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Scoop Up Inexpensive & Neglected Traffic
Streams In The Pay-Per-Click Search Engines With These Three Simple
Bidding Strategies...
In the last issue of the "Marketing
Tips" newsletter, I attempted to take some of the mystery
out of making money and generating traffic with the pay-per-click
(PPC) search engines by showing you how to calculate your "maximum
bid" – what you can afford to pay for a single visitor to
your web site to guarantee you always make a profit! (If you missed
this article, you can click
here now to read it.)
This issue, I’d like to take this topic a step further by explaining
more in-depth how to use your "maximum bid" to funnel
traffic to your web site from the PPC search engines by…
- Bidding on inexpensive keywords that are frequently searched
by your target audience
– but virtually ignored by your competition!
- Spending less money to get the same traffic by paying
close attention to "bidding gaps."
Lately, PPC search engines have been gaining popularity with
web site owners who are looking for paid advertising that guarantees
traffic, sales, and profits – and this means that bids on
popular and common keywords have been steadily increasing.
However, it’s still possible to pay literally pennies for
frequently searched keywords and phrases that your best potential
customers are typing into the PPC search engines – you just need
to be educated in your approach and use the following three simple
bidding strategies.
Increase Your Traffic and Sales
With These
Three Simple Bidding Strategies:
Strategy #1 – Build a list
of targeted keywords and phrases.
When brainstorming a list of keywords and phrases to bid on,
your challenge is going to be thinking up terms that are commonly
searched by your best potential customers, but that aren't overly
expensive as a result of bidding wars between your competitors.
For example, if you sold cell phones you might consider bidding
for the key phrase "cell phones" in Overture.
However, a quick search of this phrase shows that to be ranked
in the #1 spot right now, you'd need to bid $1 per visitor. On
the other hand, you would only need to bid 26 cents per visitor
to be ranked #1 under the similar phrase "cellular phone
sale."
Now you could probably enlist the help of friends and colleagues
to come up with unusual variations of your common keyword list
– however, if you’re a stickler for accurate statistics like I
am, this guessing game isn’t going to satisfy you.
That’s why I recommend getting a little help from two powerful
tools that will tell you exactly which keywords your target
market is searching:
Tool #1: WordTracker
WordTracker is basically an online
tool that collects the search results from 24 major search engines
– including Overture.com,
FindWhat.com,
and numerous other top PPC search engines – and compiles them
into a database that is constantly being updated.
Simply type in your keyword and
WordTracker will return a list of related keywords and phrases.
This is a really useful feature because often produces keyword
combinations that you may not have thought of!
Plus, WordTracker will also tell
you:
- How many times a
particular keyword was searched during the past 24 hours
based on their database of well over 30 million queries,
- Exactly which misspellings
are drawing traffic (so you can bid on this traffic, too!),
- And how many web sites are
competing under a keyword in a particular search engine.
This is all the exact critical
information you need to make informed decisions about which
keywords are worth bidding for… and which are a waste of your
money!
Tool #2: Overture’s Search
Term Suggestion Tool
The other
tool worth checking out is Overture’s free Search Term Suggestion
Tool that takes the keywords and phrases you enter and gives
you a list of related keywords along with the number of times
each was searched in Overture during the past month.
It’s obviously
not as comprehensive as WordTracker, however, you could reasonably
assume that popular search terms in Overture – the giant of
the PPC search engines – will be relatively popular in the other
PPC search engines as well.
Important Note:
Before moving on to the next strategy, I can’t stress enough
the importance of choosing targeted keywords – words that aren’t
just frequently searched, but that are frequently searched
by individuals who fit the profile of a buyer on your site.
If you’re bidding on keywords that don’t really relate to your
product or web site, you’ll be wasting money on traffic that isn’t
interested in what you’re offering. Your money will be more profitably
spent on targeted keywords.
Strategy #2 – Calculate your
maximum bid.
In the last issue of the "Marketing Tips" newsletter,
I showed you step-by-step how to calculate the value of a single
visitor to your web site. This figure is very important because
the value of your visitors is also your maximum bid.
For example, if a single visitor to your web site is worth 75
cents profit, then your maximum bid should never exceed 75 cents
per visitor if you want to guarantee that your advertising always
remains profitable.
Warning: Should you be tempted
to enter a bidding war for a popular keyword that exceeds your
maximum bid, stop for a moment and think about all of those
dot-bombs who threw millions and millions of dollars into unprofitable
advertising, with vague notions about turning profitable 5 years
down the road. Then give your head a shake and focus on advertising
that’s really going to make you money!
If you don’t know the value of a visitor
to your web site, click
here now to review the last
issue of the "Marketing Tips" newsletter.
Strategy
#3 – Place strategic bids for cheap but popular keywords.
Once you’ve done the preliminary footwork, you’re ready to start
combing through your list of keywords one by one, looking for
those that are frequently searched by your target market, but
that aren't highly competitive (i.e. expensive!).
A really useful tool at this stage
in your research is CompareYourClicks.com,
a free site that will take any keyword or phrase you type in and
produce a comparison chart of the top bids in 9 of the PPC search
engines including Overture, FindWhat, Sprinks, Bay9, and more.
Overture offers a similar Get
Current Bid Tool, though
it obviously doesn’t offer bidding comparisons for the other PPC
search engines. (I guess we can forgive them… it’s their competition
after all.)
Simply type your keyword into either of these tools, and you’ll
be presented with a list of the top bids for that particular search
term. For example, when I typed "gift ideas" into the
Overture Bid Tool, here’s the list I was presented with:
- Lenox Has Something for Every
Collector
s0b.bluestreak.com (Cost to advertiser: $1.78)
- Give the Gift of an Online Business!
www.cihost.com (Cost to advertiser: $1.77)
- Great Gifts at GiftWild
www.giftwild.com (Cost to advertiser: $1.76)
- T.J. Maxx - You Should Go!
www.tjmaxx.com (Cost to advertiser: $1.73)
- Send Champagne or Wine Anywhere
in Hours
www.1-800-4champagne.com (Cost to advertiser: $1.19)
The gift industry is very competitive, so it shouldn't be too
surprising that bids for visitors are heading up towards $2 per
click. However, let me draw your attention to a couple of missed
opportunities in bidding strategies that exist here.
Opportunity #1 – Save Money By Closing The Gaps!
First of all, remember that we're looking at bids in Overture,
the giant of the PPC search engines, where ranking among the top
three bids means that you also get exposure under your particular
keyword or phrase in Yahoo!, AOL, Lycos, AltaVista, Netscape,
Hotbot, and Cnet.
So it obviously makes sense to try and rank among the top three
listings in Overture whenever you can afford it because you...
Dramatically increase your exposure in multiple
search engines through this single listing.
However, do you notice a problem with #3 – Great Gifts at GiftWild?
They're bidding 3 cents more than necessary to keep their ranking
in the top three! They could easily save themselves money by dropping
their bid to $1.74!
What's more, if #4 – T.J. Maxx can't afford to compete with the
top 3 bidders, then they should drop their bid by a whopping 53
cents to $1.20. They'd keep their #4 ranking, but avoid wasting
an unnecessary 53 cents per visitor!
When you're looking to place your bids, watch for gaps like these
and take advantage of them! Never bid more than necessary... and
monitor your bids once you've placed them to remove any gaps like
these that may appear. You'll save yourself a lot of money in
the long run – money that you can use to bid on more keywords
to drive even more traffic to your site!
Opportunity #2 – Go For The Traffic Your Competitors Are
Neglecting!
Grab the low-hanging fruit first. Why get sucked into an expensive
bidding war for one common search term when you can bid pennies
for multiple keywords and phrases to generate similar volumes
of traffic for a lot less cost!
Just to give you a simple example,
I searched the keyword "gift" in Overture's Search
Term Suggestion Tool and was provided with a list of
approximately 50 related keywords that included "unique gift
idea," "the gift," and "gift for a birthday."
Then I did
a traffic and bid comparison on the keywords I randomly selected
from this list using information from both Overture's Search
Term Suggestion Tool and
Current
Bid Tool, and here's what I discovered...
| Keyword: |
Traffic
|
#1
Spot |
#2
Spot |
#3
Spot |
#4
Spot |
|
gift
idea
|
45,613 |
$1.78 |
$1.77 |
$1.76 |
$1.73 |
| unique
gift idea |
3,774 |
$0.97 |
$0.96 |
$0.69 |
$0.68
|
| the gift |
3,132 |
$0.40 |
$0.37 |
$0.36 |
$0.30 |
| gift
for a birthday |
2,192 |
$0.06 |
$0.06 |
$0.06 |
$0.05 |
Obviously,
"gift idea" is the phrase more frequently searched –
that's why it's sooooo competitive at $1.78 per visitor for the
#1 spot.
However, who
says you have to bid on the most frequently searched term when
you can go after smaller traffic streams... like the bargain
find "gift for a birthday" at just 7 cents per visitor
for the #1 spot! Even 41 cents per visitor for the #1 spot
for "the gift"... or 70 cents per visitor for the #3
spot for "unique gift idea"... is a far cry from the
$1.78 these sites have been battling one another to pay.
Do you think
we should tell them? ;-)
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Key
Secret: Did you know that there are over 200 PPC
search engines? Sure, Overture is where you'll get the
majority of your traffic from; however, its popularity means
you pay more for each visitor you get.
With
the smaller PPC search engines like FindWhat, Kanoodle,
Sprinks, Bay9, etc... you can still place bids of 1 and
2 cents on popular keywords! Maybe you won't get the
same traffic that you will from Overture... but you're paying
pennies per visitor! So does it really matter?
Even
if a keyword in a smaller search engine only generates a
handful of extra visitors each month, it's still traffic
you wouldn't have without the bid! To get a complete list
of the PPC search engines, visit PayPerClickSearchEngines.com
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Final
Thoughts:
I know paid advertising like the
PPC search engines might seem a bit risky to those of you with
tight budgets. If you’re looking for new sources of traffic for
your site, though, I’d advise you to consider the strategies that
I’ve taught you in this article (as well as those in the last
issue of the "Marketing Tips" newsletter) very carefully.
The PPC search engines are one of
the few low-risk paid advertising opportunities that allow you
a LOT of control over your success. If you follow these few simple
rules that I’ve laid out for you here, keep your bids lower than
your maximum bid at all times, and choose keywords targeted to
your market, it's actually quite easy to funnel targeted traffic
into your web site.
Plus, you can really give yourself
an extra edge by looking for keywords that your competitors are
neglecting and scooping up these untouched traffic streams while
taking advantage of bidding gaps that make sliding your site into
a top 3 listing extremely easy!
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