i wonder if there's any chance of overture going back down to $.05; or do you think perhaps adwords might raise to $.10? if i was in a PPC engine's shoes, though, the $.10 minimum bid doesn't really make sense because it seems there's a huge market for advertising that's only sustainable at around $.05 (e.g., small/startup businesses, affiliate advertising, etc.); bumping up to $.10 would erase that revenue, and leave a lot of search term inventory unsold. anyone have other thoughts?
I mainly use G for brand exposure. Their ad setup is good for this. Also the content ads allow for thousands of impressions at little cost, and there is no minimum click-thru requirement.
When I check my logs, I notice most clicks from the Google content partners are from good quality sites such as the New York Times, About.com, etc., so I'm happy with the traffic I'm getting.
Why Overture converts better is an interesting question. Could it be better distribution partners? Could it be that OV's age cohort is older than Google, and therefore users have more disposable income?
Not sure, just putting some questions and possible explanations out there for discussion.
These are all good points. I actually ran a very aggressive campaign in terms of limiting my keywords to only highly relevant words, using the exact match feature, writing a specific ads for each keyword, etc. and still did not get the conversions I get from Overture, even though I invested considerably more energy in creating the campaign with Google.
Before I became an advertiser, and was just using the search engines for searching and surfing the web, it always seemed to me that the layout overture has is easier to use and cleaner than the ads on the right. So I started out with OV and had good results. I heard so many good things about Google's Adwords that I decided to give it a try. Just didn't get the conversions I was looking for.
I don't mean to get down on Google, it's a great company and arguably the best search engine out there. It is also a very ethical company and, I actually think their layout has a lot to do with keeping the ads on the right side separate from the search engine results, so they actually look like ads. When Yahoo and other portals that use Overture place the sponsored listings on the SERPs, it is difficult to distinguish them from the standard listings even though they are labeled as such. I'm afraid though, this layout probably hurts the results on Google.
Also, in all fairness, a lot of web masters get better results from Google, so it is probably a good idea to try out both and see which one works better for you. There are alot of factors involved, the market niche you are in, the cost per click which can sometimes be much higher on one than the other.
I actually find that bidding on Google invetably requires higher bid prices than Overture in my niche. I think this probably affects results. It used to be at one point that Google was cheaper to bid on, but that doesn't seem to be the case as it has grown in popularity.
I'm actually trying out some of the second-tier pay per click engines: Findwhat, Enhance, etc. and I'm finding that results so far are better than I expected. Clicks are very cheap on these ppc's, in particlular Enhance, so even though conversion ratios are not as good, the cost to conversion has actually been pretty decent. I guess you just have to experiment and find what works best. Each niche is different.