The
last time we talked about Pay-Per-Click advertising, I told
you about the massive advantage paid advertising
has over traditional search engine marketing. It can all be
summed up into two points:
- PPC
advertising allows you to bring traffic to your website
in just minutes .
- PPC
pays for itself AND your other SEM
expenses (like link-building) while leaving you a decent
profit margin .
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Yes,
PPC advertising can really take your ads live, and bring
your website traffic, in just a few minutes. In fact, once
you have set up your advertising campaign (we'll talk about
this a little later) and gone “live”, it takes less than
a minute for the first visitor to show up at your website.
And
this is not random traffic. We are talking about laser-targeted
visitors who are actively looking for the services
that YOU provide. To take a real world example – instead
of promoting your newly-opened restaurant, if you had the
option to implement a marketing strategy that would bring
you hungry customers to your doorstep,
wouldn't you take it up?
Of
course you would!
PPC
advertising is the Internet version of this scenario. It
will bring you “hungry” searchers – people who have a “need”
for the information and / or solutions that your business
provides.
In
the rest of this article, I'll spend some time telling you
a bit more about Google AdWords, and then cover some basic
strategies that will help you succeed at Google AdWords
in particular. If you aren't using AdWords as yet, I would
strongly recommend that you switch over
(I'll tell you why in a minute). If you are already using
AdWords, or are contemplating starting your PPC campaign,
then read this article very carefully – it includes techniques
that form the foundations of a successful PPC campaign.
In
other words, to benefit from the methods below, it doesn't
matter what PPC engine you use – the basics remain the same.
Many
people have asked me why I support AdWords when there are
much cheaper alternatives, and also why I choose AdWords
over Overture (now known as Yahoo Search Marketing).
I've
addressed the first question in part 1 of this two-part
series on PPC – while AdWords and Overture may be more “expensive”
in terms of cost per click, they are far more effective
than other PPC engines when it comes to the following:
- Market
Reach – combined, Overture and Google AdWords
cover over 80% of the search engine
market.
- Quality
of Service – AdWords is far easier
to use and set up compared to any of its competition,
even when compared to Overture (which requires a manual
review of your keywords and ads, leading to a 3-5 day
delay before your campaign can actually go live).
- Quality
of Traffic – The top 2 PPC engines bring in
significantly better quality traffic
– especially when you measure traffic in terms of conversions.
Add to that the fact that these two are less
afflicted with click fraud
than the rest of the industry and you have your case
made.
Between
AdWords and Overture, there is little to choose except for
the emphasis on user-friendliness that
Google maintains. Not only do you get instant traffic, it
is ridiculously easy to make campaign-wide changes to your
ads, and this is a big concern when you are managing several
ad campaigns or have a large list of keywords.
Now,
let's look at how to guarantee that your “instant traffic”
translates into “ instant sales ”.
Quite
like search engine optimization, PPC advertising is a lot
about getting the basics right. If you have solid foundations,
your campaigns will invariably be a success. Let's go through
the core elements of any PPC campaign.
Keyword
Research
When
compiling your keyword list, consider using a professional
tool such as WordTracker
or NicheBot
instead of coming up with all the keywords yourself. Why?
Because quite frankly, no one has the time to manually compile
a list of several hundred keywords. Also, these tools will
tell you exactly what people are searching for
AND give you a lot more options that you may never have
even thought of. Using either WordTracker or NicheBot, you
can easily compile a keyword list of even a thousand keywords
in under an hour.
Another
tool that I highly recommend is a program called Keyword
Locator. You can have a look at that program below.
It does a heck of a lot more than WordTracker and Nichebot.
=>
http://www.keywordlocator.com
Once
you have your keyword list ready, break it down into sub-lists
. Essentially, instead of lumping together all
the keywords, you can use the main keywords as “headers”
build your list around them. These headers will be the keywords
receiving the most traffic. To give you an example, take
an online soccer store. Possible headers would include “soccer
store”, “soccer equipment”, “soccer goals”, “soccer accessories”,
“soccer merchandise”, “soccer nets” and even “soccer supply”.
All these terms have hundreds of related keywords
.
What's
the advantage of creating sub-lists? For one, it helps you
focus your campaign even further – you
can send visitors clicking on your “soccer goals” ads to
an internal page on your store that is dedicated to soccer
goals, and so on. Second, your campaign becomes more manageable
– if one theme of keywords is not working well,
you can improve it without affecting the rest of the lists.
However,
the most important reason to using sub-lists is that you
can create ads that are customized towards
your header keywords. An ad for “soccer equipment” will
not be as effective as an ad for “soccer nets” if they both
appeared next to search results for the term “cheap soccer
nets”. Customized ads will give you higher click-through
rates , and a high ad CTR can help lower
overall costs .
Ad
Copy
Your
ad copy will make or break your PPC campaign, so it is important
to get it just right. There are two sections of your ad,
the title (or the heading), and the ad
description . Apart from adhering to the
basics (place your sub-list “header” once in the title,
and once in the description), there is a lot to learn about
writing winning ad copy. Think of PPC ads as intensely summarized
version of a regular sales letter
– approach ad copy with that view will help you write better.
The
ad copy has two key components – a riveting title/header,
and a compelling description. Taking Google's example, you
have space to write 25 characters in the title, and two
lines of 35 characters each in the description. Eventually,
writing winning ad copy boils down to convincing
the skeptical searcher into clicking on your ad
(amongst several others) in a maximum of 95 characters.
Put
each ad that you write through a stricter test than you
would put your sales letter. The title is the key to attracting
the searcher's attention – if it contains the keywords that
are being searched for, the keywords will show up in bold
and help make the ad more visible. The description,
on the other hand, has just two short lines to convince
the searcher to click on the ad. Focus on the user and the
benefits your website / product will provide.
If it helps, you can make a bulleted list of key terms that
highlight your business and spread them throughout your
ads.
Use
the title to grab the searcher's attention ,
and then reel them in with your ad description.
If you follow the principles you have used to write your
sales letter, you'd be at an advantage compared to most
of your competition.
Ad
Optimization
Setting
up the ad campaign is, believe it or not, the easy part.
Managing it is tricky (though your work is reduced if you
get the basics right). There are two main challenges facing
a PPC campaign:
- You
don't know how well your ads will
work
- You
don't know which keywords will convert
into sales
The
result is that managing a PPC campaign is a continuing
process of tweaking your ads based on results
– it ultimately involves regular improvements in your ad
copy, to keyword lists and maybe even in your website.
The
main aim of managing a PPC campaign is to constantly try
to increase your CTR . While the quick
and dirty way to do this is to pay high enough to rank on
the top of the ads list, this can easily break your budget.
A better option is to regularly review
your ads, weed out the ones that don't work and improve
on the ones that do work. Like sales letters, this involves
reusing the working elements (titles and
descriptions) and modifying them slightly to test if the
CTR improves.
One
of the best sources of information on how to succeed with
AdWords is Google itself. The next two resources will go
a long way towards
Google
AdWords Help Center
This is the information center for everything AdWords.
This will answer all of your newbie questions, and all of
your “ getting started ” questions as well.
Google
AdWords Demos and Guides
If you prefer watching how-to videos, then click on
the above link to go to the AdWords Demos page. The page
contains a series of Flash presentations that will guide
you through the basics right up to the advanced
strategies of managing your account.
Running
a Google Adwords campaign involves a lot more than just
knowing how to write good ad copy (although
this is the most important step). You need to understand
the nuances of bid management , ad optimization
(especially how to set up ad controls
and how to use them to improve your CTR), and eventually,
how to track your clicks and measure how
they translate into sales .
The
best book I've found so far that answers all those “how-to”
questions AND gives you advanced strategies for turning
even “completely failed” ad campaigns around in a matter
of hours, is Perry
Marshall's Guide to Google AdWords.
I
can't possibly go into what this course teaches, here...
But, I highly suggest you visit the link below and atleast
sign up for his free eCourse. Afterall, it's completely
free. Perry's
Definitive Guide To Google Adwords is known in the "internet
marketing world" to be the Adwords Bible...
So, chances are you've already purchased and gone through
his course, but if not, quit wasting time and losing money
with Adwords. Grab a copy of his course and start making
money.
Click
the link below and grab a copy of his free eCourse now.
=> http://www.seoelite.com/GoogleAdwordsGuide.htm
Until
next time, I hope your businesses are as profitable as ever!
All
the best,

Brad
Callen
Professional SEO
SEO Elite: SEO Software
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