Pay Per Click or PPC is a way to advertise to a specific group of people who are searching for your information using keywords or a keyword phrase. It’s called Pay Per Click because you, as a business owner, only pay for the advertisement when someone clicks on it.
The clicks are good because they’re clicking on your URL and heading on over to your website where you can close the sale and make a profit.
There are different PPC programs through various search engines and companies however the most popular PPC service is Google AdWords.
It’s free to participate in AdWords however, before you to sign up there are a few questions you’ll want to answer including:
1. How many people are looking for your products or services? Keyword tools will help you find this information and it’s key to creating an effective PPC campaign.
2. How much will your click’s cost? Google’s traffic estimator will tell you how much it’ll cost you each time someone clicks on your ad. This is important because you can quickly spend thousands of dollars and if that’s not in your budget you need to design your campaign carefully.
3. Who are your competitors? Using Google, search for your keywords and pay attention to the ads that pop up in the right hand column of your search results. These are your competition. Study them carefully. Scan through the first couple of pages. When you see an ad that’s a repeat, you’ve gone through your competition. If there are more than 50 ads, you may want to reconsider a PPC campaign with those keywords.
Setting Up Your First Ad
Once you’ve determined the keywords you want to include in your ad, it’s time to write your first PPC ad. AdWords has a strict character limit. You get 25 keywords for your headline, 35 each for the next two lines of text, and then your URL. This means it’s time to get creative. You want a headline that captures attention and hopefully promises a benefit and then two sentences that inspire curiosity, evoke emotion, and motivate clicks through to your website.
Each PPC ad you create will be optimized for very specific keywords and should thus send readers to a relevant web page. If, for example, you have a PPC ad selling a dog training eBook and people who click through land on a page that sells dog care information you’re not going to have the same conversion rate as if you sent them directly to a sales page for that dog training eBook.
Once your ad is written, the rest is easy. Simply log onto or create your Google AdWords account and follow the steps. Set your budget low (you can always adjust it), create your ad, enter your billing information and you’re good to go. Oh, one final thing. Track the success of your PPC ads. You can fine tune them for optimal results, delete them and start over or add to your campaign.
5 comments on “Pay Per Click Basics”
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How much do we, as a business owner, usually have to pay per click?
It depends on your niche. Some niches can get clicks for very little, while others need big bucks to compete.
The more competitive the niche, the higher the cost. But, if you know how to research your keywords, you may find long tail keywords that are less expensive and convert better 😉
How much do we, as a business owner, usually have to pay per click?
It depends on your niche. Some niches can get clicks for very little, while others need big bucks to compete.
The more competitive the niche, the higher the cost. But, if you know how to research your keywords, you may find long tail keywords that are less expensive and convert better 😉