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Pay per click & Adwords
2005: expensive without expert help
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by: Drew Harris
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Copyright
2005 Drew Harris
Despite being online using email since 1995, at the start of the summer
of 2004 I had no idea what pay per click was.
During that summer, I had taken some time off work and was researching
online opportunities. This led me to Ebay, various get rich quick type
scams, and then an email referral to marketing using pay per click.
What was pay per click, I remember asking.
Days of research later, I learned that pay per click (also called ppc)
was a type of search marketing where advertisers pay a set amount every
time their ad was clicked by a prospect. This is known as a click thru,
click through rate or ctr.
The opportunity to place your ad directly in front of a prospect at the
exact moment they are searching for your product or service is
tremendous.
Performance based advertising is not only cost efficient and effective,
but it is track-able and user-friendly. The advertiser, you, in this
scenario has control over the keywords that best represent your
product.
The PPC model allows you to decide how much you are willing to pay per
customer. Unlike banner ads that demand payment on a cost per thousand
basis, the only viewers you pay for are those that are actively seeking
your product or service.
In a Google search, I learned the small sponsored ads on the right hand
side of the page were a type of pay per click called Google Adwords.
I discovered that the pay per click world was huge, with millions of
clicks delivered by hundreds of search engines such as Overture, Find
What, ePilot, Enhance and GoClick.
The great benefit is the cost-effective, highly targeted website
traffic that this type of search generates.
However, the massive popularity and growth of pay per click had also
made it very expensive.
For example, Google Adwords allowed me to set up campaigns and see them
live within 15 minutes. This was very, very exciting and very
addicting.
Within days of learning about pay per click, I was generating 1,000
clicks per day to my various campaigns. I thought I was seeing success
in pay per click.
In the early days of ppc, that may have been true because your bids on
popular keywords were just pennies a click.
By the time I was hitting it, popular keywords were around $1 dollar
per click and I was actually losing hundreds of dollars per day.
Worse yet, my keywords were being disabled and my ads were getting
disapproved.
Then I started watching for sales. I kept watching, and watching, and
watching and by the end of that first week, my 6,800 adwords clicks had
produced only 3 SALES for $55.
I was crushed. My brand new online business had already lost $500. This
is when I realized just how steep the learning curve was.
I signed up for free-5 part email courses on Adwords and pay per click.
I learned about converting traffic into sales, avoiding the curse of
disabled ads, return on investment, finding niche keywords and lowering
my cost per click.
Today, no one is quite sure where the pay per click industry is going.
The bottom line is pay per click campaigns can bring large numbers of
highly targeted visitors to your website. The industry is growing
rapidly, it is hugely competitive and campaigns can become
prohibitively expensive.
Success of any pay per click campaign comes down to paying pay a
reasonable price for each visitor, that each visitor is highly
targeted, and that you continuously monitor and track your positions.
About the author:
Adwords-Hints.com/pay-per-click shows you how to maximize profits from
Google Adwords and pay per click advertising. This website features
hundreds of pages of resources. Find tools for keyword analyzing,
lowering costs and increasing click throughs. http://tinyurl.com/5nb46
Circulated by Article Emporium
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