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Are You Paying Too Much For Traffic? Increase Clicks 40-Fold With This PPC Strategy
by Bill Platt
More Search Engine Optimization Articles
Published on this site: January 16th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month
In any business, if you can reduce your effective advertising
expenses, you will increase your profits. Many business owners
will opt to push the additional savings into more advertising,
and if you are utilizing the information described in this
article, you could feasibly increase your paid traffic by
40-times, with the exact same advertising budget.
But before I can show you how to reduce your advertising expenses
and increase your traffic, it is important for you to learn about
proper keyword research.
When playing the search engine rankings game, it is important to
know what people are "actually typing into the search engines"
in an attempt to find your business...
Food For Thought
Think about this, if you were going to take a vacation to Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, and you needed to find accommodations in Ft.
Lauderdale FL, what would your first search keywords be?
Would your first search be the generic search phrase, "travel"?
If you answered, "Certainly not", then you and I are not much
different...
Why would anyone type in the generic keyword "travel", when
they know specifically what they want, before doing the search?
They wouldn't, would they?
Some people will abbreviate the "Fort" in Fort Lauderdale;
others will not abbreviate. The same applies to the state
information - some will abbreviate; others will not. Some web
searchers will eliminate the state information, because they
assume that Google will know "which" Fort Lauderdale they mean.
(In the case of Fort Lauderdale, that is reasonable to believe.
But search for something like "Paris", and you might discover
that 23 U.S. states have a town or city named, Paris, along with
the country of France.)
People will search for a range of spellings for the locality, and
then they would add niche-specific keywords to their search,
utilizing words like:
- hotels
- hotel rooms
- hotel suites
- accommodations
Expand Your Thinking
Chances are that even if you sat down to generate a list of
keyword phrases that people might use to find your business in
the search engines, you will get stuck in the "keyword rut"
that bogs down so many other webmasters... The "keyword rut"
that I speak of is the one where we get a certain set of words
and types of words stuck in our heads, and that prevents us from
exploring the wider range of what might be available.
Even the best keyword research tools fail to show us the
full-range of related keywords - keyword research tools tend to
only show us the keyword phrases of a "similar root word". For
example, if you type in the word "hotel", you can get vastly
different results from the Google Keyword Research Tool and the
WordTracker Keyword Tool.
Just to prove my point, I ran the keyword "hotel" through both
keyword search tools. Google's Keyword Research Tool performed
better than the WordTracker tool, but WordTracker does provide
better estimates of search-volumes outside of the Google
universe.
While not all-inclusive, I wanted to show you a list of suggested
keywords that I was expecting to find using both tools. Behind
each Keyword, I indicate in parenthesis which tools provided
those suggestions to me...
- motels (Google - YES | WordTracker - YES) BOTH
- accommodations (Google - YES | WordTracker - no)
- bed and breakfast (Google - YES | WordTracker - no)
- b&b (Google - YES | WordTracker - no)
- vacation rentals (Google - no | WordTracker - no)
- vacation homes (Google - no | WordTracker - no)
- condos (Google - no | WordTracker - no)
- condominiums (Google - no | WordTracker - no)
- beach rentals (Google - no | WordTracker - no)
As you will note from this example, if you let the keyword
research tools do all of your thinking for you, then you would
have missed over half of the keyword phrases that are actually
relevant to your business...
That my friend spells m-i-s-s-e-d o-p-p-o-r-t-u-n-i-t-i-e-s!
How To Do Better Keyword Research
A trip to the library or your favorite bookstore could be the
best thing you will ever do for your business research / keyword
research...
Use book titles to narrow your search, but check the "back of
the book" for the Index, before you make your selection...
Many of the best books in the non-fiction niche have an index at
the end of the book, with page-after-page of topic related
keywords, with page numbers.
If you have selected the most relevant book from the shelf, and
it has a good Index at the end of it, you will have one of the
best resources you will ever need to do keyword research in your
niche.
Value The Long-Tail Keywords
Many people make the mistake of only chasing the high-volume
keyword phrases that signal strong interest in a topic...
However, the high-volume keywords have some inherent
shortcomings:
- Although 151 million searches are conducted using the word "travel" each month, that search will seldom generate a real
click, because the person searching for it will realize that more
specificity is to his or her best interest.
- If you are able to get a click from the search for "travel",
that click will cost an average of $2.25 in Google.
- If you are bidding high enough to be seen for a search for "travel", you will find your competitors to be many. It is
harder to be noticed among the crowd.
- If you do generate a click from your placement on the word "travel", that visitor may hit your website and leave to do
more shopping, since there are currently 11 paid listings on the
front page of Google for that search phrase. People will spend
less time on your site, if they know that they have more varied
choices.
The still-generic search for "Fort Lauderdale travel" will
require $1.72 per click, with 8,100 searches per month.
A more specific search for "Fort Lauderdale Florida hotels"
will actually cost an amazing $3.48 per click, but the hotels
that are paying for those leads are more likely to get a larger
portion of the 60,500 monthly searches, since this search phrase
is far more precise.
"Fort Lauderdale beach resorts" only costs $2.02 per click and
has 27,000 monthly searches, which is really inexpensive compared
to the still-generic "Fort Lauderdale Florida hotels".
"Fort Lauderdale resort" is even cheaper at $1.93 click, with
50,000 monthly searches.
"Fort Lauderdale beach place" gets a surprisingly high, 3,600
searches per month. It has two competitors and can be purchased
at an average of $1.06 per click.
...Do you see where we are going here?
Here is where I get to drive my point home... "Fort Lauderdale
reservations" gets 40,000 searches per month, and it has an
average Cost Per Click (CPC) in Google of a measly 5 cents per
click!
As individual searchers drill down into the search results, your
chances of appealing directly to them when they are likely to
make a purchase is greatly increased... And more to the point of
this article, you can generate a lot more traffic for a lot less
money...
If you have fewer competitors on the long-tail keywords AND you
pay less for those clicks, you could very well cobble together a
large list of long-tail keywords that will give you access to the
same volume of traffic you would get with one high-volume search,
for much less money!
Let me make my point with "Fort Lauderdale beach resorts",
which has 27,000 monthly searches at a rate of $2.02 per click,
and "Fort Lauderdale resort" with an 50,000 monthly searches
and an average CPC of $1.93. These two long-tail keywords
co-joined will be exposed to 77,000 people at Google, and those
clicks will cost an average of less than $2.02 per click.
If you simply compared the above example with the 60,000 searches
for "Fort Lauderdale Florida hotels" at $3.48 per click, you
will find that you can reach more people, at more than a 38%
discount in PPC pricing...
In Conclusion
There are many niches where you might advertise, where your
competitors are paying $2 to $6 per click in a shark-feeding
frenzy, and yet you can get 5 cent clicks all day long for other
relevant, more specific, long-tail keywords, with less search
volume... But, by bidding on more keywords, you could actually
get as much exposure as your competitors are getting, at a much
lower cost...
There is one niche where I am getting as much exposure as the
competition, but I am only paying 5 cents a click in MSN and
Google, while my competitors are fighting among each other for
the shorter, less specific keywords in the niche, at $2 to $6 per
click... In comparison, I am able to get 40 to 120 times more
traffic for my websites than my competitors are getting for the
exact same amount of money... And the people visiting my site
have pre-qualified themselves by drilling down to my extremely
relevant keywords for their searches...
As a business owner or manager, it is important to target your
PPC and SEO towards the actual keyword phrases that your
potential customers are using to find your website... But more
importantly, if you leverage the knowledge found in this article
and your efforts, you might be able to discover that you can tilt
the odds towards you getting the sale, and you can do it at a
cost that would make your competitors envious...
Bill Platt has been providing article distribution services since
2001 at http://thePhantomWriters.com/. Utilizing his nearly one
decade of article marketing experience, Bill Platt created a free
ebook titled, "Article Marketing: Beyond the Basics", which will
teach you why many people fail with article marketing, and how
you can turn your articles into profitable and productive
advertising tools. Get your copy of this article marketing ebook
that has been receiving rave reviews. Download it for free here:
http://thephantomwriters.com/ebooks/advanced-article-marketing.html.
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