Protecting Your Profits on Pay-Per-Click Engines:
The 3 Common Mistakes
Marketers Make
by Catherine Seda
The plan in your head seems so simple: bid on keywords on pay-per-click
(PPC) engines then watch your business skyrocket. Some marketers do
achieve instant success. However, many are losing money because they’ve
got gaping holes in their PPC strategy. Don’t overlook the basics.
Search engines such as Yahoo! and Google allow you to bid on keywords
and drive visitors to your web site for a per-click fee. The Yahoo!
Sponsored Search program has a $30 non-refundable deposit and a $0.10 per
click minimum bid (and a $20 per month minimum spend). The Google AdWords
program has a $5 account activation fee and a $0.01 per click minimum bid.
For many PPC engines, the highest bid typically gets the highest position,
and you’ll only be charged when someone clicks on your ad.
Just because it can take less than 15 minutes to set up a PPC campaign
doesn’t mean you should! Let’s look at three common mistakes PPC
advertisers make:
1. Choosing the Wrong Keywords The wrong keywords deliver too much traffic that doesn’t convert, or
too few visitors to impact your bottom line. The trick is to choose
highly-targeted keywords that are targeted, yet popular enough that you’ll
get decent traffic without blowing your entire budget in 24 hours. If you’
re trying to get visitors to take action on your site, it’s mission
critical to track your leads or sales at the keyword level. Without
knowing which keywords did and did not perform, you won’t be able to
maximize your advertising profits.
2. Writing Ad Copy that Attracts Non-Buyers Generic-sounding copy is terrible, especially for pay-per-click.
Something like “we offer business solutions to help your company succeed”
is so vague that it’s going to attract people who have no use for your
company. You’ll be paying for wasted clicks. A worse offense is to
over-promote your offer which also attracts non-buyers; the word “free”
has to be used carefully for this reason. Make your ad descriptive and
compelling so potential customers know what you’re selling and get ready
to buy before they land on your site.
3. Using a Landing Page that Doesn’t Sell Do not, I repeat, do not send PPC traffic to your home page. Besides
certain exceptions, it’s not the most relevant page for the users’ search
query. The landing page you send visitors to, and the way it’s designed
and written, determines if people stay or abandon your site. Design and
test your landing pages for optimal conversions.
Successful pay-per-click campaigns start with careful consideration of
the basics. New advertisers should take time to plan out their campaign
while existing advertisers should optimize these basic ingredients.
Protect your profits!
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