Using PPC To Maximize Your Search Engine Positioning ROI
Author: Dave Davies
<h1> By Dave Davies, Beanstalk Search Engine Positioning, Inc. </h1> <p>The quest for higher search engine positioning on the
natural search engines is generally the quest to increase
revenue from a product or service. It is not the rankings
themselves that hold any special value; it is the visitors that
they bring and the resulting increase in business. It is for
this reason that the PPC engines and namely the secondary ones
are a great tool in developing a campaign strategy for the
natural engines that will produce the highest return on
investment.</p> <p>While tools such as the <a
href=" http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion/" target="_blank">Overture Search Term Suggestion Tool</a> and <a
href=" http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/resources/recommended/wordtracker.htm" target="_blank">WordTracker</a> are great tools for
helping to determine which phrases are most searched, they
cannot provide you with which phrases will produce the highest
return on investment and let's be honest, search engine
positioning is not about traffic it's about money. While traffic
can often mean money, knowing which search phrases are going to
lead to the highest conversion rates will give you a great
advantage going into your SEO campaign.</p> <p>While testing
phrases on the PPC engines will result in an increased timeframe
for your search engine positioning campaign, this step can
result in much higher conversions from the traffic you are going to get. For example, if you were a business owner who was
promoting a brand new acne treatment and you were to simply look
for the phrases with the highest numbers of searches to target
in the promotions for your site, you would undoubtedly settle on
the single keyword "acne" as your primary targeted phrase. Will
this produce the highest ROI? Unlikely and lets take a look at
why:</p> <p><strong>Keyword phrase: acne</strong>
Searches:
2,470/day estimated on WordTracker Inbound links of #1 site:
2,642 on MSN Number of pages of #1 site: 34,100
Approximate cost to optimize site assuming it is new with 50+
pages: $7,000 - $10,000 with guarantee.
Now, let's a take a
look at a less competitive phrase such as "acne treatment":</p>
<p><strong>Keyword phrase: acne treatment</strong> Searches:
516/day estimated on WordTracker
Inbound links of #1 site:
216 on MSN Number of pages of #1 site: 153 Approximate
cost to optimize site assuming it is new with 20+ pages: $3,000
- $5,000 with guarantee.</p> <p>Armed with this information you
would then want to test these two phrases on the PPC engines.
Engines such as Google and Overture provide great reporting
tools that will enable a website owner to actually track which
phrases are converting for them, however at $8.85/click on
Overture to be #1 for "acne" or $2.90 to be #1 for "acne
treatment", that option may be just a bit out of your price
range. And so we have the secondary engines.</p>
<p>Pay-per-click engines such as Enhance Interactive (formerly
Ah-ha) make a great testing ground for those choosing their
keyword phrases. Ranking #1 for "acne" on Enhance can be had for
$0.15/click and "acne treatment" is only $0.23 to be #1. Setting
aside the money that could potentially be made from the PPC
engines themselves, with bids this low this engine and others
like it make great testing grounds for keyword selection.</p>
<p>To test your keyword phrases simply bid to be #1 or at least
in the top three for a potential primary target phrase. Keep the
site ranking for a couple weeks monitoring your traffic and the
sales of your product/service. After a couple weeks remove the
phrase from your list and switch it to an alternative phrase.
Again, monitor this success of this phrase for a couple weeks.
After you have tested all of your potential primary phrases you
will be in a position to assess which one will produce the
highest return on investment.</p> <p>Selecting which phrase will
produce the highest ROI based on these numbers can be a bit more
involved, weighing a number of factors such as the cost in
either time or money (or both) to optimize for the various
phrases, the sales-per-click ratio, etc. Basically what you want
to do is consider your budget vs. how much can you make per
click and thus, how many sales you can expect per day based on
the keyword phrase you have chosen to target. If a promotion can
pay for itself over a 3 to 6 month period of time, thus
producing a surplus after it is paid off, it can be considered a
successful promotion.</p> <p>It should be noted that this step
is not an exact science. The number of sales you will get per
day will be dependant on exactly what position you attain on the
natural engines (your content is also important obviously,
however you will have used your existing content on the PPC
engines so for the most part you will be comparing
apples-to-apples). There will be some guestimation but you will
get a good idea of how many sales you would make if you ranked
in the same position for all of the possible phrases.</p>
<p>While I have not tested the above noted phrases on the PPC
engines and applied them to the natural engines I would feel
confident in predicting the ROI would be higher for "acne
treatment" based on two factors:</p> <ol> <li>The competition is
lower and thus the number of sales required to produce a return
on investment is about half that of the phrase "acne".</li> <li>
The phrase is far more targeted. People searching for "acne" may
be writing papers on the subject or just looking for information
whereas people searching for "acne treatment" are far more
likely to be looking for a solution to an acne problem.</li>
</ol> <p>While I have my instinct on the subject, were I to
advise a client on the best possible strategy I would have to
recommend testing these phrase on the PPC engines. It may extend
the promotion for a bit but in the end the decision on which
keyword phrase makes the best target will be based far more on
statistics and facts than a simple guestimate.</p>
<p><strong>Additional Considerations:</strong></p> <p>While this
article's purpose is to explain how PPC engines can be used to
help increase the ROI of a search engine positioning campaign,
your use of the PPC engines should not stop there. While you are
testing out phrases you should be making sales as well. If the
revenue generated from the PPC promotion is higher that it's
cost then stick with it. PPC engines are a great testing ground
however they're also a great source of leads and revenue if used
correctly.</p>
<p>There are many PPC engines out there. We've
researched a number of them and posted the ones that have
produced the highest ROI for our clients on our <a
href=" http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/info/ppc.htm"
target="_blank">PPC Engines page</a>. These are the engines that
we have found are worth sticking with once any testing phase is
complete. In the case of the primary engines (Google and
Overture) you will have to use your discretion based on the
cost-per-click to determine whether they are worth testing or
advertising on.</p> <p></p> <p>Dave Davies is the CEO of <a
href=" http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/>" Beanstalk Search Engine
Positioning, Inc</a>. He has been optimizing and ranking
websites for over three years and has a solid history of
success. Dave is available to answer any questions that you may
have about your website and how to get it into the top positions
on the <a
href=" http://www.beanstalk-inc.com/info/search-engines-major.htm">major search engines.</a></p> |