We the leading company that distributes "golden widgets" online, but our profits dictate that the golden widget sector does not make enough money to invest in Sponsored Ads on Google... or even AdWords (except on few occassions such as "Golden Widget Appreciation Month").
So why do we see our competitors - small, home grown, raw, garage-based businesses - advertising all of the time with AdWords and even as Sponsored Ads!
Don't sponsored ads have a $5000 minimum?
How about AdWord ads that never seem to dissappear from the top four positions on the sidebar?
We just don't understand how these guys find the resources to advertise like that... unless...
...unless, there's something being overlooked.
Anyone buy a Sponsored Ad? Any tips for AdWords that will give us more faith in the PPC model?
Thanks in advance.
He may also be working through a third party who is able to meet that $5000 minimum and handles his ad for him.
As for advertising on adwords, there are many different factors. It could very well be that he is one of those not so keen advertisers who pay more attention to traffic than ROI. Maybe he really can't afford it and he just hasn't figured it out.
Or it could be that he has discovered something that you haven't. For example, originally we thought that our really low end stuff (under $10) would not be worth it to advertise on adwords. Not enough mark up. But then I tested a few ads with those products. What we found is that if people really needed the product, they would buy it and to offset the cost of the S/H, they would either shop around our site for other things to buy or they would buy 2, 3 or sometimes lots more of the same item. They bought enough on their order to make the ad worth it.
You may want to really re-evaluate the product and look closely. He could just be an idiot or he just might have found a real gem.
I've seen a number of competitors spend incredible amounts of money- And I encouraged them to spend more- and I have watched them burn out when somebody's boss got the bill at the end of the month.
does not make enough money to invest in Sponsored Ads on Google
It only takes a nickel.
Anaylze your site to see if there are areas that could make purchasing easier - eg. have a look at your competitor's site. How long does it take to answer e-mails? Are you indentifying yourselves sufficently to instill confidence in the purchaser - we won't buy from a site that has no contact info or a fixed address.
We agree. Because of the nature of our product, we have to sell alot to make Google PPC a reasonable alternative for us, and the conversion from Adwords doesn't provide that type of formula (though it definitely should, and we are underwhelmed by conversion rate history with Adwords in our case).
We use Adwords for specials from time to time, where it fits in nicely with our well ranked free SERPs in Google, but as small company with a very low budget and that requires ROI in reasonable period of time, we could not think of running it consistently right now.
Maybe when we are larger and have the revenue base and therefore budget to spend on advertising, quick payback on campaigns won't be so vital and PPC will have a bigger place in the scheme of things, but until than it does fit in nicely with our well ranked SERPs from time to time, as mentioned. A nice supplement when we need to get special information out quickly and in front of eyes to see it.
I was gritching about this to one of the WW Adwords gurus at PubCon -- "How the heck can I afford to spend x dollars when my conversion rate is y and the average sale is z?" Faces and names are still a blur but he said that Adwords conversion rates *can* be much higher than folks surfing the SERPs. I'm sure this varies by category and am planning to throw a few bucks into a test, maybe in July.
Am hoping that the results aren't too horrible and as abcdef does, maybe use Adwords for specials from time to time, possibly on a seasonal basis.
Figure I can't really gritch too much until I test it.
Jim
This is especially important with geo-targetted campaigns because the 1000 impression test can blow the air out of your tires and leave you stranded.
There's more I can say, but I'm going to hold 'em.