Search Engine Marketing
SEARCH ENGINE MARKETING consists of three major components
and they are often used individually to great effect. But only
when the three are effectively used in unison does the whole become
greater than the sum of its parts.
The following are the primary components of SEARCH ENGINE
MARKETING:
| 1. |
Pay-per-click (PPC). PPC is very close
to a pure form of advertising. Companies bid to have
their ad copy show up for specific search terms related
to their business. That ad copy usually shows up in
a special section of the search engine results page,
typically labeled "sponsored." Companies
that use PPC are rewarded with targeted visitors to
their Web sites and have to pay the bid amount for
each visitor they receive.
|
| 2. |
Natural search engine optimisation (SEO). Searchers
who understand the difference often consider PPC advertising
less trustworthy than natural search results. These
ostensibly nonbiased search results can be likened
to articles in a trade magazine, while "sponsored" results
can be likened to advertiSearch Engine Marketing ents.
The mention of a company in an article will usually
garner a more favorable impression than a company's
advertiSearch Engine Marketing ent in the same magazine.
|
| 3. |
Web site conversion. The most overlooked of the
three components, Web site conversion is equal in
importance to the other two. It is the art and science
of determining predominant user behavior on your site
and trying to improve it -in other words, attempting
to influence visitors to take a specific action on
your site that eventually leads to a sale.
|
|
 |
How They Work Together
Although each of these components can, by themselves, return
excellent results, the power of each is multiplied when they are
used effectively together. The results returned by any combination
of the three pieces applied simultaneously will almost always surpass
the collective results of the same pieces applied separately.
PPC With SEO
Recent studies have indicated that SEARCH ENGINE MARKETING
is an effective brand builder. This branding effect is amplified
through placement both in the natural search results and in the
paid results. This makes perfect sense. On most search engines,
you have two unique opportunities to present your company and products/services
for every search query. By taking advantage of both opportunities,
you greatly increase your chances of being "first in mind," from
the searcher's perspective, at the time of the search and beyond.
A popular approach by some search engine marketers is to
use only PPC for keyphrases when the site does not achieve high
natural rankings. Although this approach can certainly save money,
it runs counter to the branding benefit (since it ensures that
a site listing will be in either the paid results or the natural
results, but never both).
If your company's average sale amount is high, and you have
a chance to favorably impress visitors with dual exposure before
they visit your site, it usually makes sense to take that opportunity.
SEO and/or PPC with Web Site Conversion
Often, firms are willing to spend thousands of dollars to
increase traffic to their site, but not a penny on Web site conversion.
In a medium that makes it so easy for a searcher to look elsewhere,
conversion is critical—and the net effect of raising your
conversion rate from one to two percent is the same as doubling
your traffic (and in one sense it is even better, since it means
that far fewer people have left your site unsatisfied).
Conversion naturally works independently of any SEARCH ENGINE
MARKETING initiative (provided that your Web site gets any traffic
at all). But the combined effect of increasing your conversion
rate and your traffic naturally yields more impressive results.
Say, for example, that your Web site provides you with only
two solid sales leads per week. By doubling your conversion rate,
you will get four leads, and doubling your traffic on top of that
will yield eight.
However, that example does not take into account the quality
of search engine traffic from targeted keyphrases. Often, current
site traffic is not particularly targeted (a look into a site's
Web logs will often reveal a large number of search engine-referred
visitors that found the site using non-targeted phrases).
It is not uncommon for conversion rates to skyrocket as the
quality of traffic improves due to targeted keyphrase advertising
or organic search engine optimisation. With PPC campaigns, you
can further boost conversion rates by sending visitors to highly
targeted landing pages—another example of how seemingly separate
disciplines can work together so well.
The Bottom Line
Just because these components are most effective when used
in concert does not mean that each should not be tracked separately.
But do not be surprised when your returns on two or more of these
disciplines used together are greater than the sum of the returns
from the individual components used separately.