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5 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Do Your Own PPC

It’s true that Pay-Per-Click Advertising (PPC) such as Google’s “Adwords” and Microsoft’s “Bing” can be a remarkably effective, low-cost advertising solution that can almost instantly bring a flood of eager buyers to your website, if done correctly. However, it’s also true that you can take a terrible beating in a very short time if you’re not careful and don’t know what you’re doing.

You see, Adwords™ and Bing™ (the dominant Pay-Per-Click platforms) are promoted as being easy to use. In a sense that’s true. You can sign up for an account and be walked through how to put up a PPC ad in a matter of a few minutes. But, I can’t tell you how many local business clients have come to me mentioning that they have spent thousands of dollars on PPC – and yet they received zero sales for their efforts. They report that money is leaving their pockets – and it’s not being replenished. They have almost given up on Pay-Per-Click Advertising.

Here Are 5 Things That Can Go Wrong When You Try to Manage Your Own Pay-Per-Click Advertising Efforts

1. You target the wrong keywords.

Some search terms can get a lot of clicks, but very few sales, because they’re too general, and there’s no buying intent. For example, you have a tire shop specializing in off-road tires, and you bid on “tires.” That term is searched on over 16,000,000 times a month, so even if your ad wasn’t very good, you could get a lot of clicks. But that searcher isn’t your prospect—he’s in the early stages of looking around, and it’s likely that all you’re going to do is pay for a very expensive click and not get a sale.

2. You under-estimate the amount of clicks you can get, and don’t set an appropriate limit on what you want to spend.

Sure, you can set a daily budget for your campaign, but that’s for all the adgroups in the campaign. You could spend your whole budget early in the day on one poorly-chosen search term, and have all your other ads not get shown at all. Or you could mistakenly set your budget at $3,000 (what you wanted to spend for the month) instead of $100, and come back a few days later to find that you spent thousands of dollars. Happens all the time—and the search engines aren’t user-friendly when that happens. They still want to get paid.

3. You have a local business, but you advertise in geographies that can’t possibly bring you any business.

If you advertise your dry-cleaning business located in central Denver in Google’s Denver “metro” area, your ads will be shown throughout northern Colorado, including places 250 miles away. That will get you some completely worthless clicks.

4. You advertise, using broad match, without properly using negative keywords, and pay for a lot of useless clicks.

For example, if you sell guns, and you don’t set “Top Gun” as a negative keyword, you’ll pay for a lot of clicks from people looking for information about the movie, not about guns.

5. You bid on a keyword, and write a good enough ad to get the click, but your landing page isn’t congruent with the ad or the keyword.

For example, you’re a signage and graphics shop, and you bid on the keyword “trade show graphics”, but when people click your ad, you send them to your home page where there are pictures of lighted building signs and vehicle “wraps”. Your visitor doesn’t see what he expected to see, so he hits the “back” button, and he’s gone.

I could write about a hundred similar errors, and probably a lot more than that.

With So Many Things That Can Go Wrong, Should You Continue to Invest in Pay-Per-Click Advertising?

Pay-Per-Click is a fiendishly complex beast, capable of amazing and subtle refinements, and not at all easy to master. One of the most popular PPC manuals is over 300 pages, and that’s just the beginner’s guide. Not only that, PPC changes all the time, so it’s difficult, even for experts, to stay on top of it.

Now, I’m not saying you shouldn’t be doing PPC. You very likely should. Done right, expert Pay-per-Click management can improve website results phenomenally. Traffic and sales increases of several hundred per cent are common—at minimal cost, leading to a very large return on investment.

You just shouldn’t do it by yourself, unless you’re willing to devote a LOT of time (and money) to learning it.
Because we’re experts in local search marketing and pay-per-click advertising, we’re able to help our clients avoid mistakes and get the kind of results they want, like:

  • One very happy reverse mortgage specialist obtained exclusive, hot leads for less than half what he was paying to buy leads that weren’t nearly as fresh, and weren’t even exclusive.
  • A physician, who was using pay-per-click advertising for years, increased his inquiries three-fold, at no increase in cost.

If you’re looking to achieve excellent results from Pay-Per-Click marketing, I urge you to consider investing in a PPC management expert who can handle all your PPC needs – because in the long run, it pays!

About the Author:

Local Search Marketing and Pay-Per Click Management expert Scott Harvey works with business owners who want to improve their website marketing , get better search engine results and capture more clicks. Now, he is offering an 82-page, step-by-step guide to better website performance, covering PPC and many other proven website marketing strategies. Grab his FREE “Make the Phone Ring” eBook now at: http://www.honestwebsitemarketing.com

One reply on “5 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Do Your Own PPC”

All of this can be summed up in one sentence: “Don’t do your own PPC because you’re not a professional.” We always tell our clients this. Professionals know how to reduce your wasted spend and increase conversions. This is valuable information for people to read, Marcel; thank you!

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