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> Get Articles > Pay Per Click Search Engines > Why I Don't Want a #1 Pay-Per-Click Search Engine Listing
Why I Don't Want a #1 Pay-Per-Click Search Engine Listing
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Dan B. Cauthron
DanEarn-Revenew.com
Earn-Revenew.com
http://Earn-Revenew.com
Pay-per-click search engines are backward.
- Your site is listed in the search results according to
pertinent keywords and key phrases, but those have nothing
to do with the rank or position of your listing.
- Anyone who has the bidding power can effectively buy
themselves a #1 position, but that may not be the position
that earns the best bottom-line profit over the long haul.
- Conventional ad writing wisdom is often blown to the
wind. In fact, you may be better off to clearly post your
price in your listing.
Pay-per-click is the ultimate concept in advertising cost
control. For each keyword or key phrase that relates to
your offer, you determine how much you are willing to
spend/bid for each click-through your site receives. The
higher you bid on any particular keyword/phrase, the higher
your listing will appear in the search results.
From a marketing standpoint that's wonderful, as searchers
who will view your listings will also be more likely to
have a valid interest in your business and your offerings.
Pay-per-click search results are, at least from the better
engines, more specific and more targeted than those from
conventional search engines like Google and Yahoo.
But recently we've heard pay-per-click advertising being
referred to as 'fool proof' and 'risk free.' Sorry dear
reader. That is far from the truth.
Before jumping into deep water with both feet, we advise
that you do your homework, and arm yourself with some
facts. An unchristened foray into PPC advertising can
quickly become a budget-busting money-sucking nightmare.
In fact, some aspects of pay-per-click advertising seem
backward, paradoxical, almost contrarian in nature. They
appear to fly in the face of the principles that we know
work well in other advertising venues. Just keep in mind
that things are not always as they seem. Regarde vous!
Where's the Best Position?
An almost automatic response to that question is likely to
be, 'Number One, of course.' That's because we're
programmed from childhood to believe that winners are the
ones that occupy the top of the heap. Not necessarily true
in PPC search engine advertising.
Consider this scenario. You're holding a #1 listing under
search results for a particular keyword. Your offer beats
the heck out of all your competitors only a few lines away.
Your price is right, your incentives to buy are great, and
you're locked and loaded for business.
Jane Searcher lands on your listing and clicks through to
your page. You pay for that click out of your bidding fund.
Now, Jane likes what she sees behind your #1 listing, but
she continues clicking on down the page to peruse
competitive offers, hoping she will find a better deal.
Ultimately, Jane decides that your competitors don't hold a
candle to what you're offering. She returns to your listing
and places an order. GREAT . . . except that you've just
paid for two clicks to get one sale. That will eat your
lunch fast, when you're bidding high to maintain that #1
position.
If your listing had been in position #3 or #4, Jane would
have most likely viewed your competitors' offers first,
before coming to yours, clicking once, and making a buying
decision on the spot.
Include Your Price In Your Listing
WHAT? We can't do that! We're supposed to gently and
persuasively lead the prospect into making that all
important buying decision, not slam her with a price up
front. Don't we have to spend a minimum of several hundred
carefully crafted words in convincing her of benefits and
features before we even begin to ask for money!
Maybe not. Again, it's contrary but true. Your price,
clearly stated in your listing, will help to weed out
curiosity-clickers and freebie-seekers, thus reducing your
cost per sale. Searchers who click through to your website
will know from the start that there is going to be a
purchase involved. The question here is, do you want clicks
from qualified buyers, or from penniless surf geeks?
Bid Lower . . . Not Higher
On a case by case basis of course, it might be in your best
interest to bid lower on a particular keyword/phrase and
accept a lower position for your listing. Keep in mind that
one of the primary keys to success with pay-per-click
search engine listings lies in carefully managing your cost.
It does you no good to get 2 fast sales per 100 clicks from
a 50 cent listing, when you might just as easily get those
two sales from 100 clicks to a 25 cent listing. Granted, it
may take longer for those sales to occur from a lower
ranked 25 cent listing. Your patience and optimism may be
tried sorely while you wait. But hopefully, your goal is a
solid and methodical bottom-line profit, and not the thrill
of the sale at any cost. That goes hand-in-hand with
compulsive gambling.
Pay special attention to the bid patterns on any page of
search results. Often there is a point in the listings
where the bids drop off dramatically, and reasonably good
positions are available for a relatively cheap bid. If the
drop-off point is still within the top ten, or even on the
same page with the top ten listings, that may be the place
to stake your claim.
Study, calculate, be patient, and make sales.
_________________________________________________
Dan B. Cauthron offers original marketing insights and a
7-Volume eMarketing Library to all new subscribers. Join
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