It’s not measured in pure clicks. It’s not measured in how little you spend on a click.
We can’t even measure it solely by conversions.
PPC campaign success comes down to one all-important metric.
If you want to increase your PPC ROI, turning clicks into conversions is what truly matters.
To grow your business it all comes down to this question.
What’s it cost to acquire new customers vs. how much that customer is worth? How much money will they usually generate once they have converted to a customer?
What kind of ROI do you need to see from your pay-per-click advertising campaigns? 5X, 10X, 15X?
Let’s go over the basics of PPC advertising, and explore how to attain a high ROI.
Takeaways
- PPC works on a bidding system, with businesses bidding a certain amount of money for ad space on different search engine results pages (SERPs).
- To begin your seed list, consider each of these categories and how they align with your campaign goals.
- Align your landing pages with the ads to get the best results and don’t ignore your quality score.
What Is A PPC Campaign?
Pay-per-click or PPC marketing is a method in which advertisers pay for clicks generated on their ads.
This strategy works on a bidding system, with businesses bidding a certain amount of money for ad space on different search engine results pages (SERPs).
When a business has a PPC ad in place, they then pay a fee for each click their ad gets.
PPC campaigns put this strategy to work in order to generate more customer engagement and, ultimately, sales.
How To Launch A Successful PPC Campaign
1. Thorough Keyword Research
To have a successful PPC campaign, you must choose the right keywords to target.
These aren’t just any keywords or search terms that relate to your business. They’re strategic and designed to maximize your PPC ROI.
Effective keyword research follows 3 essential steps:
- Build a seed list – These are words off the top of your head. They’re also based on knowledge of your target audience, previous campaigns, and competitors.
- Use research tools to expand this list, or eliminate words – Tools will include keyword planners as well as tools that help you understand what the competition is using.
- Refining your list – Don’t skip this crucial step. It will cost you.
What Makes a Great Keyword?
A great PPC campaign and SEO keyword is actually a phrase or search query composed of 3-6 words.
If you just use a single word, the competition would typically be so high that you wouldn’t be able to get a decent ROI.
In the digital marketing world, we call these phrases long-tail keywords. But they’ve become the norm, replacing single words for many years now.
If you want to learn more tips on using long-tail keywords, read this post next.
A great keyword gets decent search volume without being too competitive.
A great PPC campaign keyword isn’t just any phrase that has to do with your business.
It has regard for what your goals are and where the customers who will see your ad are in the buyer’s journey.
Let’s look at 8 categories that you can put keywords into as you align keywords to the buyer’s journey and our goals.
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Audience-based keywords
These are very broad keywords. They are helpful especially in the brand awareness phase.
They may be just what you need if you’re a new kind of company.
Do you have a new product line that people aren’t specifically searching for? Or are you trying to reach newbies who may not know what they’re looking for?
These keywords do the job.
These broad match keywords should be used and monitored very carefully to avoid sabotaging your campaign.
If they aren’t performing well, it’s time to get rid of them.
If you specialize in organic steel-cut oatmeal, then a very broad audience-based keyword might include “healthy foods” or “breakfast ideas”.
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Alternate Keywords
You would use alternate keywords when people tend to gravitate toward a very similar product.
People who search for “quick oats” or even “cream of wheat” could be persuaded to try your oatmeal with the right message.
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Competitor Keywords
If your ad campaign appears when people are looking for your competitor, the right message could encourage them to switch.
These might include a brand name or a specific branded product name.
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Product/Service-Specific Keywords
What do you actually sell? Here’s where you get more specific with terms like “steel-cut oatmeal” or “organic oatmeal”.
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High Intention Keywords
These phrases indicate that a person is ready to buy now. They would include things like:
- Buy oatmeal
- Buy steel-cut oats
- Oatmeal reviews
- Best steel-cut oatmeal
- Healthiest oatmeal
- Steel-cut oatmeal coupon
Here’s a great example of a high intention Ads search ad.
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Branded Keywords
To avoid a competitor stealing someone who looked up your brand specifically, you can use keywords that include your brand in your search campaigns.
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Negative Keywords
These are keywords that indicate that someone is not your target customer.
They may add these words to a keyword you’re targeting when they type a query into Google search.
Because they included this word, you know that you’re not really what they’re looking for.
For example, a person who searches for “digital marketing” is looking for something very different than someone who types “digital marketing jobs”.
In this case, unless it’s a recruitment ad, it’s in everyone’s best interest that the ad not even appear.
It would risk a click you’ll have to pay for that you won’t convert into the customer you want.
Plus, it makes your ad appear irrelevant to advertising platforms such as Google AdWords and Bing Ads.
When you add negative keywords, you reduce the chances that someone will accidentally click on your ad, thinking it’s something else.
Common negative keywords include the following:
- Jobs
- Cheap
- Tutorial / Guide
- Video
- Recipes
As you start your campaign, you’ll find more negative keywords to add to your list.
Keeping your ad from appearing where it shouldn’t is just as important as having it appear where it should.
Don’t ignore them if you want to have a successful PPC campaign.
How to Build a Seed List
To begin your list, consider each of these categories and how they align with your campaign goals.
Which keyword category or categories make the most sense for your campaign?
Which keywords are customers using to find your company or companies like it? Explore common customer social media hangouts, blogs, and forums to find out.
Create a list for this campaign. You may find that you have some go-to terms that you use across campaigns.
But keep in mind that your goals can change the keywords you choose significantly.
How to Use Tools to Expand Your List
Now it’s time to expand the list.
Even if you’re an expert in the industry, you need to know what terms people are actually using to find products or services like yours.
Even if your PPC account is not in Google Ads, start with a tool like Google Ads Keyword Planner unless the platform has a better tool for you.
Or invest in a paid tool. You may find it very worth it.
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Keyword Research in Keyword Planner
A keyword planner will show you similar words you may want to add to your campaign. You’ll see:
- Estimated monthly traffic
- Competition scale
- Average cost per click
Sort by each category to find the best keywords based upon the criteria we discussed.
As tempted as you might be to focus on the lower cost per click (CPC), remember the big picture is ROI.
As a general rule, people are paying more per click because they have a higher ROI.
This may not be the case in all businesses. So you’ll use analytics.
Make sure you’re never paying more than that click is actually worth to your business to guarantee a positive ROI for your campaign.
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Competitor Keyword Research
You can waste a lot of time trying to re-create the wheel. If your competitor already did the work for you, why not see what they’ve got.
Paid tools like Spyfu, WordStream, and SEMRush allow you to spy on the competition.
These tools can be cost-prohibitive for small businesses that are handling marketing alone.
But a digital marketing company is able to spread the cost of these tools across many clients, making them cost-effective.
You can also do competitor research manually by searching for each keyword on your list to see who pops up in the ads.
You then have an idea about who you’re competing with. You can take a closer look at their sites and strategies.
How to Refine Your List
You’ll both refine your list before and during the PPC campaign. Before, you’ll want to get rid of words that are just too competitive or don’t get any traffic.
As you begin to refine your list, you may determine that some terms will be more effective in a different campaign.
Avoid doing all of this work over and over. Start categories for lists of words you rule out.
They may be useful somewhere else.
Watch your campaign closely once it’s running. If you have words that perform poorly, weed them out. Or move them to a different ad group.
2. Determining Customer Lifetime Value
When you know what a customer is worth, you know how much you can spend to acquire that customer.
You’ll also be able to better calculate your PPC campaign ROI.
People often use complex formulas to figure a customer’s lifetime value (CLV). These formulas may be more accurate.
But they typically result in businesses throwing their hands up and just guessing what a customer is worth.
Here’s the quick and easy way to determine a customer’s value. If you don’t know your CLV, start here. Then refine your estimate later if needed.
What You Need to Know
Gather data to answer 4 questions:
- What’s the average spend per purchase?
- How many times a year does the average customer purchase? (frequency)
- How many years will the average customer be a customer?
If you’re a kid’s clothing company or similarly time-restricted business, this last one may be clear.
If it isn’t, you can also look at this on a yearly or 5-year basis.
Finally, you need to know,
- What’s your margin rate?
CLV = average spend X frequency X years X margin rate
Are you a new business? Start tracking these numbers now to learn what each customer is worth to your company.
Segmenting Your CLV
CLV isn’t just one number across your whole company. Some customers are worth more than others.
But you don’t have to look at each customer individually. That would be way too cumbersome.
Instead, segment customers by things they have in common like:
- Job role
- Location
- Profession
- Age group
- Goals
- Which channel they came through
- etc.
You’ll find that some segments have a higher value than others. When you’re creating your PPC ad budget, you can spend more to acquire those customers.
Let’s look at your budget next.
3. A Clearly Defined Budget
Some small businesses jump right into PPC without a monthly or daily budget. They inevitably choose the maximum bid and eventually overspend.
They don’t realize that what they are doing really isn’t working. They fail to plan for related expenses.
Because they didn’t plan, they turn to the lowest bidder for the unplanned stuff in an effort to keep from breaking the bank after the PPC campaign is in full swing.
Understanding the expenses involved in advance will allow you to create a more successful plan. Your budget will include allotments for:
a. Ad copy – You’ll either DIY, pay someone in-house or hire a 3rd party.
If you’re creating display ads, you’ll also need a designer using one of the options mentioned.
b. Landing page – The most effective PPC campaigns have landing pages or webpages that seamlessly align with the ads.
They provide high relevancy with your PPC ads. Someone needs to write and design them to ensure your CTAs will generate more clicks.
And keep in mind that whether you have short or long landing pages, both have their own advantages and disadvantages.
So here are some points to help you decide.
- Short copies produce a higher number of leads but are typically less qualified. It is more used for low commitment actions and for giving out free downloads.
- Long copies produce fewer leads, but typically better qualified. It is more used for big actions and for offering products or services.
c. Cost for clicks – You can set a limit in your campaigns, making this the easiest budget item to calculate.
d. Other labor – You may be paying someone to research, manage and/or monitor your campaigns.
Someone’s got to do it. PPC advertising isn’t a “set it and forget it” type of marketing. It requires continuous monitoring and optimization.
e. UX Optimization – You can’t run an effective PPC campaign if you don’t have a flawless user experience on your website.
For instance, even if your ad campaign is good but when users land on your website and can’t even click your phone number, that click will be wasted.
If you’ve already invested in a responsive website and SEO to create the optimal user experience, skip this.
f. Tools – Many tools are free. You’ll also find some paid tools that make planning, running, and analyzing your campaigns easier.
To determine the actual cost of your campaign, you’ll divide up all of these expenses by the number of new customers you generate.
In most cases, we’re talking pennies per each. But to know your real ROI, it’s important to factor in all the related marketing expenses. Maximize your small business marketing budget with these tips.
4. Functional Geo-location
Whether you’re creating social media PPC ads or using Ads, geo-location is a vital component of your ad strategy.
It doesn’t matter if you have a Shopify shop or you’re a local business. There will always be locations that are more ideal than others.
Do you think everyone is a potential customer for your e-commerce shop? Consider if that’s true to get the best ROI.
Australia, New Zealand, India, or Wales?
When you’re using Google’s search network, a text ad in English might get an ad placement there, but are these good locations for your ad to display?
Maybe. Maybe not.
If you’re a local business in Atlanta, are people in Nashville, Ashville, or Ft. Lauderdale very likely to become your customers? Probably not.
Failing to geo-locate can cause 3 serious problems for your campaign:
- You’ll get more accidental clicks. People don’t realize your location before they click. You’ve just wasted their time and the cost of that click by not setting up your ads properly.
- They immediately leave your site. This makes the ad platform think that you either have a poor user experience or the ad was irrelevant.
- If you’re using Ads, they’ll start penalizing your campaign if this keeps happening. Your cost per click will go up and you’ll become less visible against your competitors.
Using geo-location is easy in both Ads and on various social media sites.
Depending on the platform, you may choose to use these targeting options:
- Certain zip codes
- Cities
- States
- Countries
- A specified radius
In a Facebook or Instagram PPC campaign, you can even target people who are visiting in your area. Each platform will walk you through it step-by-step.
5. Aligned Landing Pages
Does your ad point to your home page? You’re making a mistake far too many small businesses make. Your home page is a general page that tells people about your company.
Companies that create multiple landing pages with a strategic call to action aligned with their ads generate 12X the leads.
And yet 44% of companies point their ads at their homepage. 61% have fewer than 5 landing pages.
A landing page is a page that is specifically designed to meet a goal. It is built to directly align with your ad.
If the ad is speaking to plumbers, the landing page also speaks to plumbers.
If the ad offers 20%, the landing page tells the clicker more about what you offer and then tells them how to redeem that offer.
Landing pages are conversion tools. They give the clicker a straightforward next step that aligns with the ad.
Congruence across your keywords, ads, and landing pages is your best friend.
Here’s the landing page for the ad we showed a bit earlier. Notice how it sends you right to the oatmeal page, not just an overall products page.
It’s more specific.
Here’s another fantastic landing page from Ties.com. Click the ad that offers $75 worth of ties for just $9.
Go straight to this page that tells you how to redeem it. Now that’s seamless!
This is PPC at its finest. Why settle for the average small business conversion rate? It’s about 3%-6%.
You could be tripling it or more simply by aligning landing pages with your ads. Check out more of our engaging landing page examples in this post.
6. Maintaining a High-Quality Score
While other PPC platforms have similar quality models, Ads is the one where you really need to understand what your quality score is and how it impacts your PPC campaign success.
Ignoring it will cost you a lot of money.
Why Quality Score Exists
In an effort to provide the best user experience, Google Ads wants to show the most relevant ads to searchers.
If they didn’t, they’d lose money because fewer people would click the ads.
To accomplish this, they’ve established a system called “Quality Score”. It rewards businesses that provide an exceptional user experience.
What is Factored into a Quality Score?
To determine your quality score, Ads looks at:
- What percentage of ad appearances earned a click
- How long people stayed on your website after clicking
- Whether they clicked on anything else on your website
- Performance history (how well you’ve done over time)
If people aren’t clicking, this tells Ads that your ad is irrelevant. This might happen because you have poorly written copy.
Or you may be appearing in searches that don’t really apply to your ad.
To fix this, improve your ad copy or remove irrelevant keywords and locations from your ad.
You may need to add negative keywords if they’re causing irrelevance.
If people leave your page immediately or don’t click on anything it’s a bad sign to Ads. It tells them one of two things.
Either people thought they were clicking on something else. Or your website provided a poor user experience.
The page may take over 3 seconds to load. Or maybe it wasn’t mobile-friendly. In either case, fix the experience to recover your score.
How a Quality Score Impacts Your Bottom Line
Ads want you to fix the problem. That’s why they tell you what your score is.
But if you ignore it, they will begin penalizing you by making you pay more for ad space. That’s as much as 400% more.
But there’s a flip-side to this. Get your score up.
That’s a 7 or higher. They will give you a discount on your cost per click and increase your visibility or ad rank.
This is just one more reason a successful PPC campaign isn’t a set it and forget task.
7. Target to Connect
If you’re running a PPC campaign, your ad should compel people to click. To do this, target someone specific.
Similar to segmenting, target people with a specific:
- Occupation
- Goal
- Challenge
- Age range
- Where they are in the Buyer’s Journey
Once you’ve decided what characteristics to target, divide your ads up into ad groups. Each ad group will represent a specific target.
You might further subdivide ad groups based on a specific service or product line.
Who you’re targeting with that ad group will impact:
- What keywords you choose for that ad group
- How you design your ad copy
- What your landing page says
Align everything for a seamless experience for that target.
8. Tracking & Improving Your Campaign
What’s a common theme throughout this article? It’s that you can’t set and forget a PPC campaign. To be successful, you need to:
- Measure the right metrics
- Know what those metrics are telling you
- Adapts your PPC campaign based on your findings
Note that there are several ad extensions and tools that can help you with this.
So what should you be tracking while running a PPC campaign?
Website Responsiveness
Test your site’s speed and mobile-friendliness. You can use free tools from Google.
Or you may choose to invest in real-time site monitoring. Not a day should go by that you aren’t very aware of how your website is treating people.
If you make changes to the site, always test them. Make sure they display like you expect them to.
Marketing Analytics company Kissmetrics performed an extensive study on how page speed optimization impacts people leaving your site.
For every additional second your page takes to load, you lose about 10% of your visitors. If your page takes 5 seconds to load, that just won’t cut it.
You’ve lost almost 50% of your visitors. But you paid for those clicks.
Think mobile is an exception? Think again. Only 11% of mobile users said they accept that a site will load more slowly on mobile.
If their phone can handle it, they expect you to deliver that speed.
Over 50% of web traffic is now mobile. Your website should be responsive on all devices.
Impressions
You can’t earn clicks that convert if you’re not being seen. Keep track of your impressions.
If it’s very low, reevaluate your bid caps and keywords to make sure you appear when you should and where you should.
Click-Through Rate
People should be clicking on your ad no matter what ad format (text ads, video ads, shopping ads, etc.) you choose to use.
If they aren’t, then one or more of your keywords may be irrelevant. Or your copy isn’t compelling them to click. Make the adjustment to increase clicks.
The average CTR across industries is around 3% for search ads and 0.46% for display ads.
This excludes remarketing ads. These are the ads for your business that appear on another website after someone visited your site.
These CTRs are much higher, but conversions are generally lower. If you need help with your PPC ads, work with our expert Google remarketing agency today!
Cost Per Click
As we discussed, you’ll pay more for clicks if you let your quality score drop.
Compare the cost per click to your conversion rate and customer value to know you’re spending the right amount on each click.
If it’s too high to give you a decent ROI, then increasing your conversion rate is your best move.
In Ads, the average cost per click is $2-$3 across all industries.
But it can be significantly higher for more expensive services with highly competitive keywords such as legal, medical, and insurance.
Average Position
This tells you whether or not your ad is appearing in ideal spots. If it isn’t it may not be seen.
You may need to work on your quality score or raise your bid for certain keywords.
Conversions
If you have a very low conversion rate, it makes your cost per click seem astronomical.
But when you have the system in place to convert more clicks, cost per click becomes a very reasonable investment.
To determine your ROI, spread the cost of clicks that didn’t convert across the ones that did.
The average conversion rate in Ads is 3.75%. It’s much higher in service industries.
Quality Score
We’ve discussed this in detail so here we’ll just remind you to track it.
Run a Better PPC Campaign
With these strategies, you can run a more successful PPC campaign. Spend some time evaluating those keywords.
Align your landing pages with the ads to get the best results. And don’t ignore your quality score. You’ll pay more.
If you need help growing your business through digital marketing strategies that work, book a free consultation today.
Other PPC Advertising Resources
- How To Choose The Best PPC Management Agencies: 9 Steps
- 43 Top PPC Agencies – 2024 Rankings
- How Much Does PPC Management Cost?
- What Are PPC Management Services?
- The Top Online Advertising Platforms in 2024
- How Much To Spend On Ads When You’ve Made $0
- How To Create Ads That Actually SELL
- How To Choose The Right Strategy For Business
- ROAS: Understanding Your Return on Ad Spend
- How Long Tail Keywords Can Make or Break Your SEO Plan