-natural nutrition and advanced performance training.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Growing a Business

If Email Is Your Main Strategy, You're Missing the Easiest Way to Build Authority

Most marketing emails don't get read, but businesses are still treating email as their primary relationship-building tool. It's time for a new approach.

Starting a Business

This Is What the CEO of Kickstarter Wishes Aspiring BIZ Experiencess Knew

Everette Taylor founded his first company at 19 — this is his best advice for people who want to start a business.

Business News

Here's How Meta's AI Superintelligence Effort Is Different From 'Others in the Industry,' According to Mark Zuckerberg's New Blog Post

In a letter published on Wednesday, the Meta CEO said that the company's goal is to bring personal superintelligence to everyone.

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Science & Technology

How to Future-Proof Your Career in Today's AI-Powered World

Think your job is AI-proof? Only if you've got skills a machine can't fake, like creativity, ethics and real human judgment.