Nonprofits scramble to comply with new Google ad policy
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[March 01, 2018]
By Paresh Dave
SAN FRANCISCO(Reuters) - Thousands of
nonprofit organizations could lose a monthly advertising grant from
Alphabet Inc's Google as soon as Thursday, cutting off an important
source of traffic to their websites.
Google gives $10,000 in credits each to 35,000 nonprofits worldwide
every month to buy ads on its search engine. But Google found that some
ads received few clicks and announced in December that it would stop
funding groups that generate clicks off less than 5 percent of their ads
in two consecutive months.
Grant recipients called it a wake up call to pay attention to Google
after years of focusing on social media marketing. But despite rushing
to comply, several said they could not do so in only two months and that
their accounts may not get funded for March.
"We're very grateful for the program," said Conrad Contreras,
communications manager for Greenlining Institute, an Oakland, Calif.
social justice organization afraid of losing the funds. "But five
percent in two months, it's just unrealistic."
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Organizations can seek reinstatement after demonstrating changes.
The 15-year-old AdWords Ad Grants program did not previously have a
click threshold. Advertisers list search terms such as "donate clothing"
for which they would like their ads to appear. Perfecting phrases is key
to garnering clicks.
Google said it increased training this year, and that the average click
rate among nonprofits in February was about 6 percent. Rates can range
from around 2 percent to 12 percent among other advertisers.
"We revised our Ad Grants policies to help nonprofits be more effective
with AdWords and improve the quality of their ads, which will lead to
targeted awareness of their projects and mission," a Google statement to
Reuters said.
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The Google logo is
pictured atop an office building in Irvine, California, U.S. August
7, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
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Greenlining hired a consultant that helped boost its click rate to 3.5 percent
in February from 1 percent in December by concentrating spending on better
performing ads and simplifying language in ads.
Contreras said the ads are valuable because they drive ten times as many website
visitors from Google as Greenlining would otherwise get.
At the American Forest Foundation in Washington, D.C., communications director
Elizabeth Greener said she recently began scouring news articles and industry
websites to find phrases policymakers and corporate executives are likely
looking up.
Other tweaks have included ensuring searches for Christmas tree farms do not
show the foundation's ads. Still, clicks doubled from January to just 4 percent
in February.
Susheila Juggapah, digital content manager at London charity networking
organization CharityComms, eliminated immediate risk of suspension by reaching 7
percent in January with help from digital marketing agency Montfort.
But Juggapah expressed concern about smaller organizations.
"I hope Google understands the limitations most charities face and is kind to
those who cannot hit the requirements in time," she said.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Peter Henderson & Shri Navaratnam)
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