Summary:
Writing good copy for pay-per-click
advertising. Search engine marketing.
Tens
of thousands of businesses, large and
small, use Google Adwords and Overture
Match (from Yahoo!) to advertise their
products and services on the Internet.
An entire industry, loosely known as
“Search Engine Marketing” (SEM for
short) has grown up to support this new
advertising medium. To date, very little
independent analysis (as opposed to
analysis by industry players) has been
published to demonstrate the
effectiveness of these vehicles to
advertisers. Still, businesses seem to
be using Adwords and Overture in droves.
Briefly stated, Adwords and Overture
enable you to run advertisements on
search engines and other websites, the
display of the ads being triggered by
“keywords.” Hence, if you sell “red
widgets,” you would choose “red widgets”
as one of your keyword phrases. When a
computer user enters “red widgets” as
their search term on Google or Yahoo!,
your ad may appear in or adjacent to the
unpaid search results. How high up on
the page, and how frequently your ad
appears, depends upon your “bid,” or how
much you are willing to pay for a user
to click on your ad (which leads back to
your website). Administering your
campaign can get a whole lot more
complicated than this, but it gives you
the idea in a nutshell.
What makes an effective campaign? There
are many variables, but SEM
professionals have focused heavily on
the importance of “keywords” – to the
extent that entire sub-industries have
sprung up to show clients how to create
lists of keywords! What has been
overlooked, in our estimation, is the
good old art of copywriting itself – how
you write the ad. After all, an ad is an
ad whether it appears in a newspaper, a
magazine, or on Google or Overture.
You’ve got space for a short headline
and a brief description – briefer on
Google than Overture, but at least
Google doesn’t truncate your listing, as
Overture does. Given how little space
you get to work with, and the fact that
you have no visual opportunity, it is
crucial to create compelling, snappy
ads. Unfortunately, the vast majority
are nothing of the sort. Most of them
look like badly written classified ads –
and that’s the main reason most of them
will deliver poor click through rates
and disappointing results.
Here’s an example: as a test, I typed
“business website promotion” into the
search box on Yahoo! With all of those
internet marketing types placing the
ads, I figured that I’d definitely see
some short, exciting text that would
really make me reach for the mouse.
Wrong. What I saw was just a list of “me
too” ads that, with rare exceptions,
were indistinguishable from each other.
Out of 8 ads on the screen, most just
displayed headlines such as “website
promotion services,” or “affordable
website promotion,” or “internet
marketing services.” Why would anyone
click on one of those ads, especially
when there are literally thousands that
say the same thing? The answer is – they
wouldn’t.
Perhaps the reason why SEM professionals
focus so much on keywords, rather than
on writing great ad copy, is that
creating keyword lists is, at bottom, a
rote task that is frequently
accomplished with specific software.
Creating great copy, on the other hand,
requires a writing implement (pencil or
keyboard is fine), a surface (paper or
screen) and, the hard part, some really
creative thinking! When ad copy is
improved, an Adwords or Overture
campaign delivers more traffic to your
site, often for a lower “cost per
click.” Our company, Small Business
Online, a
web design and internet marketing firm,
has repeatedly seen vast improvements in
user responses (what’s known as “click
through rates”) when the ad copy is
compelling.
What are the the characteristics of ads
that make users click? Ads that are
snappy (you only have a few words to
work with) and that promote a benefit do
best. So, for example, if you are
selling an extremely comfortable hiking
boot, don’t just write a headline like
“Great Hiking Boots!”. Give the user a
benefit, something that’s in it for
them, such as “Your Feet Will Love
You!”. If you’re selling strong gourmet
coffee, don’t just say “Premium Quality
Coffee,” say something like “Our Java
Will Jumpstart Your Day!”.
How
does a person learn to write good copy?
It’s not rocket science. Surf over to
Amazon, search on “advertising books” or
“copywriting books” and a whole world of
advertising help will open up before
you. Read the reviews, pick out one or
two books that are highly praised, and
you’ll be armed with the knowledge you
need to stand out from the herd. And
when you stand out, your Google Adwords
or Overture campaign will really
improve. Compelling ad copy is not the
only aspect of these campaigns you need
to work on – keywords still count, bids
still count. But in the end, your ad is
like a sign on the front door to your
website. If it’s not interesting or
compelling, no-one will knock.
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