Did you know the average paid search marketing account spends $2,500 a month? That should tell you that the majority of companies using paid search are small business. So with a budget how do you maximize these dollars? Here are some paid search tips that are a must:
- Open a test account – If you are just starting out you are going to make mistakes, big ones. Ones that can really hurt your Quality Score and that will hurt your wallet with higher costs. Open a test account and have at it. Worst case will be you have done a great job on this account and you will then use it as your primary one.
- Change devices to computers and laptops – By default, Google will opt your account into all devices such as mobile, tablets and computers. Yes, mobile is growing rapidly and you will want to have device specific landing pages or websites but focus on computers and laptops while getting your feet wet.
- Choose the right keywords – I can not stress this enough. With a small budget every click counts and by finding the keywords that have less competition you will pay less per click and this will make your money go further. WordTracker, KeywordDiscovery, and the tools provided by Google and Yahoo! are all great starting points.
- Exact match only – By doing this it will reduce your spending while giving you the highest quality traffic.
- Daypart – Paid search marketing is one of the most competitive and tightly managed digital marketplaces that exists today. Yet in this world where daily micro-management of tens of thousands of keywords has become the norm, one of the simplest and most powerful strategies is often overlooked or underutilized. The art of dayparting is to shut down or start your campaign at certain times of the day to give your ads the maximium chance of being clicked by your targeted audiance. Cheryle Pingel, founder and president of Range Online Media, revealed what kinds of shoppers are on the Web and when. Men are generally buying before or at work between 6 and 8 a.m. Women, on the other hand, are shopping in the evening. So, if you’re selling football tickets you might want to boost your listings to a top spot in the morning. But if you run a woman’s shoe store, pause or delete your ad listings until after work hours.
- Go Long Tail - Longer Tail terms are ones that appeal to users searching for very niche or specific items. For example, a generic term from the B2C world would be ‘Teddy Bears’. A Long Tail term would be ‘Big Teddy Bears’ or ‘Big Teddy Bear Delivery’. This will help avoid the high cost generic terms and pick up traffic from people doing very specific searches. Not only will the CPC be significantly cheaper, but you’ll tend to find that prospects know exactly what they want, and the quality and number of inquiries resulting from the clicks will be much higher.
- Explore Content Networks – Personally I am not a big fan of content networks as they generally offer a lower quality visitor and will eat up your budget quickly. You can police and control campaigns to accommodate for these content network traps by building campaigns specifically for content networks.
- Ad Writing – By far the most important thing you can do to optimize your campaign. If your ad copy is stale or less relevant, you may suffer from a low clickthrough rate, which in turn will hurt your quality score (in Google) and make you pay more for your clicks. You can also lose positioning which allows your competitors to have a stronger opportunity to take your visitors. The beauty of this is that you can always have ads rotating, and if your new efforts do not pan out, the major search engines will automatically stick to what was working.
- Negative Keywords – A core component to managing your keyword list and saving your budget. Adding a negative keyword to your ad group or campaign means that your ads won’t show for search queries containing that term. By filtering out unwanted impressions, negative keywords can help you reach the most appropriate prospects, reduce your cost-per-click (CPC), and increase your ROI.
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