Pay-Per-Click_Advertising_-_The_Basics
| Pay-Per-Click Advertising - The Basics
Search engine optimization can take a long time to show results.
The Google sandbox alone can delay optimization results by 6 to
8 months. So, what can you do to get traffic while you wait?
Pay-per-click [“PPC”] campaigns fill the time gap. This article
discusses the basics of PPC advertising.
What Is A PPC?
A PPC search engine allows you to bid for placement in search
results. Search engines such as Google, Yahoo, MSN, AOL and most
others bolster their organic search results with sponsor
advertisements. If you search on Google, links in blue across
the top and the little ads down the right side of the search
results are PPC listings. In one form or another, similar
listings appear on every major search engine.
How Does It Work?
When you use a PPC, you will bid for placement in the search
results under particular keywords. Instead of optimizing your
site to appear high in the listings, you simple pay for the
position. While this may sound great, keep in mind you are
paying for the listing and have to watch the return on
investment closely.
To get started, you must open an account with the PPC in
question. The two biggest PPCs are Google Adwords and Overture.
You will need to register with the PPC, provide a credit card
number and, depending on the PPC, deposit money into the
account. Next, create ads with a title, body text and link to
the landing page of your site. The title of each ad should
correspond to a particular keyword you want to promote. If at
all possible, include the keyword in the actual title. Finally,
you will be asked to bid on placement in the search results.
Bidding for placement is not as simple as it my sound. Ideally,
your ad should be in the top 3, but never below the 10th
position. This has to be balanced, however, by the return on
investment of the campaign. If you sell a product that produces
a $10 dollar profit per sale, you probably can’t afford to pay
$.90 per click. If your site converts 1 visitor out of every 100
into a sale, you will spend $90 for every sale. Obviously, that
is going to work out very well. The one caveat to this situation
is a business with reoccurring revenue.
If you site charges clients a reoccurring monthly fee, you can
bid in excess of your immediate profit margin. To do this
safely, you must determine how long the average customer will
stay on your site. For example, if you make a $10 profit per
month and the average customer pays for 5 months, the total
profit is $50. In this situation, you can spend $20 or $30 to
obtain a customer and still turn a profit. To properly manage a
PPC campaign for a reoccurring charge site, you must recalculate
the profit per customer ever week to protect yourself.
PPC Cons
Why not just use a PPC campaign instead of pursuing search
engine optimization? There are a number of reasons. First, you
are paying for each click with a PPC, which requires a budget
and may impact your cash flow. Second, PPC bidding is
competitive and that translates into higher costs, so much so
that a profit may be hard to make. Third, many people simply do
not click on PPC ads with the figure being as high as 20
percent. Fourth, you run the risk of having people click on your
ads with no intention of buying, whether they are just browsing
or are trying to exhaust your advertising budget.
PPCs definitely have a place in the online marketing field.
Manage your campaigns with an eye for detail and you should
fine.
About the author:
Halstatt Pires is with Marketing
Titan- an Internet marketing and advertising
company in San Diego, California comprised of a search engine
optimization specialist providing meta tag optimization services
and Internet marketing consultant providing internet marketing
solutions through integrated design and programming services.
|
|