Mister Rogers #Google Local Neighborhood Search Tips

What is the first thing you do when you are looking to buy something today?

Yeah, I’d would do an internet search on my phone too.

According to a study out January 2011, over 56% of local searches – searches with local keywords in them – are done on smart phones. For local companies, being visible to potential local customers online has never been more important.

If you own or do marketing at a local SMB  this blog post will give you some basic tips to help you to play nice in Google’s local search neighborhood. Tips Mister Rogers would approve of.

 

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Ask a PPC Expert: Keyword Match Types

Match types is another trick component of paid search – figuring out when it’s appropriate to use what match type. If you’re just getting started, start with our definition of broad match vs phrase match vs exact match. In this post, we answer questions we’ve received about match type. Leave a comment at the bottom and we’ll answer your question as well. For more posts, see our previous Ask a PPC Expert: Landing Pages and Ask a PPC Expert: Keywords.

Q: How do I change keywords from exact match to broad match?

For Search Alliance (Yahoo/Bing) access the campaign then go to the Ad Group and select one or all keywords. Then click on “Add or edit Keywords” button.  On this screen you can select exact match and un-select broad match for the specific keyword. In Google AdWords, select the correct campaign, click on Keywords tab, select one or all keywords, click on Edit and adjust keyword match type for one or multiple keywords.

-Dan Navarro

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5 Ways to Use Google+ for Small Businesses


New social network, Google+, started off strong and has become a new “hot spot” for power users and casual users alike. The internet famous such as Kevin Rose, use Google+ as well as everyday people—especially now that Google+ is in open beta, allowing anyone to sign up for an account.

Small businesses can benefit from building a Google+ personal profile (business profiles aren’t out yet) and keeping engaged with customers. Instead of writing off Google+ as another social network to maintain–on top of that Facebook Page and Twitter account–here are some tips to consider for small business marketing help.

1. Hangout with your customers, employees

Google+ has a feature called “Hangout,” which is a video chat service that can be used to talk to dozens, or even hundreds, of people at once. Hangout’s can be utilized by a small business to use a virtual meetings with employees, especially if a majority of your employees do remote work.

However, another thing to consider is a Hangout session with customers. Customers can use the Hangout to express opinions and even help your small business improve or change its strategy.

2. Huddle for instant chat

The mobile version of Google+ includes the “Huddle” feature, which is an inner chat option that allows you to instantly send real time messages to anyone on your profile. Huddle is a free service which can be used to send out messages while on the go–maybe for those last minute ideas or impromptu meetings.

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How do you use crowdsourcing?

Tomorrow, Trada is participating in the 1st of a 4-part webinar panel series, covering the questions that everyone is asking:  How can I effectively use crowdsourcing in my business?

We couldn’t be happier with the company we are going to keep. From Lukas Biewald at Crowdflower, one of the most successful crowdsourcing companies to Peter LaMotte at GeniusRocket, a thought leader in using creative crowds – this is really a rock star crowdsourcing lineup.

The series is starting at the most basic approach and greatest solution Crowdsourcing offers:  how to take advantage of crowdsourcing as a small businessDon’t miss the first of the series!

Why are crowdsourcing technologies significant to SMB’s?

Well, many times, new technologies and solutions can only be consumed by companies large enough to afford to take a bet and gamble success, or are able to hire a new person to own the job.

BUT! – Crowdsourcing is the rare case when a small businesses have the most advantage in being the first to the party.

Agree or disagree?

The biggest issue for small businesses is finding tactical experts to solve specific problems (make logos, build advertising campaigns, shoot video, etc..). True? Not only can crowdsourcing solutions solve this expertise problem, crowdsourcing does it in a low-risk model. In the webinar you’ll learn more about why, but the reason Crowdsourcing is low risk is because most are pay-per-performance.  In the between SMB’s for talent, speed to market and constant evolution, crowdsourcing is one of the best tools any small business can have in its competitive arsenal.

Join us!

If you or a friend work to keep a small business succesful – please join us or let them know about this groundbreaking (FREE!) webinar.

If nothing else, listen in on 6 thought leaders in the expanding crowdsourcing industry cover ideas that matter in business today: how the current nature of work, freelancers and expertise are dramatically changing on a global basis.

In 5 years, when crowdsourcing is the norm, you can say, “I was there in the beginning.”

And bragging rights, unlike work on the cloud, can’t be crowdsourced!

PS Bring your hardest-hitting crowdsourcing questions! If we can’t field them, no one can.

PPC Help: AdWords & Polygon Geo-targeting Tool

PPC Help: Geo-targeting
Everyone needs PPC help, and this series is part of our blog post series to help you improve your paid search campaign in 10 days.

Start with our introduction to PPC Geo-targeting 101 and then read on to learn a common mistake with paid search geo-targeting.

Geo-targeting a campaign is simply another option advertisers can use to fine comb their AdWords campaign and save money to be sure their advertising is going to the right people. With geo-targeting, you choose the geographic area where ads are shown. Google then finds out where a searcher’s physcial location is based on the IP address of the searcher. There are a handful of tools one can use to geo target a campaign. The one we are going to discuss today is the custom shape tool in adWords.

Ask A PPC Expert: Keywords

Keywords are the foundation of a paid search campaign, and a topic area we see many questions about. We’ve gathered previous questions we’ve received on keywords, and shared our answers for everyone to see. See our previous Ask a PPC Expert: Landing Pages.

If you have a question about keywords, leave a question in the comments and we’ll answer them.

Life raft by Flickr user Feisty.com Will deleting non-performing keywords really help my campaign? Why can’t I just leave the garbage in and focus on adding more, improved keywords?

Dan Navarro: Deleting non-performing keywords simply helps to save your budget from non-converting or performing clicks. A non-performing keyword might have only a few clicks which shows that traffic is low for that keyword, unless the bid price is too low and not allowing the word to be used. Focusing on performing keywords is a way to use real data and refine your campaign even further by changing ad copy, etc.

Brandon Hess: There are very few reasons to delete a keyword versus pausing a keyword when managing your PPC campaigns. While some keywords may not perform at the level you desire, often the performance of keywords are based on more than the match type or bid price you’re using. New ads, better optimized landing pages, advanced settings and other factors can improve a historically poor performing keyword. Pausing keywords allow you to return to poor performing keywords as low hanging fruit begins to stabilize (branded terms, etc) and track their improvements. Only focusing on what works out of the gate, while a short-term goal, puts all your eggs in one basket in the long-term. Pause keywords that don’t meet your success metrics over a specific timeline but always look to improve portions of your campaign that are poor performers.  Many PPC experts will move poor performing keywords into separate ad groups noted as “Low Performance” and pause / adjust settings to allow them to both notate troubled portions of a campaign, better organize their efforts and allow them to return to these areas once other areas of a campaign have been improved.

In my analytics reports, many of the clicks come from people who look for the exact name of the hotel, which appears at the top of the page anyway, so, is it a good idea to put the complete hotel name as a negative keyword so I can save on those clicks?

Brandon Hess:  Making your brand name a negative isn’t recommended. The question of whether or not an advertiser should bid for their branded name if they already own an organic listing is a very common question. The answer to this is whether or not the advertiser has heavy competition for their brand name by other competitors and if they feel it’s worth the cost (which is usually low given the quality score the brand owner will pay to bid on the name they own) to take a position away from their competitors. As well, there are stark differences in Organic and Paid advertising for search. Paid ads have the flexibility to adapt and serve timely and adjusted messaging at a much quick pace than Organic meaning that your competitors are likely advertising on your brand name with messaging meant to dissuade customers from using your hotel over theirs. Organic listings are less flexible.

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PPC vs. SEO: Better Together from #SMX East 2011

On Tuesday we wrapped another successful show at SMX East in the big apple. A group of people from Trada made the trek to the city to educate the crowds, eager to learn more about search and social marketing.  [Read more...]

A Guide to PPC Dayparting

Although it may sound counter-intuitive, there may be times when a business owner doesn’t want business. For example, the store may be closed or he may be unavailable. Small business owners often run pay-per-click, or PPC, campaigns 24/7 in order to reap the most financial benefit. However, if someone clicks on an ad for that business and decides to call, receives no response and moves on, prime business is lost. Interaction is often necessary for sales.

Unfortunately, there is no way of ensuring that people only call when a store is open, but there is a technique that can help direct the majority of traffic flow to occur during a time convenient for its owner. This technique is known as dayparting, or, as Google AdSense refers to it, ad scheduling.

What is Dayparting?

Dayparting is the process of scheduling ads to be shown at specific times and days, and at those times only. Broadcasters use dayparting on TV to appeal to a certain audience at carefully chosen times. This is where metrics come in handy (we’ll address this below in the sections headed “Is Dayparting Difficult?” and “How Can Bid Adjustment Be Used With Dayparting?”).

How Can Dayparting Help My Business?

Business owners can use dayparting to attract more web traffic when their stores are open and they are prepared to handle it, whether by email, IM or phone. Dayparting even allows business owners to set up landing pages geared toward their contact availability method – again, email, IM, or phone – and times.

Choosing when ads run and how frequently allows business owners to test different time factors that might affect traffic (work, lunchtime, etc.). They can then use the results of that data to streamline when their ads have the most desirable effect even more precisely [Read more...]

What is a Long-Tail Keyword?

 

Long-tail keywords drive less traffic to a website, so why would anyone want to use them? The answer is simple: traffic conversion rate is much higher. Not sure what that is or how it works? No problem – the rest of this post has you covered.

What is a Long-Tail Keyword?

Long-tail keywords are three to five-word phrases that are based off of shorter original keywords. These phrases are very specific, like “handmade mahogany iPod case,” an example based off of the popular keyword “iPod case.” Long-tail keywords can be used to define web page content and show up on search engine results just like regular keywords.

How Are Long-Tail Keywords Important For Pay-Per-Click Advertising?

A keyword like “iPod case” would probably field a lot of big-time corporate competition that would be hard to bypass without serious time and money. A site owner selling handmade mahogany iPod cases, however, has a special niche product [Read more...]

3 Strategies for PPC Campaign Success

If you enjoy these strategies, check out our PPC tips for keywords, time savings tips for PPC and 15 PPC tips and tricks!

Before you pull out your credit card and bid in an all-out AdWords war, consider how to make the most of your campaign. As with any advertising campaign, you are aiming to sell your product through branding and spreading awareness. The following tips will help you make the most of your advertising investment.

Dollar bill1. Campaign Budget

Work from the bottom-up. If your campaign success stems from making sales, decide how much you are willing to pay for each sale. For example: if your AdWords campaign is focused on selling one $55 bottle of perfume, can you afford to pay $5 in clicks for each sale? What about fifteen dollars in clicks? This metric is called a budgeted cost-per-acquisition (CPA) and defining your max CPA will help down the road when it’s time to ask yourself if pay-per-click (PPC) advertising is right for you. (Tips for lowering your CPA.)

How much are your competitors spending on paid search? Learn who your competitors are on PPC. Type in keywords you think you’d like to bid on to see who else is bidding. If every search is filled with ads, you’ve got competition. Jot down a few sites and search their PPC spending on www.SpyFu.com. This will tell you about your competitors and will let you know if your budget is realistic.

2. Campaign Focus
If you’re reading this, chances are you are reeling to just go write keywords, bid prices, witty ads and get selling but, just… don’t. (IF YOU JUST HAVE TO: Jot down all of the keywords you can possibly think of in a blank document – okay, done? Let’s continue.)

Who are you targeting?
If you’re selling scarves, are you looking to sell to a stylish woman in NYC or rugged men in Northern Michigan? It may sound a little batty thinking of a target audience in such depth, but it’s a great exercise. (See: geotargeting as a tool.) Fully imagine two or three completely unique people who fit your target audience. Where and when are they online?  If your customers are only online during the week from 9-5, you want to advertise specifically during those hours to save money and reach your audience effectively.

3. Campaign Success
If you have outlined a budget, done research and have set up some campaign goals/targets you are ready for your first month of PPC. Do not just “set it and forget it.” Remember to sign on at least three times a week and never stop testing! Trada account manager (and PPC godfather) Brandon Hess often asks, “What if your campaign is successful?” Could your team handle production? Do you have enough people ready to answer phones? How will you handle the volume of leads or orders? Can your website handle the traffic? Is your online shopping cart easy to use and made to convert visits into sales?  Imaging success will help you from day one. If not for production value, at least for inspiration.

Think positive, set your budgets and goals, and get advertising! Have more questions? Is there another blog post subject you’d like to read? Leave a comment and I’ll reply ASAP.

(Photo courtesy of Flickr user Thomas Hawk)