Showing posts with label AdWord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AdWord. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

Ben Norman's SEO course: Day 6 - Email Marketing.

LogoBen Norman's SEO Made Easy Range
  |  Main Site   |  SEO Blog   |  DIY SEO   |  
 
 
7 Day Search Engine Optimisation Course
 
 


 
Day 6 - Email Marketing
 
Email marketing, although not strictly part of a normal SEO process, is, in my opinion, a great way to catch and make maximum use of the new traffic to your website.
Whilst the SEO process brings good targeted traffic to a website, not everyone is quick to catch on to harnessing every last visitor. Most web sites focus on visitors that are ready to buy and totally ignore their future buyers (the people that are there to look around and get more information). Email marketing allows you to capture those people in a list and then keep marketing to them through emails.
There is a great tool out there called AWeber which allows you to setup an email list on your website which is very easy to do and the system does all of the hard work for you enabling you to just focus on building your lists.
For example to build my list I have given away this week long search engine optimisation course. This gives people in my list a great informative course which helps them and their websites do better and I then have permission to contact them with other information as and when.
Now it is important to remember that you can't just bombard people with rubbish as they will just remove themselves from your list but as long as you keep it informative there would be no reason to leave.
Ways in which to market this is:
  • Offer a free course such as this one
  • Offer a free video
  • Offer access to a forum or members area
The key thing to remember is not to sell at people. You just need to be informative and keep giving information this way you will be able to not only make the sales through your website but also take the window shoppers by the hand then educate them and then sell to them later.
It is very easy to get started with AWeber and cost effective too. They will also make sure everything is double opt in etc, so you stay legal. The system will also allow you to set up auto responders like that you are receiving from me so the system will automatically send you a series of emails over an adjustable period of time.
So go to Aweber and sign up for a trial and remember why waste the visits when you can push them to your newsletter educate them and sell to them later.


 
Tomorrow
 
Tomorrow we will be looking at blogs and RSS so be sure to check your inbox.

4 factores por los que no me gusta el SEO.

Una de las preguntas que más recibimos en LaPrimera.net es: “¿Por qué recomendáis publicidad de pago en Facebook Ads y Adword para Vídeo por encima del SEO que proporciona tráfico gratis?”
seo-contra-ppc
Desde mi opinión personal y experiencia propia voy a enumerarte los factores por los que considero que el SEO no sirve si es tu principal fuente de tráfico:
  1. El SEO es algo que NO puedes controlar. Por más que me digan que usan técnicas amigables con Google y que han sobrevivido a todas las actualizaciones hasta el momento (Pinguino, Panda, Colibrí) nada te asegura que mañana Google cambie su algoritmo y el ranking de tus sitios web baje muchísimo :(
  2. Cuesta tiempo y trabajo. Posicionarte por una buena palabra clave en un nicho competitivo usualmente tarda meses e incluso años, por el contrario posicionarte para palabras claves de pequeña competencia (larga cola) demora mucho menos, pero necesitas muchas más para conseguir un número de visitas aceptable.
  3. Tiempo de mercado. En el tiempo que se tarda en posicionar una página para una palabra clave que me envíe una cantidad aceptable de tráfico, yo ya he probado si un producto funciona o no, como responde la gente, como lo puedo mejorar, que puedo añadir, que puedo quitar y cientos de cosas más utilizando tráfico de pago.
  4. No contribuye a un negocio real. Si dependes sólamente del SEO no tienes un negocio. Un negocio es aquel en el que inviertes 1€ y generas 1,50€ y por ende lo puedes escalar a donde tu quieras. El tráfico con SEO no permite esto en un periodo de tiempo razonable.
En fin, tal y como dije al principio si el SEO es tu única fuente de tráfico para tus sitios web, te recomiendo pensarlo dos veces y empezar a buscar nuevas alternativas. Créeme que no te arrepentirás ;)
Saludos.
Félix Román

Friday, October 11, 2013

The Best Way to Structure Your Google Product Listing Ad Campaigns.

Business 2 Community

The Best Way to Structure Your Google Product Listing Ad Campaigns


It’s well-known that the Google Product Listing Ads program is a big deal for ecommerce merchants and will be a significant revenue driver during the holiday shopping season. The best way to manage your PLA campaigns, on the other hand, seems to be up for debate.
It has become apparent that many PLA merchants and advertisers have been misinformed by agencies and industry professionals about the most cost-effective Product Listing Ad campaign structure.
The structure I refer to is the SKU-level (a.k.a. product-level) ad group strategy, or creating an ad group for each and every SKU in a retailer’s inventory. This strategy has been packaged as “cutting edge and “innovative,” and this selling point naturally makes many PLA campaign managers feel like they’re missing out.
Plain and simple, breaking out your entire PLA campaign at the SKU level is by itself a detrimental PLA strategy. This holds true for merchants with sizable inventories and tight time resources. The reality is that, when used alone and as the primary foundation for a PLA campaign, the product-level ad group strategy is insufficient and primitive at best. RELATED CLASS: Google Shopping Overview: Strategies and Tactics for Success

Why the SKU-level Ad Group Strategy Is Primitive

If you currently structure your PLA campaign like this, I highly recommend stopping by our white paper on its downfalls and what to do about it. In theory, product-level ad groups are totally logical. Right off the bat, a PLA manager could imagine that he/she has the utmost control over bids for each of their products. The structure also lends itself to automation pretty seamlessly. However, in practice the SKU-level ad group strategy typically results in:

1. Less bidding optimizations and modifications*

The more ad groups you have, the less likely you are to go in and make bid changes to each. We took over one campaign with 7000 SKU-level ad groups. Who’s going to take the time every day (because management is best done daily) to make changes to all 7000 of those ad groups? This directly impacts product rankings and performance.

2. Less control over ad spend*

The more ad groups you have, the less control you have over the campaign’s overall ad spend. For example, let’s say you have 500 ad groups. That means you have 500 different entities contributing to just one total ad spend so if a manager wants to lower overall ad spend, he/she has to go in and evaluate and make changes to each of those. You can see how handling and maintaining ad spend can be considered cumbersome.

3. An inhibited ability to track and analyze campaign performance

When you have only data for just one product, there’s not much to go off of and the data can become cluttered. For example, after 30 days of a PLA campaign with SKU-level break outs, the data (for a retailer with a small inventory) may tell you that you have 20 products with 50+ clicks, 70 products with 25-50 clicks, and 200 products with less than 25+ clicks. Great.
This data doesn’t tell you that Nike is doing great for you or that your top-sellers continue to do great or that you’re not doing well in the sock department. Well technically it does tell you that, but now you have to go in and manually make those bid changes to each individual Nike product or sock. When you compare this reality to the nicer categorization of product type, brand, and top-sellers ad groups, you can see how a product-level breakout just isn’t feasible from a management perspective for a retailer with a decent-sized inventory.
*These general results from merchants with sizable inventories. A small PLA campaign with only 10-100 SKUs is far more manageable at the product-level than a PLA campaign for a medium-sized retailer with a hundreds or thousands of SKUs.

The Right Way to Structure PLA Campaigns

You might be thinking that this isn’t a problem for you either because A) you have product-level ad groups and automate your account smoothly or B) you have an agency or tool that automates and runs the account for you (regardless of their strategy).
Here’s an analogy: Having an automated PLA campaign is like having an iPhone with no internet access. You’re simply not going to get the most value that you can out of the lucrative program (yeah I know, I need to up my analogy game).
As I mentioned earlier, the most effective way to structure your PLA campaigns is by breaking out your products by:
  • Top-Sellers: Group your best-performing products in one ad group. This way you can dedicate more attention to the products that need an aggressive strategy most. Bid high on this ad group.
  • Some Brands: You should do some research and see if customers are searching for particular brands that you carry. If you find that there are a few brands that convert better than others, give them their own ad group and implement a more aggressive bid strategy for these so they get more exposure.
  • Product Types: This is the same deal with the brand-level ad groups. If you find that as an apparel retailer, your shorts are converting much better than any other category, you’ll want to segment these and bid higher so the group as a whole gets more exposure.
  • Seasonal Products: Halloween is quickly approaching, and so if you carry related items in your inventory, you’ll of course want to give all of these relevant, seasonal products more exposure this time of year.
  • All – Products: This is the catch-all ad group of all your products where the remainder of your products not categorized in more segmented ad groups will be accounted for. Typically you bid as low as 1 cent for this entire group.

Learn how to drive more ecommerce transactions with Google Product Listing Ads.

Watch Google Shopping Overview: Strategies and Tactics for Successand start leveraging Google Product Listing Ads (part of Google Shopping) to drive more transactions today. You’ll see how to integrate Google Product Listing Ads into your current search strategy, and get expert tips for optimizing your PPC spend. Get instant access now.

Read more at http://www.business2community.com/digital-marketing/best-way-structure-google-product-listing-ad-campaigns-0634758#bWRGCrA92P306ViY.99