reposted from MarketingProfs
The price you bid is almost never the price you actually pay. You almost always pay less.
First, it’s a little bit like Ebay. You pay 1 cent above the position below you, not the maximum that you bid.
But there’s an even more important secret that is the key to getting lower and lower prices, even while other bidders are jumping into the game:
Your Clickthrough Rate (CTR) is MORE important than how much you bid.
The Clickthrough Rate is the percentage of people searching who actually click. If 100 people search, your ad shows up 100 times, and one person clicks through, that’s a 1% clickthrough rate.
So let’s say I’ve got a 1% CTR and I’m paying $1.00 for position #2.
Let’s say you’ve got a 2% CTR. If you play your cards right, you may only have to pay 51 cents to get position #2 and knock me down to position #3.
That means that you were 2 times as relevant, and you got to pay 1/2 as much!
The rules can be very simple, but the implications are huge.
When you achieve high click-thru rates, you can pull your bid prices down, down, down and yet stay at the same position on the page, while your traffic goes up.
The difference can be quite amazing. Here’s an example of two ads – they are ALMOST IDENTICAL but one got nearly TWENTY TIMES the CTR as the other:
Headline: Popular Ethernet Terms
Ad:
3 Page Guide – Free PDF Download
Complex Words – Simple Definitions
Link: www.bb-elec.comPopular Ethernet Terms
- Why Your Bid Price is NOT the Actual Price You Pay – and the Huge Difference That Creates for You
- What to Do When Your Keywords Get Labeled ‘Inactive’
The price you bid is almost never the price you actually pay. You almost always pay less.
First, it’s a little bit like Ebay. You pay 1 cent above the position below you, not the maximum that you bid.
But there’s an even more important secret that is the key to getting lower and lower prices, even while other bidders are jumping into the game:
Your Clickthrough Rate (CTR) is MORE important than how much you bid.
The Clickthrough Rate is the percentage of people searching who actually click. If 100 people search, your ad shows up 100 times, and one person clicks through, that’s a 1% clickthrough rate.
So let’s say I’ve got a 1% CTR and I’m paying $1.00 for position #2.
Let’s say you’ve got a 2% CTR. If you play your cards right, you may only have to pay 51 cents to get position #2 and knock me down to position #3.
That means that you were 2 times as relevant, and you got to pay 1/2 as much!
The rules can be very simple, but the implications are huge.
When you achieve high click-thru rates, you can pull your bid prices down, down, down and yet stay at the same position on the page, while your traffic goes up.
The difference can be quite amazing. Here’s an example of two ads – they are ALMOST IDENTICAL but one got nearly TWENTY TIMES the CTR as the other:
Headline: Popular Ethernet Terms
Ad:
3 Page Guide – Free PDF Download
Complex Words – Simple Definitions
Link: www.bb-elec.comPopular Ethernet Terms
2 Clicks – CTR 0.1%
Headline: Popular Ethernet TermsAd: Complex Words – Simple Definitions3 Page Guide – Free PDF Download
Complex Words – Simple Definitions
Headline: Popular Ethernet TermsAd: Complex Words – Simple Definitions3 Page Guide – Free PDF Download
Complex Words – Simple Definitions
3 Page Guide – Free PDF Download
Link: www.bb-elec.com
Link: www.bb-elec.com
39 Clicks – CTR 3.6%
Notice what happened: All I did was reverse two lines – and the clickthrough rate jumped from 0.1% to 3.6%!
That means that the ad on the bottom received more than TWENTY TIMES as much traffic – and I could pull down my bid prices and get that for the same amount of money as I was paying before.Just think how much money we’d be leaving on the table if we didn’t discover this!
Beat your best, and you can get more and more traffic for less.
Before I go, there’s one other thing I need to tell you: This is precisely the thing that gets people all tangled up over keywords that Google suddenly labels ‘inactive.’
While Google may tell you simply to bid more, the major reason that keywords get made ‘inactive’ is this: The message in the ad doesn’t match what the person wanted when they typed in the keyword!
How do you fix this problem? By organizing your keywords into narrow themes and by testing different ads that match people’s searches – like I described above.
Then watch as people’s clicks vote on the words that actually sell. This is an absolutely foolproof method of getting your ad placed higher on the page, and my Definitive Guide shows you dozens of variations on this method that you can use right away.
Notice what happened: All I did was reverse two lines – and the clickthrough rate jumped from 0.1% to 3.6%!
That means that the ad on the bottom received more than TWENTY TIMES as much traffic – and I could pull down my bid prices and get that for the same amount of money as I was paying before.Just think how much money we’d be leaving on the table if we didn’t discover this!
Beat your best, and you can get more and more traffic for less.
Before I go, there’s one other thing I need to tell you: This is precisely the thing that gets people all tangled up over keywords that Google suddenly labels ‘inactive.’
While Google may tell you simply to bid more, the major reason that keywords get made ‘inactive’ is this: The message in the ad doesn’t match what the person wanted when they typed in the keyword!
How do you fix this problem? By organizing your keywords into narrow themes and by testing different ads that match people’s searches – like I described above.
Then watch as people’s clicks vote on the words that actually sell. This is an absolutely foolproof method of getting your ad placed higher on the page, and my Definitive Guide shows you dozens of variations on this method that you can use right away.