Home > Articles > PPC Objectives
  SEO  |  PPC  |  Web Design & Development  |  Web Copy  |  Site Conversion  |  Email Marketing  |  Social Media


PPC Articles
PPC Objectives

Setting your PPC objectives



Before you set out on a PPC campaign, whether it be your first time or your hundred and first, you must be clear about your objectives. What would define success for you? The most common definition of success for a PPC campaign is the number of conversions on your site. Remember that a click and a conversion are very different animals; a click is just a visit to your site (that you pay Overture or Google for the privilege of welcoming), whereas a conversion is when this click finds something that they want on your site and performs an action. A conversion can be defined in any one of a number of ways; including but not limited to, a sale, a request for a brochure, a phone call, a download etc.

The parameters of conversion success also vary; most often with budget. How much is each conversion worth to you? Conversions for different types of product are normally different; a mortgage company would naturally be prepared to pay far more for a conversion than a site selling DVDs.

Success might also be measured in clicks (traffic) as part of a branding exercise, but conversions are most often the end goal. Keep in mind your definition of success during the campaign, and use the results to calibrate future campaigns. Set a time period to achieve this level. If you have not reached your target then you should reassess and improve your campaign.

So, how are you going to map out your PPC Objectives? For those beginning their debut campaign, a couple of pointers will help to start a basic but successful campaign.

First, focus your efforts on one major search engine to start. Overture and Google AdWords are the two biggest in the market, and we recommend starting with one of these two. You should not neglect the smaller PPC engines, but launching and optimising a PPC campaign takes a lot of time, and to start with you should probably focus your efforts on the campaigns that will yield the highest returns.

Second, you ought to focus on your unique selling point. Decide what you are selling and why someone should choose your product instead of one of your competitors. For example, if your price is lower than your competitors', experiment with ads that contain actual pricing information.

As time goes on, you should research all the possible keywords that your customers might be typing in to reach you. These keywords are likely to be less expensive per click that the more obvious term, as fewer companies will be bidding on these terms.

You must set out the objectives of your pay per click campaign before you start work, otherwise you will find it difficult to assess whether the campaign is a success or not, and you may end up spending more per click than your budget will allow.



0 comments. Give us your opinion.
More Articles

Online Marketing Articles

Travel, Cat Litter and Infidelity
UK or USA LeadGenerators Can Do It All
Four Different Ways to Tweet
3 Emerging Niches for Travel
Are Online Bookings the Bee’s Knees?
Online Checklist for the Christmas Season
Saved Online Sales vs. The Recession
Love Triangle: Offline, Online & You
7 Ways to Improve Online Marketing
The Future of Online Marketing in 2009
5 Reasons your Brochure & Site Should Differ
Google for the Rich, Yahoo for the Poor?
Keep Your Customers Happy Before They Book
What Marketers Can Learn From Teachers
2.0 Cost Effective Ways of Using Web 2.0
2008: The Year of Niche Travel
5 Reasons to Celebrate Your Travel Niche
Added Value for Advertising Agencies
Customer Reviews: Encourage Them!
Different Leads for Different Needs
Dynamic Packaging for the Travel Industry
Goodbye 2007, Hello 2008
LG Dictionary
Metro Magazine: Search Engine Analysis
The Rise of Mobile Marketing
Online Marketing and the Marketing Mix
Online Traffic Cycle
Shopping Cart Abandonment
Silver Surfers: The Old Are Getting Younger!
The Difference Between Offline & Online
The Full Service Agency Model
The Rise of Niche Travel
The Wide Wide World Of Search
To Google or Not To Google
Web 2.0 & Web Analytics
Why Freebies Don't Always Cut Into Profits
Why Would Customers Pick Your Site?
Automotive and Transport Sector Flying High
Automotive Sector Makes a Getaway
Easter Not Egg-cellent For Online Adverts
LG Search Index for Travel
Property Sales See an Online Decline
Q & A: Google Site Maps
Web 2.0: Content Not Budget Gets Results
WWW Stands For What Women Want: Part 1
WWW stands for What Women Want: Part 2

PPC Articles

SEO Articles

Keyword Research

Keyword Rich Content

Link Building

Web PR

Viral Link Articles

Site Conversion Articles

Web Development & Design Articles

Email Marketing Articles

Social Media Articles

Newsletters

Structural Analysis

Site Map Terms & Conditions