Search Engine Marketing, Inc.: Driving Search Traffic to Your Companys Web Site [Electronic resources]

Mike Moran, Bill Hunt

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Your Paid Search Philosophy

You're probably getting used to it, but we're going to get philosophical again. Just because it is so easy to start a paid search program doesn't mean that you should not do some thinking first. In fact, because it is so easy to shoot from the hip, it is probable that some of your competitors run their programs that way. So, just a little thinking on your part can pay big dividends.

We spend the rest of this chapter explaining how to optimize your paid search campaign, but before we do, do you know what it is worth to you? As we have throughout this book, we harp on measurements. So, let's look first at what we know about the value of paid search.

Look for Value

Gunning for #1. That is the philosophy of the rookie search marketer. But let's take a step back and see whether we can adopt the philosophy of a cagey veteran marketer instead. The savvy marketer is looking for value, so let's examine how you find value in paid search.

We know that paid search drives traffic. You learned earlier that shopping search, in particular, drives visitors that are much more likely to buy than garden-variety searchers. But what about paid placement? Atlas DMT, a paid search software vendor, has demonstrated that paid placement can be highly effective in driving traffic, and that garnering the top positions drives the most. (Not exactly rocket science, huh?)conversions are your focus. So, does getting a top paid search ranking give you the greatest number of conversions? Not always. Another study from those busy Atlas folks showed that the highest conversion rate is generally found for the top ranking results, but conversion rates vary by keyword demand. The 20 percent of keywords in the greatest demand had high conversion rates for the highest-ranked results, but the remaining 80 percent were all over the mapthose 80 percent lower-demand keywords frequently produced higher conversion rates for their lower results than for top slots. Some Google results that landed at positions 810 had higher conversions than the #1 for the same keyword, for example. Less markedly, less-popular Yahoo! queries often showed similar conversion rates for the #1 and #10 results.value, regardless of the rankings. Although top rankings generally drive more traffic to your site, you saw that rankings do not always correlate with traffic. And besides, your goal is to drive the most conversions at the lowest pricethat is what "value" means. We know that we might need to do a little extra work to find value, but the studies say that the value is there.

Play the Market

Paid search is a marketplace, so you might as well apply what you know about markets as part of your paid search philosophy. All markets are made up of buyers and sellers, and prices fluctuate based on supply and demand. When supply is high relative to demand, prices are cheap. As more and more buyers chase after fewer and fewer goods, however, prices rise, the economists will tell you. So how does that apply to paid search? There aren't any "goods," after allit's just a spot on a Web page, isn't it?

Let's take a tour of the important market principles that underlie paid search markets, starting with the basics.

Paid Search Market Basics

Although economists like to talk about "goods," market forces apply to services, too. Think about how passenger seat prices are set for an airline. Tickets bought far in advance are usually discounted because the airline collects the passenger's money long before the flight. Nonrefundable tickets are cheaper than refundable tickets because the airline locks in a sale. Because early payments and guaranteed sales have value to the airline, the airline lowers the price of the ticket in those circumstances. But what happens as the day of the flight approaches? If there are few remaining seats, the airline raises prices, so that last-minute business fliers pay top dollar because they have no alternative. If many seats remain, however, the airline might deeply discount each ticket hoping to attract impulse vacationers, because every ticket sold, even at a deep discount, is worth more than an empty seat.

Paid search markets have some of the elements of airline pricing. Shopping search engines do not charge the same per-click fee for every category because some categories are worth more than others to search marketers. Categories for products with higher prices (and presumably higher profits) tend to cost more than those for inexpensive items, just the way airlines try to offer vacationers bigger discounts than business travelers.

Other forms of advertising follow market principles, too. Commercials on highly rated prime-time TV shows cost more than those during the Late Late Show. When more people watch the show, advertisers pay more to reach them. For the same reason, high-demand keywords tend to cost more than less-popular ones because search marketers are paying for traffic (and they hope conversions).

But shopping search and paid placement are two different kinds of markets. You do not typically bid on your per-click fees with shopping search engines, where the seller sets the price and the buyer decides whether to pay the price or not. Paid placement is an auction market, in which only minimum bids are set and the price is set by whatever buyers are willing to pay.

For shopping search, your philosophy, as you saw earlier, is to find value. You need to determine which products you should sell through shopping search and which ones do not pay. You must know when the per-click fee charged for your product category by a shopping search engine does not allow you to turn a profit, so that you can walk away from that "opportunity." Later in the chapter, we show you how to calculate that. If the price is too high for you, you might check other shopping search engines to see whether they are cheaper or avoid them altogether.

Auction Pricing

Auction markets have a different ethos than fixed-price markets. When the number of buyers is high, the prices at auction markets tend to be high, too, because more buyers are chasing fewer goods (and perhaps because the prices more accurately reflect the value of what is being sold). Auction markets also result in more sales, because items that would go wanting if priced too high are sold at a price that might disappoint the seller, but they are still sold.

Think about how eBay works. Many unique items sold on eBay would have brought a fraction of their price at a garage sale, simply because a higher number of serious collectors are exposed to the item on eBay. On the other hand, commonplace items sell for cheap prices because of the high number of sellers who make them available compared to the size of the buyer market for those items.

Economists call this phenomenon scarcityscarce items cost more when many people desire them. And scarce items fetch far higher prices at auction, which is why auction houses are always selling memorabilia or a celebrity's estate. If there is only one of something, and two rich people both want it, the price can go sky-high.

Paid placement follows the scarcity principleonly one result ranks #1 for every keyword within a search engine. If two bidders are determined to be #1 for a keyword, prices can skyrocket in a matter of hours.

Efficiency Is Everything

When you are faced with markets such as shopping search and paid placement, you can watch prices gradually rise to the highest sustainable point. As more and more search marketers begin to play the paid placement game, prices tend to rise. They aren't making any more #1 positions for the digital cameras keyword. There's only one. The more bidders that want it, the higher per-click fees will go. (Similarly, the more players enter the digital camera product category, the higher the per-click fees that the shopping search engines can charge.)

Economists call this tendency market efficiencysellers will, over time, maximize the price based on the value to the buyers. And economic price theory holds that, over time, all benefits of an item will be incorporated into its price as buyers' knowledge becomes "perfect." Well, nothing is perfect in real life, only in economic theory, so inefficiencies exist everywhere in markets, just waiting to be exploited.

Your job: Find them. Think about how the stock market works. If everyone knew exactly what every stock was worth at any given moment in time, there would not be much point to buying and selling. However, one of the reasons that shares of stock are bought and sold is that two people have very different opinions about what the stock is worth. One reason this is so is that, economic theory notwithstanding, some of the "knowledge" that people have is irrational. It makes no sense at all. Search marketing is no different. If you are rational, you will usually outdo emotional types and guessers. It is like the stock market in that you need information to get an edge, but not hot tips. The information you need is right under your nose and you can gather it.

Unlike the stock market, paid search is not worth the same amount to every company. Even if every site paid the same 25¢ per click, some companies would make more money on that click than others. If you gather the information available to you, you will know what each keyword's position is worth to you, so you will never overpay.

So how do you know what to pay? How do you know whether that shopping search click is worth 25¢? Or whether the #1 placement for that keyword is worth 93¢? That is where the Web Conversion Cycle comes in. If you know the value of every conversion, and you know your conversion rate from your search referral, you know what that referral is worth. Then you can decide what to pay.

But it is usually more complicated than that, because the shopping search engines might be charging more than you can afford for some products, or the high rankings in paid placement are bid through the roof. How can others afford to pay when you cannot?

Two answers are possible. One is that they are nuts. They are bidding to keep that #1 position, and they lose money on every sale. If that's the case, you probably have a short-term problem; economics has this funny way of correcting problems such as money-losing bidding. Although annoying, you can withstand that situation for as long as it lasts.

But you might, in fact, have a more serious problem. Perhaps they can pay higher prices because they are more efficient than you are. Maybe they can make money at that high rate, but you cannot. Several reasons could account for this:

Their costs are lower. If they can turn a much higher profit per item than your business can, they can afford to bid higher per-click costs and drive their sales up from improved traffic. Or they can pay the shopping search per-click costs for more of their products than you can.

They turn their inventory faster. If they can sell twice as many items per month as you do, they tie up their cash in inventory for far shorter periods of time for the same amount of merchandise. (In brick-and-mortar-retail, grocery stores can operate profitably with a much lower profit margin than furniture stores because grocers "turn" their inventory so many times more each year.) Their higher turn rate will lower their costs and allow them to bid higher in paid placement and cover more items in shopping search.

Their clickthrough rate is higher. If their ad copy (or their brand name) causes higher clickthrough rates, they might drive more Google traffic for the same ad budget than you do. That means each click costs them less than it costs you.

Their conversion rate is higher. If their Web site visitors convert at higher rates, they sell more items than you do for the same ad budget. Each click is worth more to them than to you.

They know something you don't know. Maybe you are trying to get the lowest cost per order, and they are going for the highest revenue. Perhaps you are budgeting based on profit margin, and they are budgeting based on lifetime value. Later in this chapter, we highlight your metrics choices and you can decide which one truly captures the value of every search click. The higher that you are able to justify the value, the higher you can profitably bid, so having the most complete model of value puts you in the strongest competitive position.

So, to take advantage of inefficiencies in the market, you must make your business as efficient as possible, so that you will have all of those advantages over your competitors, rather than the other way around. As a search marketer, you will not have much impact on whether your company is the low-cost producer in your field, and you will not have a great deal to do with how fast your inventory turns, but there are a lot of things you can affect, which we discuss later in this chapter.

Keep in mind that the only way to affect anything is to have the necessary information. As you drive for efficiency, you want to know the conversion rate for every product you sell (for shopping search) and for every keyword you buy (for paid placement), but you want to know much more. Are conversions higher

From certain search engines?

In certain positions?

With certain copy?

With certain landing pages?

At certain times?

If so, you can take advantage, as we explain later. By gathering the most detailed information possible, you will know the right situations to play the market and when to hang back. But ratcheting up your efficiency is only part of the game. You also need to learn about an old business maxim of using other people's money.

Other People's Money

Some of the richest people around got there by investing other people's money. If the investment fails, they lose nothing; if it succeeds, however, they will get something out of it. Frequently these smart people get a management fee or a cut of the proceeds for their contribution to the success.

Smart search marketers can use other people's money, too. Here are several ways to do that:

Raid sales budgets. One of the best ways to get investment in your paid search campaign is to raid other budgets, and the sales budget is one place to start. If you can show that your paid search program is wildly profitable, but you do not have a high enough budget to fund any more of those oh-so-profitable clicks, maybe your sales team does. If you can show that your return on spending is higher than the payback on their latest incentive program, you might get some of their money.

Raid marketing budgets. If your company spends money on brand marketing, maybe you can take some of it for paid search. You are already showing how paid search delivers conversions, but did you know it can raise brand awareness, too? Surveys show that searchers are 27 percent more likely to recall a well-known brand returned as the #1 paid placement result than searchers who did not see that ad. Contextual ads show a 23 percent lift. If the marketing team is willing to kick in extra money, you can afford higher bids for the most popular keywords.

Raid other product budgets. Does your product "drag" other sales in its wake? A sale of a computer might include software, services, and financing. Selling a washing machine might include a maintenance agreement. A sale of a stapler might include staples. Think about your product. If there are other things that can be sold along with your product, other people in your business are just as interested in you selling your product as you are. Can you offer these tie-in products on the checkout page? If so, will other product lines help subsidize your paid search costs to help improve their sales?

Raid your supplier's budgets. Do you sell a product that your supplier is as anxious to sell as you are? Steal a page from the offline marketing playbook and suggest cooperative advertising. Relatively new to search marketing, Intel, among others, is working with its key customers to defray the costs of search marketing. They pay part of your per-click fees for products that contain their components. You might want to approach your suppliers with a similar idea.

Raid your supply chain's budget. Suppose you are a business-to-business marketer but your paid placement keywords are attracting consumer clicks that just go to waste? Perhaps you can team up with one of your resellers to share the clicks (and the costs). If you sell wholesale and they sell retail, put up a landing page for those keywords that siphons searchers to the right site (yours or your retailer's) and you can split the per-click charges for the traffic you get. By doing so, you can share much higher bids for those keywords because none of the clicks are wasted.

Any of these techniques can make your budget go much further than if your philosophy is to go it alone, but you will be forced to share more information with your new-found partners than ever before, so you need to have close relationships for it to work well.

So far, you have learned a lot about how to develop a paid search philosophy, but the most important lesson is humilityyou will never get it completely right. Next we show you how to get it a little less wrong every day.

Iterate, Iterate, and Then Iterate Some More

Here's a secret: Paid placement won't work. At least, it won't work at first. When you start, you will find that your ads get so few clicks that they are disabled by the paid placement engine. Or you will find that your ads get loads of clicks, but almost no sales. Expect this. Expect it not to work. Your program will start badly.Chapter 8), which comes to about $12,500 a month. They knew that they needed to test, so they decided that they would spend much lessabout $1,000to start, believing that they could experiment to see what works before putting a lot of money behind their campaign later. Snap bought dozens of keywords for digital cameras and ran their keywords for just a few hours eachthe same hours each dayfor a week. By analyzing their results, they had a much better idea of the keywords that would be the most profitable in a full-blown campaign.