| Internet
Advertisement Explained : Part 5
PPC - How to Get the
Best from Search Engines
Pay per Click or PPC is a powerful search engine marketing
tool that can bring lots of potential customers to your
web-site in no time. However, degree of success depends
a great deal on skill and understanding on advertiser's
part.
Its very easy to spend a substantial sum on PPC advertising
without much of a result. On the other hand, skillful
use of PPC can significantly boost your on-line sales
at modest budget.
Let us see how PPC work and how to make its best use.
How PPC Works
We take Google's AdWords as an example here to explain
how PPC works
There's 5 essential steps in creating and running your
PPC campaign:
1. Create an AdWords account
Google charges USD 5 or Indian Rs. 250 to open an account.
There are two kinds of AdWords accounts - Pre-Paid and
Post-paid. In pre-paid account, you pay Google an advance
and your ad runs as long as there's money in your account.
You may replenish your pre-paid account through fresh
advances.
In post-paid account - you are billed at pre-determined
intervals (e.g. every month).
There are various payment methods, but if you are from
India - be prepared to pay in Indian Rs. through credit
card (VISA/Mastercard)
2. Create Your Ad Copy
You have 3 lines for your text ad - the first line or
title can be 25 characters (max) and other two 35 characters
(max) each (a character can be letter, number, punctuation
mark or space). In addition, you will need to define
a target and a URL pointing to a particular page in
your web-site.
Google has strict editorial policy on format, style
and text. Your ad should be easy to read, grammatically
correct and free from spelling error. Avoid cryptic
words, telegraphic messages and use space after every
punctuation mark. Failure to adhere to AdWords editorial
policy will result in disapproval of your ad.
In some countries including India - there's a second
layer of review for adult content. In Google AdWords
parlour - its called FamilySafe ad.
These reviews may take few days - so do not get jittery
if your ad does not show-up. There's a diagnostic tool
to check the status of your ad.
3. Select Keywords
This is one of the most crucial steps in making your
ad successful. In this step, you select keywords that
will trigger display of your ad. For example, if you
are selling bicycle chains - then relevant keywords
could be bicycle, bicycle chain, bicycle buyers, bicycle
components etc.
Whenever a surfer uses any of these keywords to search
- your ad will be displayed on right hand side of search
result. Your ad will be displayed on pages in Google
network of web-sites that deal with any of the selected
keywords (e.g. a web-site teaching how to repair bicycle).
(Google has a network of web-sites that run Google
AdWords ads. This program is called Google AdSense.
www.infobanc.com is part of Google AdSense Network)
Google AdWords has excellent keyword selection tools
where one can develop an effective keyword list step
by step. Theoretically, there's no upper limit on number
of keywords, but in practice Google may not allow too
many keywords that can overload its server. Normally,
a handful of well selected keywords should be able to
attract customers.
You may check comparative popularity of various keywords
and prune your list as many times as you like.
4. Select Cost per Click (CPC)
In this step, select the amount you wish to pay Google
whenever someone clicks at your ad and reaches your
web-site. The rank of your ad depends upon how much
CPC you have set - higher the CPC, higher will be the
rank of your ad.
Normally, there's a 'minimum bid' that your CPC must
exceed. If the CPC is too low, concerned keyword becomes
inactive (i.e. fail to trigger your ad)
Remember, CPC is the maximum amount you are ready to
pay for a click. Actual amount to be paid per click
is dependant upon bids placed by other advertisers for
that keyword. In practice, you may have to pay significantly
less than CPC
5. Select a Daily Budget
In this final step - you set a daily budget for your
ad campaign. Once the budget you have set is fully consumed
- your ad will no longer appear until either the budget
is increased or the next day starts.
You may start with a low budget and increase it gradually
based on daily feedback. If your budget remains too
low and you have selected popular keywords - the daily
budget will get consumed within first few hours of day.
As a result, your ad will not be visible for 24 hours,
missing certain geographical regions.
Fine Tuning PPC - How to Get Best Return from Advertising
Budget
A fine balance between keywords, daily budget, audience
targeting and CPC is essential for optimum result. Any
mismatch may result in huge spending or missing out
on important audience segments.
To make your ad more effective, use audience tragetting
tools such as geographic locations and language selector.
Use English as the only language for your ad to be
shown. So your ad will not be visible for surfers using
non-English languages.
Use geographic tool to remove select countries or regions
from your ad coverage so that your ad will be visible
only in select countries. For example, if you think
China is a competitor of your product and USA/Europe
are main markets - use geographic tool to remove China
from ad coverage and include USA and Europe. Similarly,
if you wish to target overseas market only, remove India
from ad coverage.
Conclusion
Ask any marketing expert to list key success factors
for any ad campaign and chances are, he/she will list
audience targeting at number 1 spot.
With PPC search engine marketing - your ad campaign
gets this quality by default, making your job that much
easier. With speed and high degree of flexibility -
its truly a formidable tools. No wonder, PPC today account
for one-third of all on-line advertising spending.
** AdWords and AdSense are registered trademarks of
Google Inc.
Happy and Productive Surfing
Dr. Amit K Chatterjee
Related Links:
Author
: Dr.
Amit K. Chatterjee
(Amit worked in blue-chip Indian and MNCs for 15
years in various capacities like Research and Information
Analysis, Market Development, MIS, R&D Information
Systems etc. before starting his e-commerce venture
in 1997. The views expressed in this columns are
of his own. |
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