Newsletter Subject

My 2 cents about CTR in Video Campaigns...(Dedicated to Google Ads Apprentices, but it won’t hurt the Old Foxes either)

From

vidtao.com

Email Address

vidtao@mail.vidtao.com

Sent On

Thu, Apr 11, 2024 12:23 PM

Email Preheader Text

CTR aka Clickthrough rate is a metric that tells us how well our ad intrigues the selected audience.

CTR aka Clickthrough rate is a metric that tells us how well our ad intrigues the selected audience. Let us see how things are going in the real video campaign.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 VidTao YouTube Ad Newsletter My 2 cents about CTR in Video Campaigns…(Dedicated to Google Ads Apprentices, but it won’t hurt the Old Foxes either) Not so long ago, I decided to partially move away from the wonderful world of physics and apply my math and statistics knowledge to no less incredible marketing area. But, a small problem bothered me from the beginning, I had no idea what digital marketing is. So, I was bombarded with all now-known abbreviations, CPM, CVR, ER, VR, RPL, CPL, CPA, CTR, ROI, ROAS… I felt like my head was going to explode. And just when I thought I had it all figured out, a new metric popped up from the deepest abyss of marketing hell, the abbreviation of which I have to add to the arsenal of the marketing stuff. I will never forget when my current colleague Dejan opened Google Ads in front of me and started to ‘explain’ to me what is important. The only thing I remember is, uhm…, nothing 🙂 Sorry, Dejan, I’m just kidding 🙂 But, the truth is that I heard a bunch of new expressions without meaning to me, so, my logical brain had to translate these things into a language I understand. As CTR was the most frequently mentioned metric, at the beginning I paid the most attention to that. So, let us roll. As we all know, CTR aka Clickthrough rate is a metric that tells us how well our ad intrigues the selected audience, the ratio of clicks our ad receives divided by the impressions (ad shows) we got, multiplied by 100% to be expressed as a percentage. Thus, a CTR of 1.40% means that 0.014 of our impressions became clicks, if we had 1,000 impressions, the number of clicks we got is 0.014 * 1,000 = 14 Of course, if you are reading this article, it’s very probable that you already know this. And you surely want to see CTR be as high as possible. And it sounds logical if I get 1,000 impressions I should be happier if my CTR is 3% than in the case when my CTR is 2%, ‘cause I’ll receive 30 instead of 20 clicks for the same number of ad shows! Mathematically speaking, ideal and constant CTR would be a slope k of the linear function y=kx, where x is the number of impressions, and y is the number of clicks. In the English language, it would be the rate of the increase in the number of clicks with respect to the number of impressions, if the clicks increase linearly with impressions. Let us draw our example above: If my goal is to have 20 clicks today, I’ll achieve it faster if my slope (CTR) is 0.03 (3%) or when it is 0.02 (2%). In the first case, I’ll need 20/0.03=667 impressions, in comparison with 20/0.02=1000 impressions. If you think about this, higher CTR really may mean better performance! But… There is always a ‘but’… Let us see how things are going in the real (for example) video campaign. The data we have is given in the following table: As we can see, we can’t expect a totally stable CTR, and linear increase in clicks, but the fluctuations are not too high to be worried about too much. Daily fluctuations of CTR are something normal, even if the conditions of ad showing are constant, don’t forget that we work with real people, with their daily habits, mood changes, obligations, etc… We can summarize eight days and say that our total CTR is equal to the sum of clicks divides by the sum of impressions, which would give CTR of 1.31%. Mathematically, it means that we would receive the same number of clicks due to the given number of impressions if CTR were 1.31% every day of these eight days. In cases like this one, it’s helpful to draw a scatterplot graph to visually represent the fluctuations in daily CTR: The main conclusion is that dots that represent pairs (impressions, clicks) almost lie on the trendline with a slope which is some kind of average CTR for eight days (not really average, but explaining that is totally another story). Dots above the line are the ones with the highest CTR, and dots below the line are the ones with a lower CTR than the ‘average’ value. Thus, daily fluctuations are not too high, and if you are ‘obsessed’ with CTR as a performance metric, you can sleep peacefully. The campaign goes on for another eight days, and we have results: At first sight, It seems like a catastrophe! CTR dropped significantly and our first instinct is to panic! The scatterplot seems a bit different now: Every sense of order disappeared, it’s not likely to draw any line of trend through these dots! Obviously, something changed and caused a significant drop in daily CTR values (only 0.32% in total). But, we haven’t answered yet: Is it a threat to our campaign’s performance? This is where we come to the most important part of this article: Looking at CTR without the other metrics is completely meaningless. To be honest, the most important metric to us is SPEND, denoted as Cost in Google Ads, and every time we speak about impressions, interactions, views, clicks, or anything else, it’s necessary to include Cost somehow. When CTR is the topic, we actually speak about Impressions and Clicks, and if we want to include Cost, we can do it through the easily derived formula, which says: CPM = CTR CPC 1,000 For the novices between the readers, CPM aka Cost per Mille is the amount you have to pay to get 1,000 impressions, while CPC aka Cost per Click is the amount you have to pay for one click! Mathematics is an exact science, the formula above clearly says the relationships between Cost, Impressions, and Clicks have to be adjusted so that they satisfy the formula. Hence, every time we see such a drop in CTR, it’s very probable that we will notice a significant CPM drop too (unless CPC increases exactly by the same factor CTR decreased). On the other hand, a significant drop in CPM means that we got cheaper impressions (on average!), thus, we can buy more with the same amount of money. If those impressions are the ones of ‘less quality’, their chances to become clicks are reduced, so, we notice CPM and CTR drops followed by each other. Let us see what the tabular overview looks like: One look is enough, it’s not some natural law or rule that must be obeyed, but the general tendency is clear. It’s even more clear if we visualize the data: According to the derived formula, CPC can be expressed as 0.001 multiplied by the ratio of CPM and CTR. The plot tells us more, CPC is relatively stable, despite extreme changes in CPM and CTR, and its range is relatively narrow (min:$3.09, max:$6.53), especially in comparison with the CPM range (min:$8.07, max:$93.83). Thus, there is no reason to think that your campaign is underperforming in clicks when you see an extreme CTR drop. On the contrary, maybe you’ve got more clicks for the same money than when your CTR has high values since it’s not impossible to have a lower CPC with a CTR drop at the same time. Let us use, for example, data for Day 5 (CTR is 1.37%) and Day 9 (CTR is 0.35%). On Day 5, you needed 1/0.0137=73 impressions to get one click, and on Day 9 you needed 286 impressions to get one click. But, if your Cost for both days was around $1,000 per day, you would achieve 1,000/5.72=175 clicks on Day 5 compared to 1,000/3.37=297 clicks on Day 9. A similar analysis is applicable to that, and maybe it’s more important because in video campaigns we must pay more attention to views than to clicks, since the view which leads to conversion without clicks counts as a score for us, don’t forget! But, what are the reasons for such drops in CPM and CTR, while Campaign settings remain unchanged? Audience segments are the same, you didn’t change geo settings or device settings, so why did it happen? The answer, as always, can’t be unique. But one of the possible reasons is described in the following subtitle: CAMPAIGNS → CONTENT → WHERE ADS SHOWED We, video advertisers, must be aware of one thing - Google charges us for impressions! You will be charged for views ONLY if you choose CPV bidding, but it’s not recommended to choose if your goal is to drive conversions. Thus, the placements of your ad will be the one of factors that determine the amount you must pay each time your ad is shown. Of course, you’ll know only about average values. Let’s see if there is anything that led to CPM and CTR drops. I didn’t say it before, ROAS for both of the eight-day periods analyzed in this article is IDENTICAL! Hence, nothing changed in the metric which is the most important to me, but I need to understand what happened with my traffic, maybe to try to improve the performance, or, at least, to prove that integral CTR doesn’t mean anything. Let me begin! For those who don’t know about this yet, ‘[youtube.com](’ represents filtered ‘display’ performance, or better said, in-feed impressions of your ad. Youtube channels are our in-stream impressions, while we don’t know anything about ‘Other’. Anyway, those are the placements of our ad without any success (mostly). As you can see, ‘Other’ has a catastrophically bad performance, with almost no (or literally NONE) views or clicks, and Google doesn’t provide the data to us, so don’t fantasize that you can exclude ‘Other’ in the future. But don’t forget, you pay for ‘Other’, the same as you must pay for the other two segments. And, as I said, we don’t know what ‘Other’ really is. I hope you notice what’s the problem here. You look at the CTR on an account level, or on the campaign level, and what information you’ve got? Almost nothing useful! You don’t know if your performance really dropped, or simply, most of your traffic just went to in-feed or, in the worst-case scenario, the percentage of impressions in the ‘Other’ segment increased. At least, you must select and clean your data by placement, and see what’s happening, then, you can estimate if your CTR really went down because your ad wasn’t interesting to the potential leads, or if the placement change was in the game. Anyway, let us summarize: CTR means nothing without other metrics, if it is your main performance indicator, don’t forget to check the others among them. If you are using smart bidding, google is searching for the best solutions due to your bid, CTR is just an incidental metric that you have insight into. It CAN, but not necessarily, be a good performance indicator, but at the end of the day, you’ll pay for impressions. Hence, go to CAMPAIGNS → CONTENT → WHERE ADS SHOWED, and see what you have to pay. Also, compare your daily CPM, CTR, and CPC combinations to quickly get an impression of your performance, here is a tabular review of possible CTR/CPM/CPC relations (a and b are some random real numbers): So here it is. My two cents, of course, but I truly hope it will help you to analyze some of your performance metrics slightly better, the more data you have, the more noise and wrong conclusions are lurking in the shadows. Until the next time, high CTR to everyone! Dobroslav Slijepcevic - Sponsored - VidTao is brought to you by Inceptly High-Performance YouTube Advertising Agency Inceptly builds YouTube ad creatives & manages over 5M USD/month in YouTube ad spend for companies like ClickFunnels, Descript, MindValley, Advanced Bionaturals, Organifi, and many more. [Find out more at inceptly.com]( Are you spending over $1k/day on ads and looking to scale your business with YouTube ads? Schedule your free YouTube ad brainstorming call here: [👉]([inceptly.com/call]( What are your YouTube ad questions? Hit reply to this email and let us know, and we’ll make sure to cover your question in an upcoming newsletter. Have a great week! The VidTao Team [VidTao.com]( Get this free newsletter & free access to [VidTao.com](: The Free Tool to Discover & Track Your Market's Best Youtube Ads [VidTao.com]( is brought to you by [Inceptly.com]( - High Performance YouTube Ad Creative & Media Buying Agency Managing $5M/month+ in YouTube Ad Traffic Are you are spending over $1k/day on paid traffic and want to scale with YouTube ads? Schedule your free YouTube ad brainstorming call here: [inceptly.com/call]( [tw]( [ig]( [yt]( [in]( Update your email preferences or unsubscribe [here]( © 2024 VidTao 2407 Ward Road Sacramento, California 95827, United States

EDM Keywords (215)

would worried work went well want visualize views view us update unsubscribe unique understand underperforming try truth trendline trend translate traffic total topic time threat thought think things thing sum started spending speak slope simply shown shadows see searching score scale say satisfy said rule roas results respect remember relationships reduced recommended reasons reason really real reading ratio rate range question provide prove problem probable possible placements placement physics performance percentage pay panic paid ones one obsessed obeyed number novices notice noise need necessary necessarily must money metrics metric means maybe math market many lurking looking look line likely led least leads language kx know kind kidding interesting insight information increase improve impressions impression impossible important idea hurt hope honest high helpful help heard head happier happening happened happen hand got google going goal given future front formula forget fluctuations find figured feed faster fantasize factors expressed explode explaining explain expect exclude example even estimate equal enough end email drops drop draw dots determine described decided days day data ctr cpm cpc cover course cost constant conditions comparison come clicks clear clean choose check charged chances caused case campaign buy business bunch brought bombarded beginning begin aware attention article arsenal apply applicable anyway anything answer analyze amount always almost ads adjusted add ad achieve abbreviation 100

Marketing emails from vidtao.com

View More
Sent On

03/05/2024

Sent On

03/05/2024

Sent On

02/05/2024

Sent On

01/05/2024

Sent On

01/05/2024

Sent On

29/04/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.