Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Important Tips for PPC Management

By George Kristopher

YOU'RE REACHING TWO KINDS OF PEOPLE

It may seem like the following advice is only for real estate people, but the same concept applies in a variety of places. There are two kinds of people that are looking for your business:

1. A person who lives in your area-your city, your state-who types in "real estate," "dentist," "churches," or "restaurant" and expects that the results he sees will be area-only. You'll be there when he comes looking for you.

2. A person may not be in your area at all (or else Google's system can't tell where he is), but is still asking for your area's services. He goes to Google and types in "movers in Richmond," "Richmond real estate," or "hotels Richmond," hoping to get Richmond-only results. He may be traveling on holiday; he may be planning a move; he may be an investor...etc.

He may in fact be from Richmond. But he could be down in Jacksonville. Or way out in Texas. Or in Kentucky. Or Beijing, or Kayo. But he's still searching on Google for you, and he identifies Richmond by name.

Either way, you need to be there, ready to open the door if he happens to come a knocking.

REACH THE FIRST PERSON

Now, because you're aiming at these two kinds of people, you can set up two different Google campaigns for them. Here's how to do just that. When you're first setting up your campaign, select your taget region.

Then you choose your country, followed by your state/province, and even a city or group of cities.

REACH THE SECOND PERSON

If you were advertising for real estate in California, you'd set up a nationwide campaign, possibly even an international campaign, but with local terms like "Visalia real estate" and "Yorba Linda real estate." After all, there are likely to be people from all over the country, and maybe even outside the country, who are doing searches on these terms.

So you would need to grab a map or a listing of cities from a web site and then create a keyword set like this:

California real estate LA real estate Healdsburg real estate Villa Real real estate Santa Monica real estate Buy homes California Buy homes San Francisco Buy homes Bakersfield Buy homes Sausalito

To do this the best way, you would combine a large list of general keywords (the same ones you used on the regionally targeted campaign) with a large list of cities and towns, and then use a spreadsheet to mix and match them together.

Either way, you'll end up with a huge keyword list: 95 percent of them will never get searches, and the other 5 percent may only get a few. However, it doesn't cost anything to bid on these keywords if nobody clicks, and when people do click, they'll only be five or ten cents. Not much traffic, but what you do get will be bargain priced. You should still buy generic keywords in your local campaign, but these local keywords in a nationwide campaign will bring very cheap clicks, mostly.

Your real estate Google account would be set up like this:

Campaign #1: California Targeting Only Group 1: Real estate Group 2: Buy homes

Campaign #2: National Targeting-entire USA Group 1: California real estate Group 2: Buy homes California

Now you have both bases covered, and you'll be getting as much traffic as possible for your local market. The key is that you're not leaving out people in other geographic locations who are seriously looking for what you offer.

You can also use your business's address or latitude and longitude, and target all searches within a radius that you select. Google even gives you advanced options allowing you to customize the set of coordinates that you want to target.

HONE YOUR CHOPS ON A LOCAL TEST CAMPAIGN BEFORE YOU GO NATIONAL

One age-old advertising trick is to test ideas in smaller markets before spending big bucks to try them out in the larger ones. Nowadays, the risks of going national instantly if you have a good product may seem small. After all, you're only paying for one click at a time, so you set a daily budget, and can turn your traffic on and off at will. But that doesn't undo the value of trying your product in one small geographic area first.

For example, if you sell advice to investors, you might start just with investors in New York State. The advantage? You don't need to worry nearly as much about your daily budget. If your cash reserves are limited, you can choose this smaller market to start off in, and if in the first few weeks or months it's not profitable, you're not forced to shut the entire thing down for fear of quickly going bankrupt. Make the sales process profitable in a smaller market, and then go national.

Then you'll be able to take on the big boys in the worldwide market because you know that the process works in the small market, and every dollar you send out comes back with more dollars attached. This, by the way, is an excellent way to keep competitors from knowing what you're up to, if they don't live in the cities you are actually targeting.

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