The Muse (YC W12) Is Hiring a Lead Site Reliability Engineer

Article URL: https://www.themuse.com/jobs/themuse/senior-site-reliability-engineer

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28155122

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Census Bureau to release redistricting data, kicking off process that favors Republicans

The Census Bureau on Thursday is releasing new redistricting data, kicking off a process that favors Republicans

Texas Dem Gene Wu temporarily avoids arrest after fleeing to DC, says 'hell no' to returning

Texas Democrat Gene Wu, one of 52 state lawmakers facing arrest for fleeing the state, temporarily avoided apprehension after challenging the legality of his arrest warrant in court. 

The Ultimate Guide to Google Ads Campaign Management

We’ve all seen Google Ads. Whether you call it Google AdSense, AdWords, or Ads, they’re the ads displayed in the search results on Google. Learning how to set them up is important, but learning how to manage and maintain their performance is a whole different ball game. 

In this guide, we’re pulling back the curtain and looking at what steps you’ll want to take after you have the ad set up. Whether you have a high or low-performing Google ad, you’ll want to do these things regularly.

What Is Google Ad Campaign Management?

Setting up your Google Ads campaign is an important and essential piece of the puzzle, but the work doesn’t stop there. There’s no such thing as “passive income” when running and managing Google Ads campaigns.

Those who have successful ad campaigns spend a lot of time on the backend evaluating the performance of their ads, looking at different keywords, switching up the designs and copy, and testing everything against key metrics to see how they perform. These are the necessary steps toward building a campaign that can pay you for months and even years if you hit the nail on the head.

It’s worth the work in the long run, but you need to get your Google ads campaign management right if you expect to have those types of results.

Good thing Google provides us with some simple ways to track everything in the backend. First, you can set email notifications to alert you whenever something happens with your campaign.

For example, if you want to receive alerts for possible policy violations you can do this from your Google ads account under setup and preferences. Determine what you would like to trigger an email notification. Some people only want to receive an email for critical issues while others want to stay up to date on every little detail.

Step 1: Check Current Google Ad Performance

Before you can determine what you need to change, you need to first look at your ad performance and see what’s working and what isn’t. There are five key metrics to pay attention to:

  • impressions
  • clicks
  • cost
  • conversions
  • click-through rate (CTR)

Let’s break each of these down a little more.

Impressions

An impression occurs each time your ad is displayed and seen by someone on Google. The best way to increase your impressions is to increase your campaign budget. This can push you higher on Google, thus giving you more visibility. Budget plays a role here but ad quality and relevance are ultimately the most important factors.

If Google decides that your ad isn’t relevant to the audience you’re targeting, Google won’t display your ad high enough and you will end up with low impressions and poor performance.

Clicks

This is the bread and butter of a Google ads specialist. Everyone wants more clicks. A click happens when someone sees your ad and then clicks it. Ideally, you want as many clicks as possible but if your ad isn’t getting clicks, you may want to rethink your copy or ad targeting.

Cost

Cost is the amount of money you spend, simple right? What’s more important is your “cost per click,” or CPC.

The way talented advertisers are able to scale ads is by determining how much money they need to put in to get a click or conversion. If you can determine that spending $2 on Google ads results in you making $5 for every click, it’s simple math at that point. Spend $4 and you’ll make $10, and keep building it up from there.

It’s not that simple, though. Your bid, quality score, and ad rank will impact how much you need to spend. Your bid is the maximum amount of money you’re willing to pay for a click. The quality score is a rating Google provides from 1-10 based on how relevant your ad, landing page, and keywords are. The ad rank is Google’s value to determine where they will place your ad in the SERPs.

Conversions

A conversion occurs when someone takes the action you want them to take; this happens off the search engine results page and on your landing page or website. For example, if you’re running an ad for an e-commerce store and you want people to see the ad, click it, and then buy a suit on your landing page, each time someone buys the suit, that would be a conversion.

Google provides ways for us to track this using conversion tracking as discussed in the video above.

Click-Through Rate

Your CTR is the best way for Google to measure the relevance of your ad. It also allows you to determine if the ad is resonating with the audience you’ve chosen. A high click-through rate means that a lot of people are seeing the ad, clicking it, and converting. That’s a high-performing ad.

If you get a lot of impressions or clicks, but little conversions, it could mean your ad copy is good but the product or service you’re selling doesn’t align with the ad. Your CTR is a percentage based on the number of clicks and impressions.

Click-through rate = number of clicks / number of impressions x 100

The standard in most industries is five percent but you can still have success with a lower click-through rate.

Step 2: Reevaluate Your Ad Targeting

With every type of digital marketing, targeting is an important factor. You want to understand the buyer intent of your audience and if you don’t have a solid buyer persona drawn up, you’ll want to start there.

What does your ideal customer want? What do they look like? Where do they live? How much money do they make? What are their interests? What upsets them? Think about all of these things when determining your ad targeting because you need to get inside their head if you can expect them to click on your ad and convert.

Here are some examples of the metrics you can use for Google ad targeting:

  • Demographics: targeting based on location, age, gender, and devices
  • Affinity: reaching your audience using search and display networks
  • In-market: showing ads to people with a history of searching for products just like yours
  • Custom intent: choosing keywords related to the people who have engaged with similar content
  • Remarketing: targeting people who have interacted with you in the past but might not have converted

Step 3: A/B Test Ad Copy and Design

Now let’s take a look at your ad copy and design. It’s broken down into a few different segments:

  • your offer
  • your headline
  • your description
  • the URL
  • zny extensions

If any of these factors are hurting the performance of your ad, test them up against something else. The most important thing to learn is you only want to change one thing at a time. That’s the only way to figure out if that was the culprit.

For example, if you find yourself getting a lot of impressions but you’re not converting well, you might want to change the headline because it’s not enticing people to click. If you find that you’re getting a lot of clicks but little conversions, maybe your offer isn’t relevant enough.

Dynamic ads are a great way to work around this because they pull content directly from your site to ensure that the headline and description are relevant to the offer. This takes some of the thinking out of it and it’s worth testing up against a custom ad.

Step 4: Dig Into Negative Keywords

No need to complicate this: Negative keywords are keywords that you don’t want to display your ad for. There are many reasons why someone would do this but one of the big ones is you’re letting Google make a lot of the decisions for you. In that case, you might want to use negative keywords for things such as brand names, competitors, or other keywords that you know won’t lead to a conversion.

To add negative keywords, you’ll go into the Google ads campaign manager, select keywords, Negatives, and add the keywords to the proper ad group.

Step 5: Optimize Your Landing Pages

Remember that a big part of Google ads campaign management actually happens off the SERPs. It happens on your landing pages as well. If you have an ad that is getting a lot of impressions and clicks but you’re still not converting, chances are there is something wrong with your landing page. You’ll want to fix this quickly before Google finds out and drops your ad lower due to low relevance.

Optimizing your landing page requires you to take a look at the overall offer, the headline, structure of the page, CTA, and placement of buttons and calls to action. The best way to identify the problem is to A/B test.

If you think that you don’t have enough CTA buttons on the landing page, create a duplicate page and add a few more to see what happens. Doing so will require you to get a high-quality landing page builder and optimization tool like Unbounce and Convert.com. Convert is a great tool with A/B testing and it allows you to really pinpoint certain steps to take to improve the performance of your landing page.

Step 6: Consider Switching to Automated Bidding

When you create a Google ad, you have two choices: automated or manual bidding. Each has its pros and cons.

Automated bidding allows Google to decide how much you’ll pay per click based on a few key metrics.

  • Increase site visits: If you’re trying to increase visitors to your site, you can choose to optimize your ad based on clicks.
  • Increase visibility: Target impression share sets bids with the goal of showing your ad as high on the page as possible. You may end up getting less clicks this way, but you can quickly spread awareness.
  • More conversions: If you want more conversions on-site, you’ll optimize for your target cost-per-action. You may pay more per conversion but you’ll convert more visitors.
  • Target ROAS: If you want to meet a certain return on ad spend, you can allow Google to pay what it thinks you should based on how you value each conversion.

Keep in mind that choosing manual bidding requires you to figure this all out yourself. You won’t have the luxury of picking a “blanket” goal and having Google optimize your ad spend for you. However, manual bidding does give you more control.

Step 7: Avoid Common Google Ad Mistakes

There are a few critical Google ads mistakes that can kill your ad from the get-go. Here are a few examples:

Using the Wrong Keyword Match

We’ve all heard of keyword match: broad match, phrase match, and exact match, right? Choosing the wrong one will make it more difficult for your ad to reach your audience.

For example, broad match will display your ad when someone searches for a phrase similar to your target phrase. This can work well in the beginning when you’re experimenting and gathering data. If you don’t know a lot about your audience, you wouldn’t want to use “exact match” because you don’t have the data to back it up.

Bad Ad Copy

Your ad copy is the key to the mint essentially. If you know how to write great copy, you shouldn’t have a problem converting as long as your audience, ad match, and everything else is in place. Be sure you squeeze in every character Google allows. The goal is to make your ad stand out.

Not Having Clear Margins

Keep in mind no matter what you do, Google isn’t looking out for your finances. You’re the only one who knows what you can spend to break even or profit from your ads. If you don’t have this figured out and established ahead of time, you can end up spending way too much on ads and having to play catch up later on.

Frequently Asked Questions About Google Ads Campaign Management

What is a campaign in Google ads?

A campaign is simply a set of ad groups that share a budget, targeting, and other settings. You can have multiple ads within the campaign you’re testing.

How do I run a successful Google Ads campaign?

The best way to run a successful campaign is to try and try again. Don’t be afraid to test a lot of different factors, too. You never know what will work.

What is a good daily budget for Google Ads?

If you’re just starting out, you shouldn’t spend more than $10-$20 per day until you see how everything is performing. In the beginning, the goal is to gather data so you can optimize your ads. If you’re just starting out, you shouldn’t spend more than $10-$20 dollars per day until you see how everything is performing. Don’t expect to hit a home run right away.

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Google Ads Campaign Management Conclusion

Remember setting up your ad and hitting start is only one piece of the equation. The steps you take after that will really determine the success of your ad. You can start out with a low-performing ad but take steps to optimize, test, and change the ad, and end up with a highly successful campaign, resulting in a lot of money in your pocket. If you need help getting your ad off the ground, we can help.

What do you think is the No. 1 thing that kills a successful ad campaign?

22 Marketing Techniques That Cost You Time, Not Money

23 Marketing Techniques That Cost You Time, Not Money

Here is a common situation many startups face. They have no money, but they have to do marketing.

What can they do?

Instead of focusing on costly marketing methods, such startups must focus on low-budget marketing hacks.

The beauty of growth hacking is that it engages alternate methods of growth, methods which are sometimes lower cost.

Where marketing and engineering meet, growth hacking happens.

Obviously, growth hacking isn’t free. Strictly speaking, none of the techniques in this article are “free.” Anytime you involve people, employees of the company, there will be payroll and associated costs.

But here’s why these (mostly) free marketing techniques are so powerful. They don’t require a huge marketing budget. All you need is some time, some savvy, and the kind of focused and driven perspective that smart marketing requires.

1. Get Links from Your Service Providers

To rank well, a website needs high-quality backlinks. Where do you get these backlinks? Obviously, buying links is not advised. What should you do?

If you’ve built partnerships with service providers or business partners, you have an instant source of untapped link potential. Reach out to these service providers and ask them to link to your website.

You gain a few nice links, and all it cost you was a few minutes of emailing.

2. Search for Unlinked Mentions

Another great way to get links and boost your site authority is to look for unlinked mentions of your brand or company name.

If you find such mentions in online publications or websites, email the site editor and ask them to provide a link. You might discover plenty of brand mentions all over the web.

A quick search and a few emails later — presto. Free backlinks. The good kind.

3. Host a Webinar

Free webinars introduce your brand and product to a wider audience. The more appealing the topic, the better you’ll attract interest.

Webinars take time. You’ve got to brainstorm topics, plan the webinar, and spread the word. The benefits, however, are top-notch.

4. Cross-Promote

One explosive method of marketing that some companies use is cross-promotion. Cross-promotion allows you to partner with related businesses who can market your services, in exchange for marketing their services.

For example, if you are providing consulting services for online business owners, you may recommend that they use a certain web designer to create their website. The web designer is your cross-promoting partner. This web designer works with business clients, and she points these clients your way for consulting services.

It’s a win-win, and apart from a signed document and an easy conversation, it doesn’t require much work at all.

5. Be a Blog Commenter

The idea of marketing is to make your brand presence as well known as possible. One way of doing so is by commenting on blogs. Here’s how this works:

  • Identify the top 5 blogs in your niche.
  • Read and comment on the blogs on a regular basis.
  • As people see your name and associated brand, they become familiar with it and perhaps even curious about it.

With every comment, you’re establishing a persistent brand presence. Just make sure you’re not making dumb comments. Customers’ perception of your brand is shaped by the quality of your comments.

6. Help a Reporter Out

Occasionally, you’re going to come across some newsworthy information in your niche or business. Sign up for Help a Reporter Out (HARO). It’s a free service that reporters often use to find stories. If you have a story you can help a reporter out, and gain publicity.

7. Network in Person

Don’t neglect the opportunity to market in person. You’ll meet great people in person whom you may never come across online.

Every person you meet is another marketing possibility. Obviously, you don’t want to go around shoving your business into people’s faces, but as the issue of work comes up in conversation, tell them about it.

The whole idea of networking is basically marketing. You get to introduce other people to your business live and in person.

8. Run a Contest

As much as they’ve been sullied and scammed, online contests are still a great way to get low-cost marketing publicity. Giving away the cliche iPad, cash prizes, or other merchandise is an easy way to gain some viral potential and improve your brand’s image.

9. Build a Referral Program

The best forms of marketing are those that you can set up, turn on, and grow — organically, automatically, and without too much effort. A referral program or affiliate program may not work for every business, but it’s worth a try.

Creating an affiliate program essentially turns your customers into a de facto marketing department. You don’t spend marketing money unless they first make a sale on your behalf.

10. Tweet Up a Storm In Your Niche

Twitter is a killer marketing platform. With its instant reach and massive output, Twitter can produce high levels of referral traffic, plenty of brand exposure, and nonstop social buzz.

What I suggest is following at least ten influencers in your niche, following their followers, retweeting their tweets, and mentioning them in comments. As you associate with their platform, you’ll begin to build your own platform.

11. Upsell Your Existing Customers

Too often, we view “marketing” solely as a method of gaining new customers. In reality, some of the best marketing happens with existing customers.

Marketing back at your own customers is relatively easy and low-cost. The benefits are extraordinary.

12. Get Cozy With Niche Influencers

Within every industry are a group of power players. They control the conversation, shape the contours of the market, and reach a huge audience.

Make these people your friends. You don’t need to be schmoozy about it. You can be direct. Providing them with a product or partnering with them on a project are simple and mutually helpful ways to grow your brand and ride their wave of influence.

13. Claim a Hashtag

Hashtags are the billboards of the Internet. Since hashtags are now available on every major social platform, you can create a hashtag for your business and use it everywhere you post.

A hashtag is a searchable and interactive extension of your brand and has the potential to spread virally.

14. Get More Email Addresses

Growing your email list is one of the most enduring and effective methods of marketing. I suggest using Hello Bar as a simple and cost-effective way of harvesting more addresses.

15. Get More User-Generated Content

Everyone knows that content marketing is effective for inbound marketing. If you’re not careful, however, content marketing can be expensive. How can you gain more content without blowing your entire marketing budget?

The answer is user-generated content. Motivate your existing fans and customers to tell their own story and write content, and you’ll instantly open the floodgates to tons of fresh and engaging content that your audience will love. Your fans will be creating and sharing content for you.

16. Talk to Your Fans

Customers and fans love to be loved. The way you show that love is by retweeting, favoriting tweets, liking the comments, and sharing their status. Don’t simply expect that your social media presence is going to work for you. You have to work for it, by talking to your fans.

They will return the favor and engage at a deeper level.

17. Produce High-Quality Press Releases

Press releases have passed their heyday as an SEO tool, but they still hold sway in marketing. If you use a source like PRWeb, you’ll be out a few hundred bucks anytime you pop out a press release.

A source like PRLog.org, however, is free of charge. The amount of syndication you get may not be as high quality, but it’s something. And, hey, it’s something for nothing.

Just be sure to write very high-quality releases, and nofollow any links back to your website.

18. Hack Craigslist

Craigslist is one of the most popular websites in the world. Airbnb and its high money valuation used Craigslist to skyrocket its growth. You can use Craigslist, too. Try using Craigslist’s geographic focus to target specific areas and markets.

Make sure that you’re complying with the site’s terms of service. Use Craigslist in the way that it was intended. Violators will be banned from the site.

19. Blog

I can’t create a list of marketing techniques without mentioning blogging. A business blog is an indispensable strategy for online marketing. Use it, work at it, and make it work for you.

If you’re frustrated with the current condition of your business blog, read these 35 tips that will make it better. If you’re struggling with traffic, read this post.

20. Guest Blog

If blogging is awesome, then guest blogging is doubly awesome. When you post an article on another blog, you are instantly gaining that blog’s audience. The cost of guest blogging is free, less the time you spend. Create a killer article, appeal to the blog’s audience, and you may be invited back to contribute more.

I’ve used guest blogging with incredible success. My 300-and-counting guest blogs are still paying me back in terms of referral traffic, leads, and customers.

21. Create a LinkedIn Group

LinkedIn is free, and yet it gives you incredible marketing opportunities. Many professionals use LinkedIn as a static social media tool — a place to put up their resume, and not much else.

LinkedIn is so much more than an online resume. I’ve used LinkedIn to publish content, connect with powerful people, and build a marketing group with thousands of members.

All of this cost me zero dollars and zero cents, but the marketing upside has been incredible.

22. Give Free Help to Others

If you make marketing all about you and your business, you’re going to be frustrated and unfulfilled. Try giving to others, free of charge.

Obviously, you’re not a charity; you’re a business. But why not give away a product, an hour of your time, or a membership for a customer who can’t afford your services?

Some of the best business opportunities I’ve had were consulting gigs with customers who couldn’t pay. These opportunities have been beneficial in ways that I couldn’t have predicted.

Even today, I give away virtually all of my content without charge. Doing so is fulfilling for me personally, and it provides an opportunity for improved marketing.

Free Marketing Techniques Frequently Asked Questions

What are some free marketing ideas?

Some ideas for free marketing include guest blogging, link building, creating social media groups built around your industry or brand, commenting on other blogs, and creating your own blog.

Is it possible to do marketing for free?

Yes, there are plenty of marketing techniques that are completely free.

Does guerilla marketing work?

When done correctly, guerilla marketing can help increase brand awareness.

Is it free to market on social media?

There are plenty of ways to market for free on social media. You can create groups, engage with influencers, use popular hashtags, create content with CTAs to your website, and more.

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Free Marketing Techniques Conclusion

Marketing doesn’t have to break your bank, blow your budget, or cost you thousands of dollars. Like I mentioned at the beginning of this article, marketing can require nothing more than the investment of time.

Chances are, you can increase your marketing presence today by implementing one of these methods. Pick one and run with it.

What is your favorite no-cost marketing technique?

The Top 3 Secured Business Credit Cards

Got Bad Personal Credit or No Business Credit? Secured Business Credit Cards Could be the Answer You’re Looking For

But be aware of what secured business credit cards really are – and what’s a much better alternative to kickstarting a business credit profile.

What Are Secured Business Credit Cards?

Secured business credit cards are for businesses with no credit or a less than perfect credit history. An initial security deposit is necessary. This deposit establishes your card’s credit limit. Often a minimum deposit of $500 is necessary. Once you start making purchases you get invoices like a regular credit card. But this begs the question: what does it mean when a business credit card is unsecured?

Unsecured Business Credit Cards

An unsecured business credit card works like an unsecured consumer credit card. Credit limits are calculated from many factors, this depends on the card issuer. Factors in deciding credit limit can include personal credit and/or your company’s business credit scores. They can also include time in business, annual revenues, etc. These credit cards can give your business the opportunity to earn incentives and rewards.

What Aren’t Secured Business Credit Cards?

There are a number of types of business credit cards. Some aren’t too different from secured cards. Or they may have some of the same results, where you can get credit when you normally couldn’t, and you may even have the opportunity to build business credit with such cards.

Prepaid Business Credit Cards

A prepaid business card works as a convenient alternative to carrying cash. In this way, it works a lot like a secured credit card. You add funds to your account. And then whatever amount you add is available for purchases. Sounds like a debit card, right?

Business Debit Cards

But, a business debit card is a card that works a lot like a business checkbook. The limit is the amount of funds you currently have in your business checking account. Every time you use it to make a purchase, the amount you charge comes from your account as a deduction

The Difference Between Prepaid and Debit Cards

Prepaid cards and debit cards are both widely accepted at merchants worldwide, but one is preloaded and the other is not. Debit cards are linked to a checking account, while prepaid cards aren’t and instead require you to load money onto the card

Prepaid Cards Versus Secured Credit Cards for Business

Not exactly. The salient difference between secured credit cards and prepaid debit cards has to do with whose money you’re spending when you use the card. With secured credit cards, you spend money borrowed from the credit card company. You pay that money back after the purchase. With prepaid debit cards, you’re spending your (or your business’s) own money. You load money onto the card before the purchase.

Because it involves borrowing and repaying money, a secured credit card can help someone (or a business) build their credit. It can also harm their credit if they don’t use the card responsibly. Prepaid debit cards have no effect on a credit score.

Business Charge Cards

Another, similar-sounding card is a business charge card. A business charge card has all the convenience of a credit card. But it’s without the high price of interest. When using this card you must pay your balance in full each billing cycle.

Since you can’t carry a balance, a charge card doesn’t have a periodic or annual percentage rate. Hence there is no rate for a charge card issuer to disclose. Let’s look at some secured cards for business.

FNBO Business Edition® Secured Visa® Card

With this card, you can, “take control of your credit history and help rebuild your credit”. Request your own credit limit between $2,000 and $100,000, in multiples of $50, when you apply. Your credit limit is subject to credit approval and a security deposit.

Your security deposit is 110% of the amount of your credit limit. And you will earn interest on your security deposit. But there is a $39 annual fee. Pay a variable 20.24% APR on purchases and balance transfers based on the Prime Rate.

Get it here: https://www.fnbo.com/small-business/credit-cards/ 

Union Bank® Business Secured Visa® Credit Card

With this card, you can, “start building credit for your business”. Get up to a $25,000 secured credit limit. You will pay a 13.99% variable APR on purchases and balance transfers. And pay a 5% balance transfer fee on each transfer, with a minimum of $10.

There is a 25.25% APR for cash advances. And there is a $30 annual fee. Also, Union Bank will demand immediate payment in full, if you use this business credit card for personal, family, or household purposes.

Get it here: https://www.unionbank.com/business/visa-credit-cards-all 

Score the best business credit cards for your business. Check out our professional research.

Wells Fargo Business Secured Credit Card

A Wells Fargo business checking or savings account must be open before applying. Upon approval, your funds will be transferred from the deposit account to fund the credit line

Get a $500 to $25,000 credit line, based on the amount of funds deposited by you as security in a collateral account. Pay no annual fee, and no foreign transaction fee.

You can get up to 10 employee cards. Pay prime + 11.90% APR on purchases. And pay prime + 20.74% APR on cash advances. Cash advance or balance transfer fees may apply.

Perks

Choose between Cash Back or Rewards Points. There is no annual rewards program fee. And there are no required spending categories or caps. Earn 1.5% cash back for every $1 spent on net purchases. You can receive cash back automatically as a credit to your account or to your eligible checking or savings account each quarter.

If you choose rewards points, you will earn 1 point for every $1 spent on net purchases. Get 1,000 bonus points when your company spends $1,000 or more in any monthly billing period. Redeem points for gift cards, merchandise, airline tickets and more. Get a 10% points credit when you redeem points online. And you can earn extra bonus points or discounts from Earn More Mall® retailers.

Business Credit Building with the Wells Fargo Business Secured Credit Card

Wells Fargo reports your payment and usage behavior to the Small Business Financial Exchange. Payment and usage activity of the Wells Fargo Business Secured card is not reported to the consumer credit bureaus, therefore it will not help build or rebuild personal credit history. 

Wells Fargo will periodically review your account and recent credit history for an opportunity to upgrade to an unsecured business credit card. You may become eligible with responsible use over time. Being able to upgrade to an unsecured business credit card also depends on your FICO score, payment history and ratio of credit card usage to credit limit.

Get it here: https://www.wellsfargo.com/biz/business-credit/credit-cards/secured-card/ 

Score the best business credit cards for your business. Check out our professional research.

Choosing the Best Secured Business Credit Cards for Your Circumstances

Wells Fargo is the best when it comes to annual fees (it’s hard to beat $0). For the highest possible credit limit, the FNBO Business Edition® Secured Visa® Card comes out on top,

 with a $100,000 maximum.

For the best balance transfer rate, it looks like Union Bank® Business Secured Visa® Credit Card is the best. But keep in mind, they do charge a 5% balance transfer fee on each transfer,

 with a minimum of $10.

Building Business Credit is a Viable Alternative to Getting Secured Credit Cards for Business

New businesses can get credit from starter vendors, and often there’s no need to pay money to secure a card. Consider CEO Creative and Grainger Industrial Supply. Neither of them require a deposit to secure a card.

Supply Works

Let’s focus on another starter vendor: Supply Works. They are a part of Home Depot, and offer integrated facility maintenance supplies. But they will not accept virtual addresses. They will report to Experian. Terms are Net 30. You can apply online or over the phone. 

Qualifying for Supply Works

You will need:

  • An entity in good standing with Secretary of State
  • EIN number with IRS
  • Business address (matching everywhere)
  • D-U-N-S number
  • Business License (if applicable)
  • Business Bank account
  • Trade/Bank references

But at least there is no minimal time in business requirement.

Score the best business credit cards for your business. Check out our professional research.

Secured Business Credit Cards: Takeaways

For entrepreneurs just starting out, getting secured business credit cards may seem to be one of the only ways they feel they can get credit. But you can build business credit with starter vendors. Even if you start with lower limits, you often don’t have to secure those cards with a deposit. As a result, starter vendor credit is nearly always a superior alternative to getting secured business credit cards.

The post The Top 3 Secured Business Credit Cards appeared first on Credit Suite.

The Ultimate Guide to Google Ads Campaign Management

We’ve all seen Google Ads. Whether you call it Google AdSense, AdWords, or Ads, they’re the ads displayed in the search results on Google. Learning how to set them up is important, but learning how to manage and maintain their performance is a whole different ball game. 

In this guide, we’re pulling back the curtain and looking at what steps you’ll want to take after you have the ad set up. Whether you have a high or low-performing Google ad, you’ll want to do these things regularly.

What Is Google Ad Campaign Management?

Setting up your Google Ads campaign is an important and essential piece of the puzzle, but the work doesn’t stop there. There’s no such thing as “passive income” when running and managing Google Ads campaigns.

Those who have successful ad campaigns spend a lot of time on the backend evaluating the performance of their ads, looking at different keywords, switching up the designs and copy, and testing everything against key metrics to see how they perform. These are the necessary steps toward building a campaign that can pay you for months and even years if you hit the nail on the head.

It’s worth the work in the long run, but you need to get your Google ads campaign management right if you expect to have those types of results.

Good thing Google provides us with some simple ways to track everything in the backend. First, you can set email notifications to alert you whenever something happens with your campaign.

For example, if you want to receive alerts for possible policy violations you can do this from your Google ads account under setup and preferences. Determine what you would like to trigger an email notification. Some people only want to receive an email for critical issues while others want to stay up to date on every little detail.

Step 1: Check Current Google Ad Performance

Before you can determine what you need to change, you need to first look at your ad performance and see what’s working and what isn’t. There are five key metrics to pay attention to:

  • impressions
  • clicks
  • cost
  • conversions
  • click-through rate (CTR)

Let’s break each of these down a little more.

Impressions

An impression occurs each time your ad is displayed and seen by someone on Google. The best way to increase your impressions is to increase your campaign budget. This can push you higher on Google, thus giving you more visibility. Budget plays a role here but ad quality and relevance are ultimately the most important factors.

If Google decides that your ad isn’t relevant to the audience you’re targeting, Google won’t display your ad high enough and you will end up with low impressions and poor performance.

Clicks

This is the bread and butter of a Google ads specialist. Everyone wants more clicks. A click happens when someone sees your ad and then clicks it. Ideally, you want as many clicks as possible but if your ad isn’t getting clicks, you may want to rethink your copy or ad targeting.

Cost

Cost is the amount of money you spend, simple right? What’s more important is your “cost per click,” or CPC.

The way talented advertisers are able to scale ads is by determining how much money they need to put in to get a click or conversion. If you can determine that spending $2 on Google ads results in you making $5 for every click, it’s simple math at that point. Spend $4 and you’ll make $10, and keep building it up from there.

It’s not that simple, though. Your bid, quality score, and ad rank will impact how much you need to spend. Your bid is the maximum amount of money you’re willing to pay for a click. The quality score is a rating Google provides from 1-10 based on how relevant your ad, landing page, and keywords are. The ad rank is Google’s value to determine where they will place your ad in the SERPs.

Conversions

A conversion occurs when someone takes the action you want them to take; this happens off the search engine results page and on your landing page or website. For example, if you’re running an ad for an e-commerce store and you want people to see the ad, click it, and then buy a suit on your landing page, each time someone buys the suit, that would be a conversion.

Google provides ways for us to track this using conversion tracking as discussed in the video above.

Click-Through Rate

Your CTR is the best way for Google to measure the relevance of your ad. It also allows you to determine if the ad is resonating with the audience you’ve chosen. A high click-through rate means that a lot of people are seeing the ad, clicking it, and converting. That’s a high-performing ad.

If you get a lot of impressions or clicks, but little conversions, it could mean your ad copy is good but the product or service you’re selling doesn’t align with the ad. Your CTR is a percentage based on the number of clicks and impressions.

Click-through rate = number of clicks / number of impressions x 100

The standard in most industries is five percent but you can still have success with a lower click-through rate.

Step 2: Reevaluate Your Ad Targeting

With every type of digital marketing, targeting is an important factor. You want to understand the buyer intent of your audience and if you don’t have a solid buyer persona drawn up, you’ll want to start there.

What does your ideal customer want? What do they look like? Where do they live? How much money do they make? What are their interests? What upsets them? Think about all of these things when determining your ad targeting because you need to get inside their head if you can expect them to click on your ad and convert.

Here are some examples of the metrics you can use for Google ad targeting:

  • Demographics: targeting based on location, age, gender, and devices
  • Affinity: reaching your audience using search and display networks
  • In-market: showing ads to people with a history of searching for products just like yours
  • Custom intent: choosing keywords related to the people who have engaged with similar content
  • Remarketing: targeting people who have interacted with you in the past but might not have converted

Step 3: A/B Test Ad Copy and Design

Now let’s take a look at your ad copy and design. It’s broken down into a few different segments:

  • your offer
  • your headline
  • your description
  • the URL
  • zny extensions

If any of these factors are hurting the performance of your ad, test them up against something else. The most important thing to learn is you only want to change one thing at a time. That’s the only way to figure out if that was the culprit.

For example, if you find yourself getting a lot of impressions but you’re not converting well, you might want to change the headline because it’s not enticing people to click. If you find that you’re getting a lot of clicks but little conversions, maybe your offer isn’t relevant enough.

Dynamic ads are a great way to work around this because they pull content directly from your site to ensure that the headline and description are relevant to the offer. This takes some of the thinking out of it and it’s worth testing up against a custom ad.

Step 4: Dig Into Negative Keywords

No need to complicate this: Negative keywords are keywords that you don’t want to display your ad for. There are many reasons why someone would do this but one of the big ones is you’re letting Google make a lot of the decisions for you. In that case, you might want to use negative keywords for things such as brand names, competitors, or other keywords that you know won’t lead to a conversion.

To add negative keywords, you’ll go into the Google ads campaign manager, select keywords, Negatives, and add the keywords to the proper ad group.

Step 5: Optimize Your Landing Pages

Remember that a big part of Google ads campaign management actually happens off the SERPs. It happens on your landing pages as well. If you have an ad that is getting a lot of impressions and clicks but you’re still not converting, chances are there is something wrong with your landing page. You’ll want to fix this quickly before Google finds out and drops your ad lower due to low relevance.

Optimizing your landing page requires you to take a look at the overall offer, the headline, structure of the page, CTA, and placement of buttons and calls to action. The best way to identify the problem is to A/B test.

If you think that you don’t have enough CTA buttons on the landing page, create a duplicate page and add a few more to see what happens. Doing so will require you to get a high-quality landing page builder and optimization tool like Unbounce and Convert.com. Convert is a great tool with A/B testing and it allows you to really pinpoint certain steps to take to improve the performance of your landing page.

Step 6: Consider Switching to Automated Bidding

When you create a Google ad, you have two choices: automated or manual bidding. Each has its pros and cons.

Automated bidding allows Google to decide how much you’ll pay per click based on a few key metrics.

  • Increase site visits: If you’re trying to increase visitors to your site, you can choose to optimize your ad based on clicks.
  • Increase visibility: Target impression share sets bids with the goal of showing your ad as high on the page as possible. You may end up getting less clicks this way, but you can quickly spread awareness.
  • More conversions: If you want more conversions on-site, you’ll optimize for your target cost-per-action. You may pay more per conversion but you’ll convert more visitors.
  • Target ROAS: If you want to meet a certain return on ad spend, you can allow Google to pay what it thinks you should based on how you value each conversion.

Keep in mind that choosing manual bidding requires you to figure this all out yourself. You won’t have the luxury of picking a “blanket” goal and having Google optimize your ad spend for you. However, manual bidding does give you more control.

Step 7: Avoid Common Google Ad Mistakes

There are a few critical Google ads mistakes that can kill your ad from the get-go. Here are a few examples:

Using the Wrong Keyword Match

We’ve all heard of keyword match: broad match, phrase match, and exact match, right? Choosing the wrong one will make it more difficult for your ad to reach your audience.

For example, broad match will display your ad when someone searches for a phrase similar to your target phrase. This can work well in the beginning when you’re experimenting and gathering data. If you don’t know a lot about your audience, you wouldn’t want to use “exact match” because you don’t have the data to back it up.

Bad Ad Copy

Your ad copy is the key to the mint essentially. If you know how to write great copy, you shouldn’t have a problem converting as long as your audience, ad match, and everything else is in place. Be sure you squeeze in every character Google allows. The goal is to make your ad stand out.

Not Having Clear Margins

Keep in mind no matter what you do, Google isn’t looking out for your finances. You’re the only one who knows what you can spend to break even or profit from your ads. If you don’t have this figured out and established ahead of time, you can end up spending way too much on ads and having to play catch up later on.

Frequently Asked Questions About Google Ads Campaign Management

What is a campaign in Google ads?

A campaign is simply a set of ad groups that share a budget, targeting, and other settings. You can have multiple ads within the campaign you’re testing.

How do I run a successful Google Ads campaign?

The best way to run a successful campaign is to try and try again. Don’t be afraid to test a lot of different factors, too. You never know what will work.

What is a good daily budget for Google Ads?

If you’re just starting out, you shouldn’t spend more than $10-$20 per day until you see how everything is performing. In the beginning, the goal is to gather data so you can optimize your ads. If you’re just starting out, you shouldn’t spend more than $10-$20 dollars per day until you see how everything is performing. Don’t expect to hit a home run right away.

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Google Ads Campaign Management Conclusion

Remember setting up your ad and hitting start is only one piece of the equation. The steps you take after that will really determine the success of your ad. You can start out with a low-performing ad but take steps to optimize, test, and change the ad, and end up with a highly successful campaign, resulting in a lot of money in your pocket. If you need help getting your ad off the ground, we can help.

What do you think is the No. 1 thing that kills a successful ad campaign?

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New comment by CaioFer in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (August 2021)"

SEEKING WORK, Brazil, Remote OK, c410.f3r (at) gmail.com

  Email: c410.f3r (at) gmail.com
  Location: Brazil
  Remote: Yes
  Résumé/CV: https://c410-f3r.github.io/curriculum.pdf
  Technologies: AngularJS, Assembly (x84_64),C, C++, Docker, Docker Compose, Ember.js, GCP, Golang, Java, JavaScript, Kubernetes, Linux, MongoDB, MySQL, NodeJS, PHP, Polkadot, PostgreSQL, Python, ReactJS, Rust, SQL Server, Smart Contracts, Substrate, TypeScript, Vue.js
  Willing to relocate: No

Software engineer with a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science and over ten years of experience in several technologies and programming languages. There are two fields where I mainly act: (1) DevOps; from database administration and data modeling to back-end programming or front-end design all the way to orchestrated deployment with latest tech and (2) Standalone software; involves embedded development in restrict environments, blockchain applications mostly related to Parity’s Substrate and plain command-line interfaces.

On the open-source side of things, I regularly contribute to several projects, helping and communicating with other developers. Take a look at the available coding portfolio in my GitHub profile at https://github.com/c410-f3r where my public collaborations in the last fours years are more focused on the Rust Programming Language ecosystem.

Over 40 certified courses have been completed and eight professional certifications that covers a wide range of area were obtained from different organizations, e.g., Google (Cloud) and the Blockchain Training Alliance. Learning is very important to keep up with both old and new technologies, my newest certification is the Linux Foundation Certified System Administrator (LFCS) and more certifications will be earned over time.

To finish, IT in general is like a living organism that is constantly changing, that is why I am always looking forward for a new challenge to increase knowledge. For example, my proudest project is a constrained NP-problem solver compiled to WASM (https://c410-f3r.github.io/mop-playground) where I spent years reading scientific articles to write efficient data-structures and algorithms.

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