"Pay-Per-Click
Secrets for the Budget Entrepreneur"
By Azam Corry
Pay-Per-Click
(PPC) search engines offer
some of the best value advertising
online. Where else can you
get targeted visitors from
just $0.01 each?
However,
because they aren't sure
how it all works, or perhaps
unconvinced that it does,
many have yet to take advantage
of the medium. With that
in mind, I'm going to explain
how you can benefit from
PPC search engines, and
spend as little as possible
in the process.
In
the PPC model, you write
your own title and description,
select a keyword searchers
must enter for your listing
to appear, and bid against
other site owners for its
rank in search results.
Your bid equals the amount
you will pay for each click
on your listing.
I
use several PPC search engines.
Widely acknowledge to be
the best performer, GoTo
brings me more traffic -
and sales - than all the
rest put together. Being
the most important, I will
focus on it here, although
the same techniques apply
to any PPC SE.
#1
SECRET TO BIG RETURNS ON
A SHOESTRING BUDGET
Bid
prices for good rankings
on very popular, common
keywords are often high.
However, the vast majority
of advertisers *only* bid
on these obvious terms.
They ignore THOUSANDS of
other keywords. Because
few people are bidding on
those overlooked keywords,
the bid prices remain low.
You and I can get good listings
here for just a cent or
two!
Of
course, less popular keywords
aren't searched for as often.
But that *does not* matter.
Play smart. Bid on LOTS
of keywords. Hundreds, thousands
even. Here's an example
of how it works:
#
Keywords
# Times each Keyword
Number of Times
in Account
Searched per Month
Your Ad is Seen*
------------
---------------------
----------------
20
1000
20,000
200
100
20,000
*Assume
all listings have the same
ranking, say the #3 spot.
As
you can see, listing under
200 keywords, each of which
is only searched for 100
times a month, can bring
you the SAME amount of traffic
as 20 listings for much
more expensive, popular
keywords that are searched
for 1000 times each month.
RESEARCHING
YOUR KEYWORDS
Once
you've opened your account,
start researching your keywords.
You will probably already
have several relevant words
and phrases in mind. Write
them all down and head over
to the GoTo Keyword Suggestion
Tool with your list.
The
Keyword Suggestion Tool
tells you how many times
in the previous month people
have searched for the keyword
you input, or any phrase
containing it. Results are
listed in order, with the
most popular searches at
the top.
Type
your first keyword into
the tool's search box. When
the results come up, select
"Save As" on your browser,
and choose to save as "Text."
This will save your results
in a small plain text file
that can be opened by any
text editor (like NotePad).
Use the keyword as the file
name.
Do
likewise with all of your
keywords, phrases, and other
potentially important terms
within phrases. For example,
one of your main keywords
may be "marketing" and one
of your phrases "marketing
courses." In this case,
search for "courses" as
well. Although the majority
of results will be inappropriate,
you will usually find a
handful of new terms that
you wouldn't have thought
of otherwise.
When
you've finished your list,
open the first file saved.
Delete all irrelevant terms.
From the remainder, identify
potentially good words that
you haven't yet investigated.
Input these into the Suggestion
Tool and repeat the process.
Do the same for every file
and you will soon have hundreds
of terms.
For
even more suggestions, try
JimTools Keyword Generation
Tool at http://www.jimtools.com
. Bear in mind however that
these are terms found in
Web pages, and therefore
not necessarily keywords
used by searchers.
GET
DATABASED
Create
a simple database for your
listing details - it will
make managing your account
much easier. You can use
Excel or similar; I personally
prefer FileMaker Pro for
PPC accounts (Vicki at http://www.sitesell.com/info.html
provides a basic template
for affiliates).
Essential
headings you will need are:
*
Search Term
*
URL
*
Title
*
Description
*
Current Bid Amount
Optional
headings Include:
*
Number of Searches per Month
(from GoTo tool)
*
Title Length (auto calculated
function)
*
Description Length (auto
calculated function)
*
Listing Status (New, On,
Off, Pending, Rejected)
*
Product (helpful if advertising
various products)
*
Current Rank
*
Top Bid Amount (time consuming
to update: select terms
only)
*
Minimum Bid Amount (as above)
*
First Page Minimum bid amount
(as above)
*
Date Last Modified (suggest
auto function)
I
also have FileMaker assign
a serial number, so that
it can mark terms as 'original'
or 'duplicate', making the
latter easy to delete.
Once
you have your database,
paste in the search terms
from your collection of
text files (if you have
a good text editor, use
'search and replace' strings
to batch process, deleting
unwanted information, and
tab-delimiting the remainder
for direct import, either
individually or merged into
a single file).
YOUR
TITLES AND DESCRIPTIONS
Next
compose your titles and
descriptions. Remember you
are writing an ad. Make
your title catchy.
incorporating the search
term within it usually increases
clickthroughs. Beware however
that more clicks doesn't
always equal more sales
(or more targeted visitors).
Some
searchers will click on
the first title they notice
containing the term searched
for, thinking it more relevant.
What you are offering may
be an exact match to the
keyword, or it may be related.
If the latter, think before
you automatically include
the term in your title.
In addition, writing a different
title for every search term
is very time consuming.
Make
your description as comprehensive
and benefit-laden as you
can within the space allowed
(with GoTo, this is 40 characters
for the title and 190 for
the description. Other PPC
engines vary, but most have
higher limits).
If
your budget is tight and
you simply wish to sell
something, consider making
it obvious from your description.
Unless you have a secondary
strategy (like collecting
email addresses) save money
by filtering out those least
likely to part with any
cash. Concentrate on attracting
your perfect prospect: one
open to the possibility
of making a purchase.
YOUR
MAXIMUM BID PRICE
How
much should you bid? Ideally,
calculate your Maximum bid
limit based on the average
conversion ratio of the
page you are linking to.
If you don't know what that
is, I suggest you initially
base your limit on a 1%
conversion ratio (1 in every
100 visitors buys).
Lets
say you make $20 on every
sale. That means - on average
- for every 100 visitors,
you get $20. To be in profit,
those 100 visitors must
cost you less than the $20
you make. It therefore follows
that one visitor must cost
less than $20/100, or $0.20.
This is your break-even
point. Always bid below
this figure.
With
a bid of $0.04, the 100
visitors required for a
$20 sale
ill only cost you $4. You
make $16 profit. If your
Conversion ratio is in reality
3%, at $0.04 per click you
will make $56 for every
$4 you spend. That's a 1400%
profit!
Use
coded (tracked) URL's for
your PPC listings, or if
feasible link them to specific
pages that cannot be accessed
by a surfer on your site
(can be duplicates with
no inbound links). You will
soon have a good idea of
your real conversion ratio.
BIDDING
STRATEGY
The
idea is to bid as little
as possible for the highest
number of targeted visitors.
Being first on the results
page will bring most visitors.
However, as I mentioned
earlier, simply getting
more click-throughs is not
necessarily a good thing.
In
the top position, you are
more likely to attract 'lazy'
searchers that simply click
on the first thing they
see, and
others who automatically
assume that since your listing
is at the top, it must be
the most relevant (like
a regular search engine).
Although your listing may
be highly relevant, it might
not be what THEY had in
mind.
How
important or not this is,
depends on the cost of the
listings and your budget.
If the current top bid is,
say $0.10 and the second
$0.05. It makes more sense
to bid $0.06 and get the
number two position, than
pay $0.11 for the top spot.
The
further down the listings
your ad appears, the less
likely it will be seen.
This is not only due to
the behavior of searchers.
Web sites that partner with
GoTo seldom display all
of the listings. AOL for
example only displays the
first three. Others display
the first five, ten, or
possibly twenty listings.
With
this in mind, create various
'cut-off' points in the
listings, in relation to
your budget. Can you afford
to be in the top three listings?
If not, look at the top
five, then ten.
Don't
overly concern yourself
with individual positions
Within these groupings.
Your exposure and - all
else being equal - the number
of clickthroughs you
get will be almost the same
whether you are at, say,
number 7 or number 10. The
difference in bid price
however can be substantial.
Pay as little as possible
to get into the highest
group within your budget.
That notwithstanding, increasing
your bid by 2 cents to jump
five positions in the top
half of the page would be
worthwhile.
On
popular terms where bids
are high, simply try to
get into the first half
of the results page (the
top 20 on GoTo). If that
is still beyond my budget,
I aim for a cheap position
right at the bottom of the
page.
My
theory is that most searchers
who have bothered to scroll
more than halfway down the
page will continue to the
end. In addition, most people
tend to scroll in 'chunks'.
This makes them likely to
miss listings in the middle,
as their eyes are naturally
drawn to the white space
at the bottom of the page.
If
you can't afford page one
at all, try and get within
the first five or ten listings
on page two.
GETTING
YOUR LISTINGS ONLINE
GoTo
have a good account manager,
and I would suggest using
it to submit your first
listings. However, like
most online tools, it can
become extremely tedious
when you have a lot of work
to get through.
GoTo
will happily accept bulk
submissions in an Excel
spreadsheet they have available
for download. If you don't
have Excel, you can send
your listings in tab-delimited
text format (other PPC engines
operate the same way, but
some don't advertise the
fact, requiring you ask).
Use
the account manager to get
your first few listings
online. GoTo check all submissions
for relevancy (good for
your conversion ratio) so
it will be 3-5 days before
they go live. Meanwhile,
work up a list of several
hundred keywords. Instead
of spending hours inputting
these yourself, email them
to GoTo and let them do
it for you.
If
you don't have an account,
here's a special offer for
readers of the Internet
Business Center.
If
you're not yet using PPC
search engines, now is the
time to start. You won't
regret it. Follow these
guidelines and it's impossible
not to profit!
========================================
Article by Azam
Corry.
Azam
Corry owns Now Sell! A mine
of helpful information,
tools and resources for
budding Netrepreneurs. Rated
3-star by Go.com. Recommended
by About.com. Visit: http://www.NowSell.com/?PPCSec
If you are doing business
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