30th July 2008

Seven Ways to Increase Pay-Per-Click ROI

Here are seven tips we share with clients to optimize their pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns:

1. Track on a macro-action basis. Track every keyword/key phrase to conversion on a macro-action basis. A poor result for a particular keyword or key phrase doesn’t mean you should drop it. It means your Web site should better accommodate it.

2. Track on a micro-action basis. Track every keyword/key phrase to conversion on a micro-action basis. This clarifies how your visitors interact with your Web site’s persuasive dialogue. Micro-actions are key decisions that must be made before a visitor can decide to buy — the action that’s your ultimate goal. It lets you optimize your Web site’s dialogue to terms you use with persuasive architecture.

3. Select keywords based on buying process. Choose your keywords/key phrases based on an understanding of the buying process for your product or service.

There are four types of site visitors. The first arrive by accident. Make sure your unique value proposition is clear to ease him out and offer the next three types a reason to stick around. Make it easy for someone who knows exactly what she wants to find it. Ensure you can accommodate the typical shopper who only knows approximately what he wants. Offer him categorization tools to narrow down the selection. Don’t forget the last type, who is more of a “window shopper.” She may be enticed to buy depending on how you present to her.

4. Use visitor latency. Some terms won’t immediately convert well in a campaign, so track macro-actions and micro-action factoring in latency. In a recent study with a shared client, Jim Novo documented how visitors came in cycles of 14 days from PPC engine to actual purchase. PPC ad campaigns are just that — campaigns — not one-off tactics.

5. Define metrics clearly. Calculate return on investment (ROI) correctly. Divide the amount you spend per keyword/key phrase by your gross margin (gross profit minus cost of goods sold) on products or services bought from that keyword/key phrase. If you want to generate leads, establish a base amount every lead is worth. Divide the amount you spend per keyword/key phrase by your value per lead.

6. Go broad. Focus on those keywords/key phrases with the greatest ROI before those with the most traffic or gross sales. You don’t need to be ranked number one. Many of our clients have found the top position has lower ROI than other strategic positions. My ClickZ colleague Kevin Lee says, “Broad campaigns are worth the effort. Broader terms are cheaper and often equally, or even better, targeted. Added up, you could run one powerful campaign.”

7. Engage visitors in persuasive dialogue. Use persuasive architecture to anticipate visitors’ frame of mind, plan the action you want them to take, and tell them what they need to know before they can take that action. Match ad copy closely with keywords so the visitor perceives the relevance. Then, make sure the persuasive dialogue on your site is the dialogue your visitor wants to engage in.

Spread the word: readit

Source: www.clickz.com

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