$10
Per Click??!!! (do they know something we don't?)
I
have utilized pay-per-click (PPC) advertising for
the past two years. With PPC, the advertiser is
only charged when a person actually clicks on
their link. The amount you actually pay for each
click is referred to as the cost-per-click (CPC).
The price of certain search engine keywords can
skyrocket in excess of $10 per click! The big
question isn't how much it costs per click but how
many clicks does it take to get an acquisition.
Why would so many companies pay that much money
for one single, measly, push of the index finger?
The answer is simple - it just works!
HOW
TO JUSTIFY $10 PER CLICK
The advent of PPC advertising has changed Internet
marketing forever. It represents a free market in
much the same way as eBay -- controlled by a
natural supply and demand relationship. For a
keyword phrase such as "debt
consolidation," the top five advertisers are
willing to pay cost-per-click charges of $10.01,
$10.00, $9.99, $7.00, and $6.97. Is something
wrong with this picture? The phrase "life
insurance" demands from $7.00 to $3.50. Then
there are drugs like "Xenical" that
range from $6.76 to $6.74. There are many more
examples where the cost-per-click exceeds $6.00,
$7.00, or $10.00, but you get the point.
The
fact of the matter is that while PPC advertising
can work quite well - it can also be a flat out
failure. When companies are willing to pay more
than $5.00 per click, you can be pretty certain
that they have figured out how to make it work -
otherwise they wouldn't pay those prices.
THE
SELECT FEW
There are times when PPC will work for one company
but not for another in the same industry, using
the same keywords. Large and small companies will
venture in, bid for a week or two, and then drop
out -- never to be heard from again. Some will
come in, drive the prices way up then drop back
out to obscurity. The select few who are
successful have found the secret -- a combination
of patience, determination, creativity, keyword
selection, management and analysis. They do the
math, every day - they manage the bids, every day
- they look for new keywords, every day - they
analyze the results, every day. It takes a great
deal of work to figure out how to make PPC
advertising deliver results, and the ones who have
are now benefiting - every day.
WHAT
IS THE COST OF AN ACQUISITION?
In order to determine if your PPC advertising is
justified, the first thing you need to understand
is your current acquisition cost - what does it
now cost to acquire a new customer or order? It's
amazing how few companies know what their cost of
acquisition is. To keep it simple, take your total
advertising expenditures and divide it by the
number of new acquisitions (orders or customers),
that should give you a rough estimate of your cost
per acquisition. Similarly, after running a PPC
campaign for a month, you take the total
advertising expenditures divided by the number of
acquisitions. Of course, these raw numbers are not
burdened by administrative costs, but they still
provide an apples-versus-apples comparison.
Average
cost-per-click can range from $0.40 to $5.00. The
key question remains: how many clicks does it take
to get an acquisition? If the cost for each click
is $0.40 and it takes 200 clicks for an
acquisition, then the acquisition cost is $80.00.
If the cost for each click is $5.00 and it takes
10 clicks, the cost of the acquisition is $50.00.
FINDING
THE GAPS
Two key points are crucial: (1) how much does it
cost to get an Internet acquisition compared to
traditional methods? and (2) what is the value of
a new customer? In some businesses a new customer
is worth $1,000, while in others, only $10.
Typically, the cost-per-click reflects this value,
but since the market is still very small, there
are significant gaps. Remember the "debt
consolidation" keyword phrase above? The
difference between the first and last
cost-per-click was about 30%. On the other hand,
there is literally no difference between
cost-per-click rates for the keyword "Xenical".
From this you may conclude that there is a lot
more competition for "Xenical" then
there is for "debt consolidation". The
opportunity is between the gaps in the 30%
differential example.
The
bidding market for keywords is still so new and
untapped that it's rare to have more than three
competitors fighting over a specific phrase. The
gaps in keyword cost-per-click charges such as
"debt consolidation" are the norm and
represent tremendous opportunities still available
in this media. Right now they are plentiful, and
for those few people who take the time to
understand this important marketing tool, the time
to act is NOW!