Subscribe by Email

Your email:

Brand & Capture

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Has PPC Gotten a Bad Rap in Inbound Marketing?

 

pay per clickIn a word, yes. Inbound marketing has many advantages over push marketing, most notably the tendency to build relationships over time with earned media, but the demise of paid search has been greatly overstated. In fact, PPC is alive and well, and businesses that ignore this channel are making a huge mistake. Here's the breakdown.

The folks at Wordstream put together a great infographic on the subject (see below). I love infographics, because the good ones boil down the essence of the argument and frame the discussion at a glance. In this case, research shows that PPC is still crushing organic search results for "high commercial intent" keyword phrases such as, "purchase inbound marketing services." When consumers are ready to buy, clearly they don't care that the most relevant search engine results are paid ones. To be clear, organic wins over PPC in the overall number of clicks, but for buy-cycle searches, the opposite applies.

has ppc gotten a bad rap in inbound marketing

Click here to view the enlarged infographic.

Here are some more eye-opening results:

  • Organic search results only occupy about 15% of the above-the-fold visibility on the average SERP—ads are crowding them out
  • Paid ads have become far more appealing in terms of visibility, design and content—leaders in the space are optimizing them for maximum click-throughs
  • Click-through rates on Google ads for high commercial intent keyword phrases are 600 times higher than those for equivalent Facebook ads
  • SEO/organic still wins the day for "informational" keywords and branded keywords, but leads generated from these keywords need additional lead nurturing
  • PPC wins in the "ready to buy" category—can your company afford to ignore these potential leads?
  • Google Adwords has become a very sophisticated tool, requiring expertise and experience to perform well—should you hire/outsource to experts?

Time to Get Back in the Game?

If you have abandoned PPC because you weren't getting the results you desired, it's time to rethink your strategy. Inbound marketing is a powerful cocktail of demand generation, content marketing and lead nurturing. By itself, inbound marketing helps you build a sustainable, growing sales funnel over time, but there is always an untapped element—targeted buyers who are ready to buy from you right now. Will those people find you through organic searches, blog subscriptions and the occasional social media update at just the right time to influence their impending decision? Done right, PPC can cover that base for you while driving more targeted leads in your direction faster than conventional inbound tactics. That's why when we hear clients say that they want to divert their SEM budget into more effective channels, it makes us pause. In most cases, it's not the effectiveness of PPC that's at fault, it's the way it's being used.

I'd love to hear from you. Is PPC staging a major come-back? Did it ever leave?

Infographic reproduced from Wordstream - thanks guys!

Photo: Search Engine People Blog





Spending Too Much Per Lead?

get-more-sales-qualified-leads-kuno-creative


Comments

John, 
 
Thanks for clearing the air. Good SEO is a necessary part of any internet marketing campaign but lots of companies need business NOW. They won't survive 6 - 12 months while their site rises to the top if they don't sell something NOW. Many sites NEVER make it to page one of Google.  
 
That's why you may have 10 "free/organic/natural" results on page one but these are 10 out of maybe half a million or more results found in the search. And what about the fact that most products or services will be searched for using a multitude of keywords by different searchers, not just the one or five or ten keywords that most highly successful sites show up on page one for, in organic results?  
 
Paid Adwords ads can get anyone to show up on page one TODAY if they are willing to invest some ad dollars in their business. Many Paid Search companies will run campaigns for as little as $199 per month (or you can do it yourself - though probably not as effectively as a professional), plus what the ads themselves cost. I've run successful local campaigns that only cost a couple of hundred dollars a month for ads and national campaigns that run no more than $600 a month...depends on how competitive the keywords are.  
 
These paid ad campaigns are keeping the companies in business until they make it to the top in free results...but their site has to bypass several THOUSAND other sites first...is their SEO guy better than the SEO guys (and gals) used by the several thousand others out there already? If not, then "Houston, we have a HUGE problem!" 
 
Much of the published info on SEO versus Pay Per Click ignores the fact that many searches have no commercial value...therefore you have few or no ads, so people DO click on the organic/natural/free results in all these millions of searches a day.  
 
Its also true that many searchers don't know the difference in paid and organic results. I know because I ask my clients specific questions to determine if they found me in paid or organic results.  
 
So much of he rhetoric out there implies that all searches have high buyer intent, though the authors know the facts. They are just not convenient facts, so PPC gets attacked...because it's a threat...because it works. 
 
Thanks for your article, John. 
 
Carlin Stanton 
"The East Texas Google Guy" 
 
Posted @ Monday, July 30, 2012 10:58 AM by Carlin Stanton
Carlin, 
 
That's about the most complete, in-depth, thoughtful blog comment I've ever seen. I'm honored you spent the time on my post. Anyway, couldn't agree more with your comments. Thanks for that. By the way, I'm now connecting with you on Twitter and LinkedIn. The power of a blog post comment in action! 
 
Best, John
Posted @ Monday, July 30, 2012 11:46 AM by John McTigue
Hi John, 
 
Thought I'd drop by on your blog to see the discussion. Very glad to see Carlin's comment and how much our research echoes with him. We've been getting a lot of bad rap ourselves for publishing this research, due to the vested interest we have as a PPC service provider. Glad to see an audience here that relates to it in real business situations!
Posted @ Thursday, August 02, 2012 10:12 AM by Victor
Comments have been closed for this article.