How to Optimize Your PPC Campaign for Each Stage of the Buying CyclePosted by John on October 8, 2007 in Advanced PPC Strategies |
The buying cycle is a topic that search marketers have labored over and written about consistently through the years. Today I would like to share a few new techniques with you to optimize your PPC campaigns for each stage of the buying cycle.
First a quick reminder of what constitutes a buying cycle:
- According to Kevin Lee at ClickZ, the traditional cycle is Attention, Interest, Conviction, Desire and Close.
- Search Engine Guide simplifies the cycle by one step, listing it as Awareness, Consideration/Research, Decision and Purchase.
- Not to be outdone, Yahoo! takes the buying cycle down to these three steps: Research, Shop, and Purchase.
No matter how you slice it, it is very important to realize that the customers looking for your product or service are at different stages of the cycle. It is key to realize that your PPC campaigns need to focus on all aspects of the cycle from your campaign organization down to your keywords.
People enter a market for most products or services at a variety of stages in their personal buying cycle. If you target only those people who have done their research and are ready to buy, right now, you will miss the majority of your market.
What I would like to offer up as a suggestion is that you actually optimize your PPC campaigns around the buying cycle. How does one go about this, you ask? Simple! Focus on your keywords, ad texts and bids.
Keywords and Ad Text
The complexity of a keyword most often is in direct relation to its place in the buying cycle. General, one-word search terms are going to target those customers in the early research phases. When you get to the 3 and 4 (or larger!) keyword strings, these are targeting customers who know what they want and are ready to buy.
Optimize your PPC accounts around these ideas. By doing this you can create relevant ad texts for each phase of the buying cycle. But ad texts are not the only string you can pull.
Bids
It should be a given that you want your ads to be present from research through purchase. However, high ad positions may not be as paramount with the research phase. For these general keywords, you can bid lower. On the flip side, for those customers in “buy mode,” you will want to bid higher on complex search terms to ensure they click your ad when the time is right!
All of that being said, use these techniques in close cooperation with your own ROI reporting. In some instances, general keywords can catch buyers at the end of the cycle. You will have to do your homework and make the best decisions for your individual campaigns.
I’d love to hear if anyone else has experimented with PPC optimization based on the stages of the buying cycle. Let me know your thoughts!
- Your Contact Form Might Be Hurting Your PPC Campaign
- Are You Hurting Your Keywords’ Performance? Without a Great Account Structure You Just Might Be!
- A Quick Review & Expansion on “Best Paid Search Practices”
- How to Find Customers That Aren’t Still Researching but Ready to Buy RIGHT NOW
- How to Fit General Keywords into a Profitable Campaign








October 8th, 2007 at 11:31 am
Great Post. any way to customize an adwords campaign with bid % being lower on certin time of month like you can with time of day that you know of? or good way you know about monthly sales cycle targeting?
October 11th, 2007 at 4:00 am
Good post John. One way to control what you just described is to use your analytics stats to see how conversions happen on your site according to time of day and day of the week.
Then use those patterns to setup the dayparting rules in your PPC campaign. This will give you lower position exposure when you know your clients are just researching, and higher positions when you know they are ready to buy.
A very good book to read on this and search marketing in general is Search Engine Marketing, Inc.: Driving Search Traffic to Your Company’s Web Site (Ibm Press) by Mike Moran and Bill Hunt
Anita
October 9th, 2008 at 11:14 am
[...] But first things first, you must understand the buying cycle. At its simplest form, the buying cycle is Research, Shop and Purchase. Easy enough. Your task as a search marketer is then to segment your [...]