There are many pay per click (PPC) search engines to choose from when you enter the realm of online marketing, but without doubt the absolute leader in the field is Google Adwords.
This does not mean that other PPC engines are not useful they can in fact be a great supplement to Adwords. What it does mean is that Adwords receives the greater share of targeted traffic, and if you understand how to use Adwords advanced platform correctly then you will be able to competently work in any other PPC environment.
The goal of Adwords and all PPC marketers, is to get ads into the market place and display those ads to the most targeted audience available as quickly and efficiently as possible. This Instant traffic is offered by PPC marketing and the following tips will enable all marketers to capitalise on this feature of Adwords.
Adwords Tips 9
What is the advertisers dream?
To be able to generate and drive large numbers of highly targeted free traffic to an ad or website, increase many fold you CTR and sales, improve your ad position and at the same time reduce your average cost per click. What could be better?
Whether you are completely new to marketing online or whether you are an advanced marketer, the sheer value of highly targeted free traffic can only enhance your efforts and help you progressing towards increased profits with decreased costs. The following e-book will help you to achieve these things and become a winning online marketer.
For a complete list of search engines, offering bonus credit links that will help you get started with Adwords, Yahoo, and the major pay per click search engines go to PPC Bonus Credit Links List.
Adwords Tips 10
Keywords
A technique that will benefit a beginner Adwords user is to setup smaller ad groups. More targeted ad groups may be better than having a large keyword list.
You can still target your market segments with many keywords but break them up into separate and tighter ad groups to improve relevancy and Quality Score, which will ultimately help you to lower costs per click.
One of the biggest traps inexperienced marketers fall into, because of a lack of research, is to throw everything into the mix disregarding the principle of relevancy.
When you enter a fruit shop you never find the potatoes mixed with the tomatoes or the lettuce with cabbages. The greengrocer will always display his produce in logically arranged groups according to type,colour, size and so on… and that is exactly what the trained experienced marketer will do.
Keyword sorting and arrangement is a skilled that develops with experience. It is not a speculative process but follows a precise process. Always follow the correct method if you want success. keywords are the interface that puts you and your product/service in front of your prospective buyers. If your setup is wrong you will not be selling to the correct market group or even worse you will destroy your quality score and ranking, resulting in higher costs and a bad return on investment.
A detailed analysis of keyword and key phrase location, combination, and use, is not the subject of this post, but is handled in detail in the Adwords Navigator Manual for anyone wanting more details. Also a great source of additional strategies and techniques can be found in the free Adwords Tips and Tricks Mini-Course. You can sign up for the Adwords tips course by going to the above link and scrolling down the page.
Adwords Tips 11
Badly Written Ads
The most relevant tip I can give you concerning your ad copy is to ensure that relevance is maintained between your ad groups and ad copy. One is not independent of the other. Success cannot be attained if you fail to ensure that your ad copy correctly reflects the keywords you are targeting.
Failure to follow this tip will result in costs going through the roof with no sales being made. The reason that no sales are made is that the wrong market segment is being targeted. With both keywords and ad copy your duty is to clearly define the market you are trying to approach. If you are not precise in targeting customers, or if you are in doubt about who our customers are then costs will increase.
Badly written ad copy does not present the features and benefits that the product/service on offer has. If your ad copy does not clearly tell prospective customers exactly why it is useful for them they will not buy it.
For example, imagine if you were looking for an e-book that taught you how to sail a boat, and when you conducted a search in Google you found ads that said, “Sailing Is Fun” or “Setting Sail”. Would you click on the ad? I know that, “I would’nt”.
But, if I found an ad that said, “Learn To Sail” or “Sailing For Beginners”, I would immediately take the plunge and click on the ad copy. So, the Adwords tip here is to be relevant and clearly explain what you have on offer.
I understand that there is not much space in 4 lines of ad copy to say a great deal, so what you need to do is find a quite spot and brainstorm for a while, until you have at least three of the most relevant features for your product. Now construct your ad copy around the most relevant feature. This is the feature that you believe makes your product stand out above the rest.
For example, it could be the price. If so, mention it in the ad then buyers can see that it is a real bargain. If your product is cheaper than the rest, let everyone know. Perhaps it is the most current updated version, or contains more features than the rest, or may be it is simply the most popular or reliable.
Whatever feature stands your product out from the rest is the feature to focus on in your ad copy. If there are no amazing features then perhaps there are some benefits you can think of that will likewise attract the attention of people reading your ad copy.
To sum up what has been presented, good ad copy will always contain keywords that are from the keyword list relevant for that ad copy and those keywords should be displayed in the ad headline as well as in the ad body.
Further, if possible, the ad copy should always present a significant or preferably a unique feature or benefit that your product has that is a more compelling purchasing stimulus than that of your competitors. Learning how to beat your competition is an art and the goal of advertising.
Keep an eye out for more Adwords Tips in Part 4. Keep checking for “Adwords Tips For PPC Profitability – Part 4” where we will look at some overlooked techniques and strategies that can triple your website sales when applied correctly.
Paul Goodwyn is the Founder/CEO of Adwords Navigator Tips Guide and writer of the best selling e-book on optimizing Adwords, “The Adwords Navigator Manual”. Paul is a well know marketing professional who has trained thousands of people in PPC management. For more detailed Adwords information regarding how to generate highly targeted traffic to your websites, both free and paid, and how to optimise a campaigns ability to make money, as well as to locate and organise keywords, how to ward-off unnecessary impressions and clicks, increase your click through rate and reduce your costs to make money marketing the way professionals do, and to getting Paul Goodwyn very own marketing plan please go to the Adwords Navigator Home page OR Adwords Navigator Blog for Adwords Tips updates.







