Reprintable
Article #8
Affiliate instructions:
You have permission to publish this articles in your e-zine, on
your website, on your blog or on your forum, provided the entire
article is left un-altered and the bio/about the author resource
area at the bottom is included in its entirety. All you need to
do is copy and paste. You can of course, replace any and all of
the listbuilding.com links with your own affiliate link.
Internet
Marketing - Making Google AdWords
Work for Your Business
People often ask me, "I
started an AdWords campaign, but have no idea how many clicks
I'm going to get, what it's going to cost, or what' kind of cost-per-click
(CPC) I should be looking for. So, let's say I have a product
that gets me a $25 profit. What should that CPC be?"
Want to know what I say? "Oh,
$24.99, but that's only if you're getting 100% conversion."
That's not going to happen in the Internet marketing-verse, right
off the bat, though is it? So, what should you be willing to spend?
What are you willing to just take a flush down the drain. Doesn't
that make sense?
Maybe it does and maybe it doesn't
because you're new to Internet Marketing and to AdWords. But we
can make this more clear. When it comes to AdWords, you have to
decide how much your business can afford to lose every day, and
for how many days, until AdWords becomes profitable.
Some of you are probably thinking,
I can't afford to waste a dime. If that's true, then you shouldn't
be messing around with Google AdWords. You can find many other
ways to advertise in the Internet marketing world, and many of
them are free. Wait until you have some financial traction to
start with Google AdWords, unless you have set a specific budget
for that form of traffic.
Yet, let's figure that you can
spend something, though still not able to flush down hundreds
of dollars per day. You have to come up with that figure based
on your advertising budget for your Internet marketing business.
Just visualize yourself taking a bill out of your pocket and stuffing
it into the garbage disposal. What would that bill be? Is it $50
a day, or only $5 a day? It's up to you. Whatever that amount
is, set your daily AdWords budget at that level.
Remember, the lower the amount,
the fewer the impressions you'll get and the fewer potential click-throughs.
You may not have enough potential to see your ad circulated enough
to get clicks, and it may be hard to see how well your ad is doing.
So, take that about, let's just say it's $20. You can waste $20
a day, but you only waste $5, right? So, that's an extra $15 a
day that you didn't waste. For the next 7 days, raise your daily
limit to $20 for the next 7 days, and see what happens.
You need to find a sweet spot,
where your ad is being circulated and you're getting clicks, and
it takes time. You have to keep tweaking to make it profitable.
If you don't have Perry Marshall's ebook, The Definitive Guide
to AdWords, I'd encourage you to get it, and apply what you learn,
too.
This may seem like a non-definitive
answer, but it's just the truth. Only spend what your Internet
marketing business can afford and not a penny more. Once your
campaign is working, you're thrilled, and it could happen quickly,
though it usually takes a while. It could take a year. That's
just the deal. It all depends on how quickly you're willing to
make changes and move on, and you can never get depressed or feeling
negative about things. You have to move on.
That's the key to success.
You can never give up on something, and at the same time, you
can't afford to overextend your Internet Marketing business to
the point where it goes under or you're trying to pay off credit
card debt because you didn't understand the system. Use some conservative
actions, and plan your AdWords campaigns with common sense.
Tellman Knudson, CEO
of OvercomeEverything, Inc., is a master list builder and well-known
for his List Building Club. Tellman teaches students how to build
a successful online business. Create your successful business
from his step-by-step videos at: http://listbuilding.com
Back
to Articles Directory