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Improving PPC Performance By Lachlan
Brown
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This series of articles covers some common issues that occur with PPC (pay per
click) search engine advertising campaigns. In it we'll discuss how to identify
a particular problem, what the effect is, and what to do about it. The success
of a PPC campaign is typically measured in terms of the cost per action. This
equals how each sale or sales lead costs in terms of PPC spending. Another
important measurement is revenue generated. We'll discuss each PPC issue in
terms of its effect on either the cost per action or revenue.
First, a PPC primer: PPC advertising is the method by which a company shows up
in the "sponsored links" or "sponsored results" section of the search engine
results when conducting a keyword search. It is also known as paid placement
because, with PPC, the advertiser can pay the search engine to be placed in the
top spot. Advertisers bid competitively based on who is willing to pay the most
each time someone clicks their search engine advertisement. So, if three
companies all want to show up for the keyword "used cars," the company that is
willing to pay the most per click usually shows up in first position, and only
pays when a searcher actually clicks the ad and visits the website.
First Issue: Low Conversion Rate
The problems covered in this series go in order of importance, i.e. starting
with the worst problems to have, ending with the problems that have less
negative impact. Based on this, the first problem we'll discuss is a low
conversion rate. The conversion rate equals the percentage of visitors that
perform a desired action, typically a shopping cart sale, or generate a sales
lead via an online email form, such as a contact us or request
information/quote/consultation. The formula for conversion rate is "# of actions
/ # of clicks." So, if you had 1000 clicks to the site, and this traffic
resulted in 10 sales, this equals a 1% conversion rate. Every conceivable action
on a web site has a conversion rate, e.g. how many people visit your homepage
and signup for a newsletter, how many people purchase a product from your
shopping cart, etc.
The effect of a low conversion rate is a high cost per action. There is an
inversely proportional relationship between the two. All other factors being
equal, the lower the conversion rate the higher the cost per action. The lower
the conversion rate, the more clicks it takes before a successful action on the
site, and therefore more money must be spent on clicks. The effect of a high
cost per action is less profit or even no profit, so this issue can have a rapid
and dramatic impact to the bottom line.
What to Do About It
The first thing to do, before you can even improve your conversion rate, is to
actually measure it. Both Google Adwords and Yahoo Search Marketing (formerly
Overture) offer free conversion tracking. There are also commercial conversion
tracking software programs out there, which we've covered in an article on web
site conversion tracking. In order to measure the profitability of only your PPC
efforts, the free offerings mentioned above are sufficient.
Once you've purchased enough clicks to determine your real conversion rate,
which is from 100 to 1000 clicks, you may find that your rate is too low for
desired profitability. Good conversion rates vary dramatically by industry,
product, service, etc. The more specialized your product, service or industry
niche, the higher the expected conversion rate, and vice versa. The general
range of "good" conversion rates is from 3% to 15%. If your conversion rate is
much lower than this, and your cost per action is too high, then your conversion
rate is too low, keeping in mind that there may be other issues affecting your
cost per action as well.
Once you determine that your conversion rate is too low, there are a few
potentially quick fixes to the problem:
Send PPC visitors to the best page for that particular keyword. If you have an
ecommerce site, and are bidding on an actual product or brand name, send the
visitors to the actual product page vs. the homepage. If you are targeting a
unique market segment with a particular keyword, create a page that specifically
addresses the problems and needs of that market.
Make sure that there are clear "call to actions" on the "landing" page that your
visitors see first when they click on your ad. This might include your company
contact information or a lead generation form that is "above the fold," meaning
that you don't have to scroll down on the page to see it.
Write the content on your site so that it succinctly and passionately addresses
the problems that your customers have and why your product or service solves
them, including testimonials showing that you've solved these kinds of problems
before. Avoid lengthy descriptions of your methodology, or company
background/credentials on the PPC landing page. Put these in an "about us" or
"company" section of the site.
Conduct competitive research to make sure that your prices and features are as
good as or better than the competition.
Conduct competitive research and come up with a unique price point or other
benefit that differentiates you from the competition.
Conclusion
If your PPC efforts aren't yielding the fruit of profitability, then the first
place to look is your conversion rate. To determine if your conversion rate is
good or bad, you'll have to know your desired cost per action, or CPA. If your
conversion rate is too low, then there are a number of things to look at that
may help raise your rate. As you can tell from the list above, this is one of
the harder issues to overcome, because the potential solutions comprise a broad
range, making the right solution difficult to find. The good news is this: raise
your conversion rate and you will increase the profitability of your PPC
efforts. There may be additional issues that are adding to your cost and/or
keeping your sales low, but, if your conversion rate is too low, then efforts in
other areas of your campaign may either not work, or could even end up costing
you more money in the long run.
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About the AuthorLachlan Brown is the owner and senior consultant for Tech for
People http://www.techforpeopl |