Archive for October, 2009

PPC Optimization

google adwords

Pay Per Click (PPC) ads are very popular right now, and Google AdWords is the king. I’m actually going to focus on AdWords and pretty much ignore the others, because I haven’t had much experience with Overture, Yahoo! Search Marketing, etc. – I haven’t needed it, because AdWords is so powerful.

Keywords

Keywords are available in many places on the ‘net, including through the Wealthy Affiliate and Nichebot.com sites I mentioned earlier. But once you have a keyword list, what do you do with it? How do you make money? You have to spend time with it, group the keywords into groups that are alike. For instance, if you’re doing a Dog Breed niche, and you have the following keywords:

Collie Training

Spaniel Potty Training

Collie Potty Training Lassie Dog

Training Spaniel Basic

Commands Lassie Dog

Black Lab

Yellow Lab

You’ll want to break them down into their own little “groups:”

Collie Training

Collie Potty Training

Spaniel Potty Training

Spaniel Basic Commands

Lassie Dog

Lassie Dog Training

Black Lab

Yellow Lab

Note that I didn’t put the Lassie group with the Collie group, because the keywords are different. Now, you need to break them down further for your AdWords campaigns, because you’ll want your ads to be as targeted as possible.

Collie Training

Collie Potty Training

Spaniel Potty Training

Spaniel Basic Commands

Lassie Dog

Lassie Dog Training

Black Lab

Yellow Lab

Now, notice that I left the collie group and the lassie group together. That’s because it will be easy to create a set of ads that fit both keywords, and that will save me a little time.

Once you have broken your keyword lists down, you’ll want to set up your AdWords account, and create a new campaign. In the campaign, you’re going to create new ad groups for each group of keywords that you have. Time consuming, yes, but it will save you TONS of money in the long run.

In fact, if you don’t split them up, you will have tons of “untargeted” ads, and Google will penalize you with much higher bid prices and lower positions. Put a keyword list of 1000+ keywords, and your bid prices will be $1-$5/click minimum, and that will still put you at the very bottom of the list. That’s just a huge waste of your money.

Now that you’ve got your ad groups, you’re going to want to create the ads. Here’s what I suggest that you use:

Headline:           Keywords if possible

Line 1:               Keywords and description

Line 2:               Keywords again or finish the description

Display URL        :       linkdomain.com/keyword(s)

Real URL:           whatever the link is

Notice that I recommend you put your keywords on every line. That will increase your relevance, and therefore get you higher positions for the same price, and it will increase your click-through ratio (CTR), which will also raise your position without increasing your price. I have a few campaigns running where I pay $.02-$.04 for the #1 position out of 5-10 advertisers because my ads are more targeted and my CTR is higher. I’m quite sure the others are paying upwards of $.10/click, too.

Favorite Traffic Producer “Articles Marketing”

article marketing

Article marketing is possibly my favorite traffic producer of all time. Sure, I do SEO and PPC and the like, but well-written articles take care of a number of problems all at once. (I stress the well-written part, because a horrible article does exactly the opposite of what I’m about to talk about)

First, they establish you as an expert. How many times have you read an article in a newspaper or magazine and thought, “Wow, that person knows their stuff!” Ok, maybe you didn’t actually think that, but do you trust Dear Abby’s advice? Or Ann Landers? Or your local newspaper’s advice column writer? Millions of people do, and that’s the power of having an article in a trusted information resource.

Second, they take care of SEO by giving you a backlink from every site that publishes your article. That can add up fast, and hundreds of thousands of backlinks from different sites all over the ‘net will skyrocket your SERPs. When I launched my first site (coincidently, an article directory) I sent out 5 articles with links to it, and within 1 month, I had 400 unique visitors per day coming to read and submit. Granted, I did other things too, but I attribute my site’s success directly to the fact that I had all of those backlinks, and people could find me in the search engines.

Third, you can pre-sell a reader if you can hide the pitch in the facts of the article. Now, don’t get me wrong, an article should NEVER be a pitch for a site or product, or it won’t get published anywhere. But if you can interlace a product reference (without any hype) into the article, do it. Treat it like you’re telling them about a great product you use, and they’ll check it out. You’ll want to use some of the affiliate link hiding ideas above (I find the new domain method very effective for articles) so you’re not listing your affiliate link in the article. Including a bare affiliate link or a tinyurl is a surefire way to get publishers to pass on your article, and to get readers to instantly stop reading.

Fourth, your resource box (or about the author) can bring you substantial traffic. If they’ve read the entire article, chances are, they want to learn more from you. The resource box is where you can tell them what to do next. I’ll go over how to create an effective resource box shortly.

Let me take a little time to give you some tips for your article writing. I’m going to go over the Headline, Byline, Summary, Body, and the Resource Box.

Headline/Title (This just in…)

The headline is arguably the most important part of the article. If the reader isn’t interested after reading the headline, they won’t read the rest. It should be something catchy. My first article was entitled “Branded Email: Email Branding is the Next Generation of Email” and after posting that to a site or two, I shortened it to “Branded Email: The Next Generation of Email.” By now, I’m sure you realize that my first experience at article writing didn’t go so well. My title was not catchy, (in fact, it sucked) and nobody came.

Headline is catchy? “How to” headlines are good. “10 Tips” (or 5 tips, or 47 tips) are often read. Case studies are great. Alliteration (putting words that begin with similar sounds together in a row – Gary Guesses Google’s Gauge – Wow, that was bad, but you get the point) grabs a reader’s attention. Using common phrases and clichés is quite effective, putting a funny spin or changing those same phrases and clichés works well too. Questions get readers. Pique the reader’s curiosity, and they’ll read.

Depending on your audience, you can use “shocking” words and phrases – mild swear words and words that the industry deems “taboo” work well to get readers. “Shocking” headlines create emotion, and emotion gets a visitor to read the article. I wrote a 2 part series of articles entitled “Writing articles, but still not getting traffic? That’s because your articles suck – but I can help!” and they went over very well. Just make sure that if you decide to go with a “shocking” headline, you also propose a solution. “- but I can help!” takes the offence and changes it to “Wow, he’s right, I’ll read the article and find out how he can help me!” Some readers wouldn’t keep reading if I just made the headline “Your articles suck” – that’s just plain mean. For example: If I was writing an article about plastic surgery, I would probably make the headline “Are you ugly? I can fix that.” In fact, if I saw that headline, I’d probably read it for the entertainment factor alone.

Byline (By: ME!)

Bylines are simple – just type your name in the box. Don’t use your business name – businesses don’t write articles! If you’re writing for your business, include your business name with a copyright at the bottom of the body of the article.

What Do You Do After You Have Written An Article?

Now you need to submit your articles to article directories. Here are a few great places to start:

Content-Articles.com

Ezine Articles

Go Articles

You can also find roughly 100 directories at Arcana Web. They’re all kept up to date, and the PR of the directory is listed along with the submission links. However, if you’re submitting to directories, don’t pay all that much attention to the PR, because you never know where a publisher will go to find your content. You’ll want to submit to as many places as possible. But even if you assume it will take 2 minutes (that’s being very generous) per submission, that’s still over 3 hours of work you’re doing to submit your article to only 100 sites.

One quick thing before I move on to Forums – Never, and I mean NEVER submit an article to article directories and newsletters that someone else has written, unless you have sole rights to submit them. The article directories hate getting duplicate articles, and so do publishers – they read these things all day, and they’ve probably already seen that article you got from the affiliate program you just joined. Publishers want original content, not 50 people trying to submit the same thing in order to get easy links. You’ll get a much better response that way.

How Do You Monetize Your Email List?

email monetizing

First, be truthful with your list when you’re promoting something. Tell them exactly why you think they’d benefit from it, and make sure you can give them an example of how it’s helped you. If you don’t use the product, don’t tell them they should. Why? Because if it’s crap, your list will find out, and you’ll lose their trust. No trust = zero sales. Zero sales = a worthless list.

Another great option is to give them content while you’re giving them promotions. See if you can compare 2 or more similar products, and provide pros and cons of each, that way, they can make their own decision, and they’ll feel a lot better about that. If you tell them what to buy, you’ll make sales, but if you provide them with options and information, and let them make an informed decision, they’ll feel like it’s their decision, and they’ll be more likely to purchase one.

Don’t forget to keep giving them great content in the midst of promoting products to them. If you do, you’ll start to see people unsubscribing, and that is not what you want to do.

Matt Callen said it best in his free, 7-day ecourse (for his Instant Popover product) – “The Golden Rule Goes A Long Way – Even With Internet Marketing.” He also went on to say, “Build a list, build a relationship with that list by providing mind-blowing, over-the-top content, give them a free report or product and show them that you’re a genuine human being that really cares about them, and you’ll have them fighting at your virtual door wanting to buy your products or services.”

Before I go on, I want to address this common question very quickly: “Is it legal to “grab” or “scrape” email addresses for your list?” The answer is no. They didn’t opt-in for your list, so you can’t legally email them bulk email. If you do, you’re sending them unsolicited commercial email (UCE) and that is SPAM. You can be fined thousands of dollars and thrown in jail for it, so I wouldn’t even test the waters.