Wednesday, January 20, 2010

SEM 8 Steps To Position Your Ads #1

SEM advertising strategy is actually a very simple beast, but don't confuse this with something quick to do. Anyone can create an SEM advertising campaign, but very few (including agency) know how to optimise it correctly. I have on numerous occasions been shocked at 'SEM agencies' lack of understanding of how SEM actually works. So Let me give you 8 steps to position your ads in #1.

A very good SEM campaign manager will know that position number 1 does not guarantee success, but anywhere in the top 3 is fantastic for attracting clicks, remember that 70% of users click exclusively on the left hand side of the page.

SEM 8 Steps To Position Your Ads #1
  1. Set up conversion tracking: Never start a e-commerce PPC campaign without conversion tracking, how else are you going to know if you are making sales? Much more importantly, how are you going to know which keywords are making the sales for you and which ones are just unnecessarily running up costs. If you are technically minded or have a little help, you can also set up Google analytics e-commerce tracking. This allows you to track the exact dollar value of any sales you make and you can drill down to just those from SEM.

  2. Start collecting data: Run your campaign with highly targeted but broad keywords. For someone operating in the cosmetics industry, I would use the brand names that they represent, as well as some generic words eg) Discount cosmetics, best perfume etc. Remember that the tracking code will work for 30 days after the click, so it is very accurate.

  3. Be prepared to lose money on your first month: This is data collection, you were probably losing money before, but without knowing it. Nothing has changed, now you know how to fix it. It is still important to know exactly how people search, so keep spending as much as possible. Warren Buffett once wrote: "Being good at business is having more data than the next guy" & nothing could be more true for SEM and positioning your ads #1.

  4. Run Search Query Reports: The keywords you select are not the keywords that necessarily triggered your ads. For example, a phrase match "Dermalogica skincare" will still display your ads if someone types in "Where can i buy Dermalogica skincare?". Pull this list out into excel.

  5. Sort the data: Sort the data by impressions and remove any phrases that are not appropriate. I would tend to add these as negative keywords into the campaign. This will stop your ads displaying at inappropriate times.

  6. Copy writing: Create a separate adgroup for each of the major keywords (make them exact match) you want to rank #1 for (these keywords should be taken from the search query report). You now want to create a specific ad that uses the exact wording in the search phrase for each any every one.

  7. Landing Page: Make sure you have at least 200 words of text on your landing page, using the major brand names and basic keywords that have come out of your search query report. They don't have to be 100%, but where possible, try to land each ad on the best possible landing page and support it with text. This is worth about 10% of your quality score.

  8. Monitor: Use adwords editor to monitor quality score, don't rush in and change things inside the first 10 days, but if things don't improve, then you need to look back over these steps.

Understanding what we have done:
Google adwords works on the principle of relevancy. This means that when someone searches for a specific phrase, your ad should mirror that phrase and direct them to a page that talks about that specific products, service etc.

When the quality score for any given phrase is 10/10, then you are generating the maximum amount of quality score (accrues over time to reward longevity). A maximum quality score will quickly be noticed by Google and it will automatically improve your position and reduce the cost of bidding.

If you have further questions, or need to hire a consultant to come in and fix up your campaign, feel free to get in contact, my details are in the top right hand corner of the page.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Social Media Pretenders

It is unbelievable how many companies are jumping on the social media marketing bandwagon. Sure it is a buzz word at the moment and there is plenty of demand in the market, but it doesn't over ride the fact that most of them don't know what they are doing. Social Media in its purist form is about communicating openly with the marketplace and benefiting from influential people creating free PR for your company through online and offline social channels. Let me stress, setting up a Facebook and twitter page does not mean you are engaging in social media, because you are not engaging anyone, Social Media Marketing can not be templated. Like any marketing strategy, social media requires ongoing maintenance and a closed loop strategy to channel, convert and measure the results.

Julian Cole of AdSpace Pioneers once explained to me that if you search for "ROI" (referring to the company) on Google, not far down the search results you find a whole heap of complaints about the company. For most marketing boffins, the solution was to create more websites to sit on top of the negative press, however social media marketing takes the opposite view. New age enlightened marketers communicate with those leaving negative comments to discover the true route of the problem and craft an appropriate solution that generally improves the company on the whole. Of course there are always irrational complaints that you need to ignore, but remember that less than 10% of negative feedback gets back to the people that need it, so social media can be a god send.


What to do if you are interested in dabbling with social media

First and foremost, do not sign with an advertising agency unless they have a proven track record in the area and guarantee they can track and report their actions and results.

Secondly, set up Google alerts to see when your brand is mentioned and run regular Google and Twitter searches to see if the feedback is good or bad. One former clients of mine in baby clothing found that there were hundreds of happy customers that had used her specialist clothing line and once she made contact with them, they were more than happy to spread the word for her.

Third, if you are going to set up Twitter and Facebook accounts, then make sure you have hours put aside to interact with those people that do follow you. They have gone out of their way for a reason, don't tarnish your brand by failing to communicate with them. Also, remember that once you set it up, this is another touchpoint for your organisation, so don't think you can turn it off without damaging customer relations.

Josh Strawczynski's Opinion:
There is no doubt that social media strategy is a power vehicle for driving business forward, but it is just that 'strategy' and needs to be done well, not by some company who are trying to steal a share of your profits without being experts in the field.