Imagine if you could
advertise ONLY to people who have actually
expressed an interest in doing business with
you? That’s basically what happens whenever a
prospective customer or client types a phrase
into a search engine that’s relevant to your
business. But how do search engines decide
which sites are worthy of top placement in
their search results? It turns out that some of
the results are ranked by the search engine’s
computers while others are simply paid
advertisements from companies willing to buy
their way to the top using Pay Per Click
Advertising.
Pay Per Click
Advertising (PPC for short) is an online
advertising format that allows you to buy your
way to the top of search results pages for
search phrases relevant to your business.
Businesses buy advertising on specific search
phrases, and are then charged each time a
person clicks through to their web
site.
How does this
work?
Try running a search on
a major search engine like Yahoo or Google for
a common consumer product like “DVD players.”
When reviewing the results, you’ll likely see a
set of results labeled as “Sponsor Results” or
“Sponsored Link”. Some results may appear in
the same format as the main search results on
the page, while others are listed within
colored text boxes along the site of the page.
All of those results are paid advertisements
from the sites listed within the
ads.
The ads are ranked
based on how much a business is willing to pay
to advertise on each search phrase. In the
example search for “DVD players” the current
top advertiser is currently paying $0.81 per
click – one penny more than the #2
advertiser.
The ads are purchased
through pay per click advertising suppliers,
and the two largest happen to be owned by
Google and Yahoo. Google’s program is called
Adwords and displays results on Google.com, AOL, Ask
Jeeves, many smaller search engines. Yahoo’s
program is run by an acquired company called
Overture, and the results appear on Yahoo,
MSN, AltaVista, and many other syndication
partners.
Why should I pay for
traffic?
For businesses that
have had success with search engine
optimization, the idea of paying for visitors
is not particularly enticing. However, if you
can make more money off a visitor to your web
site than it costs to get them there, why
wouldn’t you pay for those visitors? Keep in
mind that you can choose exactly what search
terms you want to advertise on, and you only
pay when a searcher actually clicks on your ad,
so it generally comes down to deciding how much
you can afford to spend for those visitors
rather than whether it’s worth doing at
all.
How much should I
spend?
The main factors
influencing how much money can be spent on a
PPC campaign are:
1. How many searches
are conducted per month using phrases relevant
to your business?
2. How much are you,
along with your competitors, willing to pay for
those terms?
The average monthly ad
spend on PPC advertising is a couple thousand
dollars, but this varies immensely from less
than $50/month for regionally targeted and
niche businesses to millions a month by large
national retailers.
The goal of any
advertising campaign should be to bring in more
money from the campaign than it costs to run
it. Pay Per Click is no different, but the
level of detail you can measure in PPC is
significantly higher than most types of
advertising. For example, with relatively
inexpensive (some are even free) tools, you can
determine which ads are generating sales or
leads for your business. Beyond that, you can
determine how much money you spent on a
specific ad to generate a sale or a lead. By
measuring what’s working, you can aggressively
advertise on terms that prove to be winners for
your business while shutting down ads that
don’t deliver.
Tips for
Success
1. Advertise on a large
number of relevant search phrases. Brainstorm
beyond the first dozen terms that come to mind
to describe your business. Advertise on the
terms used to describe your products, the
product names, product codes, and the questions
a prospect might type into a search engine that
your services answer, and more.
2. Build unique ads for
each search phrase. It takes a lot more time to
write a unique ad for each search phrase
relevant to your business rather than creating
one ad for all of your search phrases, but the
extra work will definitely be rewarded. Ads
that are aligned with the corresponding search
term receive more clicks, which will mean more
targeted traffic, and in some cases paying less
per click (on Google Adwords) due to the
intricacies of how the advertising is
priced.
3. Send visitors to the
most appropriate page of your web site. If you
place an ad for a specific product within your
online store, don’t send visitors to your
homepage and force them to dig for what they
just searched. This will frustrate your
visitors and increase the chance that they’ll
hit the dreaded Back button.
4. Track your results.
Spending money without measuring the return on
your investment is not a good business
practice. At the very least, consider
installing the free tracking tools available
through Google Adwords and Overture to measure
which terms are delivering results for your
business. Beyond that, consider using a 3rd
party statistics tool with conversion analysis
to compile the results of your various pay per
click programs into one easy to manage
interface.
Go for
it
People are searching
for what you sell at this very moment! If your
site is not showing up near the top of the
results, your competition thanks
you.
Ed Kohler is the
President of Haystack In A Needle, Inc., a web
marketing firm in Minneapolis, MN, offering
search engine optimization and pay per click
advertising consulting services.
HaystackInANeedle.com
kohler@HaystackInANeedle.com
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