Weekly Update
I can't believe its Friday again, this was a short week for me due to family/holidays, however I think I make some little advance on this journey...
Thanks to @Morticai for his amazing video lessons (if you have not check him out, you NEED to look at his website: ppcmode.com) I was able to understand what I was doing WRONG: RON.
Before this, I was running RON on DNTX, and tried to follow the optimize and "blacklist" process, only to find that I was lost... every change I was making on my ad campaigns was simply making me sink into the shadows...
Lesson Learned: Always limit your variables as much as you can... On Tuesday, I re-started my ad campaign, but this time I did the following:
1. I didn't touch my previous LP design.
2. I setup basically 4 ads, each targeting 2 different categories and allowed traffic from Android and IOS and Wifi and ATT. Pretty much I wanted to test each category.
3. I put my bid on the low avg, for all of them.
From this point, my idea was to test every category, and noticed which one will perform better (again, perform doesn't necessary mean profit). From there, I'll optimized deeper into Platform, Carrier, etc...
Yesterday night I jump when I saw the following:
Again, I have not touched my LP, basically I'm narrowing down my variables to try to find a "category" winner, these are the totals from when I started this new approach:
Now the big question remains: how many clicks will I need to consider a test statistically good???
I've heard people 100 clicks, others 300 clicks, to be honest I don't know... but, sticking to 300, I'll consider one of this tests as good.
The next step on this strategy is to COPY the ad campaign that's winning, and increment the bid according to what DNTX calls "delta". Every morning I receive an email from them "suggesting" to increase my bids a "delta" value to get more traffic. To be honest, I think this value is just a strategy to push you into increase your bids: they want you to spend the most possible.
Well, that's what I have for now, I'll continue the optimization process by narrowing down every variable one step at the time, and hopefully will have a winner...
Cheers!
I can't believe its Friday again, this was a short week for me due to family/holidays, however I think I make some little advance on this journey...
Thanks to @Morticai for his amazing video lessons (if you have not check him out, you NEED to look at his website: ppcmode.com) I was able to understand what I was doing WRONG: RON.
Before this, I was running RON on DNTX, and tried to follow the optimize and "blacklist" process, only to find that I was lost... every change I was making on my ad campaigns was simply making me sink into the shadows...
Lesson Learned: Always limit your variables as much as you can... On Tuesday, I re-started my ad campaign, but this time I did the following:
1. I didn't touch my previous LP design.
2. I setup basically 4 ads, each targeting 2 different categories and allowed traffic from Android and IOS and Wifi and ATT. Pretty much I wanted to test each category.
3. I put my bid on the low avg, for all of them.
From this point, my idea was to test every category, and noticed which one will perform better (again, perform doesn't necessary mean profit). From there, I'll optimized deeper into Platform, Carrier, etc...
Yesterday night I jump when I saw the following:
Again, I have not touched my LP, basically I'm narrowing down my variables to try to find a "category" winner, these are the totals from when I started this new approach:
Now the big question remains: how many clicks will I need to consider a test statistically good???
I've heard people 100 clicks, others 300 clicks, to be honest I don't know... but, sticking to 300, I'll consider one of this tests as good.
The next step on this strategy is to COPY the ad campaign that's winning, and increment the bid according to what DNTX calls "delta". Every morning I receive an email from them "suggesting" to increase my bids a "delta" value to get more traffic. To be honest, I think this value is just a strategy to push you into increase your bids: they want you to spend the most possible.
Well, that's what I have for now, I'll continue the optimization process by narrowing down every variable one step at the time, and hopefully will have a winner...
Cheers!