Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Pay-per-click

"Pay-per-Click”: As with most web base nomenclature it is as it reads, when your link is clicked you pay a fee. How much? On Google Ad Words, your account only gets charged when interested consumers click on your ad, the cost per click is set by you the advertiser on a bid basis.

For example, if there are five bike shops in your area using Google and a query is made on Google for “bikes, Trek, mountain bike” or a host of thousands of other “Key Words”, the shop which bids the most for the click gets at the top of the list of advertisers on the search results.

This list is what the web surfer sees on the top of the page of results or on the right side bar. The more you bid the higher the placement. If there are many ads competing for this limited space, your ad could be three pages away. Most bids for local ads start at twenty cents to fifty cents. You control the daily budget. When your daily budget is used up your link disappears until the next twenty four hour period begins. If you want to budget twenty to hundreds of dollars a day for “clicks” the amount is up to you.

You attract only the people who are interested in your product. The link to your website should show your whole inventory, your business philosophy, specials, staff and all information that can result in a sale. If the customer is in the market for your product and if your site is tweaked to turn shoppers into buyers, you should get a call or see that shopper walking into your shop or placing an online order. This is targeted, trackable advertizing. A claim other media can ma

Ten Pay-per-click Questions An Owner Should Ask

If you own or manage an ecommerce business, you may not directly execute your pay-per-click advertising campaigns yourself. Instead, you may delegate the execution of them to an employee or an outside firm. But owners and managers need to know that broad outlines and the successes and failures of their pay-per-click advertising efforts, and to help them with this I've assembled a list of 10 questions to ask the employee or outside firm who executes the campaign.

1. How many keywords do we have running? If the answer is anything less than a few thousand, you’re probably not taking advantage of the longtail game of the business. While there are always exceptions, a few thousand keywords for an ecommerce store are not uncommon when you consider all kinds of product and brand variations.

2. What are our top converting terms (by sales volume and spend)? This one is always interesting. You often find that products that may not necessarily be top sellers across the entire site pull great results for you in paid search. Depending on the answer, focus your energy around developing the winning product line.

3. What is our return on investment, average time spent on site, average order size from paid search, cost per conversion, and lifetime value of a customer? These metrics should be delivered to you at least monthly. Your pay-per-click manager, on the other hand, should be reviewing all of these on weekly basis.

4. What is our average click-through rate and how do we improve it? The click-through rate is on the most important metrics in the game. The higher the CTR the higher the paid search returns (again, there are always exceptions). Ask for a detailed ad creative testing plan that outlines all initiatives in queue that may increase your average CTR.

5. Do we have coverage across the three primary search engines? There is no reason not to be running on Google, Yahoo! and Bing. Stay on top of your PPC guru to ensure coverage across all the top three. Otherwise, you’re likely to be missing out on possible cheap sales.

6. What is our impression share? Impression share report (ideally broken down by campaign) should give you a pretty good idea of how many impressions you’re missing out on. Be sure to ask for detailed analysis from you PPC manager.

7. What’s in the pipeline for landing page testing? This one is often a challenge for ecommerce stores but that’s never an excuse to avoid it. Consult with your PPC manager to figure out recommended components to test and the plan for executing those landing page tests.

8. Have we tried contextual targeting campaigns? If you succeeded in paid search, discuss setting up test campaigns in either the Google content network or in lower tier contextual channels such as Vibrant. Ask your PPC manager to assemble a strategy plan for testing contextual targeting and campaign optimization plan.

9. When do we attract more buyers versus tire kickers? This question really refers to day of week and time of day analysis. Ask your paid search consultant to analyze sales activity for a few months (ideally) and come up with recommendations on testing day of week and/or time of day scheduling.

10. Have we set attainable monthly performance targets? Discuss performance results with your pay-per-click manager and set reasonable performance targets for a few months ahead. The idea here is to determine attainable targets, not your best-case scenario performance goals.