What Is PPC & How Paid Search Marketing Works
Chapter 1
What is PPC? How does it work? And, most
importantly, how can you make it work for you?
This chapter will introduce you to
everything you need to know about the exciting world of paid search marketing:
keywords, ads, budgets and bids, ad rank, targeting, and conversions.
Let’s kick things off with the basics.
What Is PPC?
Pay-per-click (PPC) is an advertising model
that lets marketers place ads on an ad platform and pay the host of that platform
every time their ad is clicked.
The goal of a PPC ad is to lead the person
viewing it to click through to the advertiser’s website or app, where that
visitor can complete a valuable action, such as purchasing a product.
Search engines are incredibly popular
advertising platforms. They allow you to display ads that are relevant to what
users are searching for.
Advertising services like Google Ads and
Bing Ads operate with real-time bidding (RTB), where advertising inventory is
sold in a private automated auction using real-time data.
How Paid Search Works
Every time there is an ad spot on a search
engine results page (SERP), an instantaneous auction takes place for the
keyword.
A combination of multiple factors,
including bid amount and the quality of the ad, decide the winner who will
appear in the top spot of the SERP.
These auctions are what keeps the gears of
PPC moving.
Auctions begin when someone searches for
something on a search engine; if there are advertisers interested in showing
ads related to a user’s search query, an auction is triggered based on keywords
that are bid on by advertisers. The ads that win the auction then appear on the
search engine results page.
To get involved in these auctions,
advertisers use accounts on platforms like Google Ads to set up their ads and
determine where and when they would like those ads to appear.
Accounts are split into campaigns for ease
of management and reporting of different locations, product types, or other
useful categorization.
Campaigns are further divided into ad
groups which contain keywords and relevant ads.
Keywords
Keywords lie at the center of PPC,
connecting advertisers to users’ search queries.
- Queries are the actual words that users type into the search box of a search engine in order to find results.
- Keywords, on the other hand, are
what marketers use to target these users by matching their search queries.
Keywords work as generalized abstractions
of a wide range of search queries, which are prone to irregularities like
misspellings.
Depending on the keyword match types they
use, advertisers can match search queries with more or less precision.
For example, advertisers can choose to
match keywords with search queries exactly or to allow for variations such as
different orderings of the words, different spellings, or the inclusion of
other words.
It is also possible to have negative
keywords, which will prevent ads being triggered by search queries containing
those keywords, in order to avoid irrelevant traffic.
Ads
Along with keywords, you need to prepare
ads in your campaigns.
These are nestled together within ad groups
that target shared sets of keywords, and so are organized by common themes.
Ads are what the users will see if the
auction is won, so they’re very important to get right.
They typically contain a:
- Headline.
- URL.
- Description.
On a SERP they can show up on top of the
results or at the bottom of the page. It’s good practice to test different
versions of ad copy to see what performs best.
Services like Google Ads and Bing Ads
provide features called ad extensions that enhance the appearance of ads.
Examples include:
- Sitelink extensions, which populate an ad with more links to
different pages on a site.
- Call extensions, which add a phone number to the ad during
business hours.
Ad extensions are great as they increase
the visibility of ads by making them more engaging to users while communicating
more information.
Budgets & Bids
In order to participate in the auction,
advertisers need to decide how much they’re willing to spend on a given
keyword. This is done using:
- Budgets at the campaign level.
- Bids at the ad group or
keyword level.
Budgets are set at the campaign level and
can be exceeded on a daily basis, but will not be overspent on a monthly basis.
Budgets should be set according to overall account strategy, but bids are a
more precise way of controlling spending.
All ad groups must have bids, but keyword
level bids override ad group level bids.
ADVERTISEMENT
Due to the RTB system, the actual amount
paid by the advertiser is dependent on competitor activity and ad rank, not
just the maximum bid.
Ad Rank
There’s more to winning the auction than
having the highest bid.
Search engines look at other factors to
determine which ads should be at the top and most valuable spot on the SERP.
Search engines have their own particular
ways of factoring in other elements to determine ad rank. Google, for example,
considers:
- Bid amount.
- Ad relevance and quality.
- The context of the search (such as the user’s device and time
of day).
- Format impact (whether it includes extensions that enhance the
format of the ad).
Quality Score is a metric that determines
ad relevance. The components of Quality Score are:
- Historical click-through rate (CTR).
- Relevance of the keyword to the ad.
- Relevance of the keyword and ad to the search query.
- Landing page quality.
Ad relevance is absolutely essential; the
higher Quality Score is, the lower the CPC will be.
Search engines penalize advertisers who bid
on keywords with low Quality Scores by rarely showing their ads, even if they
have high bids.
That’s why it’s very important to have
engaging and relevant ad copy that includes high-volume keywords.
But landing page quality shouldn’t be
overlooked either; ads will show less often when they point to sites with poor
user experience.
The webpage must be relevant to the user,
load quickly and provide an overall smooth user experience on all devices.
Targeting
Choosing the right keywords is what allows
advertisers to show ads to relevant audiences.
But there are other targeting options
available to optimize campaigns, including:
- Device.
- Location.
- Day and time.
- Demographics.
This way, advertisers can target users who
are on mobile in the evening or users who are under 25 and within a certain
radius of a particular location, in order to optimize the performance of their
ads.
These targeting options are incredibly
valuable because different variations of ad copy, for example, might perform
better for one group of users than for another.
It can also be possible, using remarketing
tools that allow for more specific ad copy messaging and adjusted budgets, to
target or exclude past visitors to a website who do follow-up searches.
Bids can be automatically adjusted for
keywords based on targeting options, giving advertisers more control over
traffic and spend by bidding when customers are more valuable to the business.
Conversions
The point of all this hard work isn’t to
just get clicks.
The real end game is to obtain conversions.
Conversions are the actions that advertisers want users to complete after clicking on an ad, and depend on the type of business being advertised.
The real end game is to obtain conversions.
Conversions are the actions that advertisers want users to complete after clicking on an ad, and depend on the type of business being advertised.
Common examples of conversions include:
- Purchasing a service.
- Signing up for a newsletter.
- Placing a phone call.
It’s super important to track conversions
in order to know whether a PPC campaign is doing well and how many conversions
can be attributed to paid search rather than other marketing channels.
Platforms like Google Ads can track
conversions using a snippet of code that is placed into the source code of the
conversion page (which is reached after conversion, like a thank you page) to
collect conversion data.
Conversion tracking can be a bit tricky,
because conversion paths also have a tendency to be more complicated than a
simple click on an ad and a direct purchase.
They often include multiple searches and
website visits, or can lead to an email, phone call or in-store visit.
Using an
analytics service like Google Analytics can help to decide how credit for
conversions is assigned in conversion paths.
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