Pay per click search engines let you set up an account with an initial deposit, and
then bid for the top positions in the search results pages for keywords or keyphrases that
you are interested in. Your bid will typically be set in cents or dollars per click. When
a prospect clicks on your link, you are charged the amount of that bid.
Naturally, the keyphrases that people search for the most will command the highest
bids.
Some pay per click search engines operate their own brand of search engine. However,
the bulk of the traffic to bidding web sites doesn't come directly from them but from
partner sites, usually large portal sites like Yahoo!, MSN or AOL. Links to bidding web
sites will appear at the top or at the side of the search results page, clearly marked as
"sponsor results" or "sponsor links".
For example, Overture
(formerly GoTo), by far the most popular pay per click search engine, provides sponsored
listings to numerous partner sites, among them: America Online, Altavista, Direct Hit,
Excite, HotBot, iWon, Lycos, Netscape, and Yahoo! The highest bidders will achieve the top
position for their selected keywords.
With Looksmart, you pay
a flat fee per click ($0.15 at the time of this writing) and the pages with higher
relevance rise to the top. Looksmart provides sponsored search results to a high
quality core of sites like MSN, Altavista, About.com, Netscape and CNN.
Another important Pay Per Click search engine is Kanoodle.
Kanoodle goes beyond offering traditional sponsored results in search engines, by offering
their ContextTarget service. ContextTarget puts your ads alongside
editorial content instead of within search results. This allows you to reach potential
consumers at the exact time they are engaged and reading relevant content on their
favorite sites. At the time of this writing, Kanoodle was offering new customers
it's attractive $5
Kanoodle Free Trial.
Google, the king of search engines, has recently launched its own pay per click
service, called Google Adwords. At the time of
this writing, Google Adwords provided sponsored search results to America Online,
AskJeeves, Earthlink, and to Google itself. Google operates a little differently than
Overture and Looksmart, in the sense that the top positions are determined by a
combination of high bids and high click through rates, so nobody can lock the top
positions solely by bidding high.
One thing to keep in mind, though, is that usually only the top two or three bidders
for a selected keyphrase will be displayed in the search results page of the partner
sites. This means that if your page is in fourth position or lower, your link will most
likely not be displayed on the top partner sites, and your traffic will be significantly
less. That explains the large difference in price between a top position and a lesser one.
Since bidding for the top positions is so expensive, you want to make your link text as
specific as possible, to attract only the most qualified, targeted traffic. If you make
your link text too generic and bid for a top position, you may end up receiving lots of
clicks from people who are not really interested in your product, and who click on your
link only out of curiosity. That is also the reason why you have to select very specific
keywords.
To know how much to bid for a top position, you have to have an idea of your expected
conversion rate and the gross profit margin of your product. Let say that you sell
computer books at a gross profit of $4 per book, and your conversion rate is 3% (meaning
that 3 out of 100 people who click on your link actually buy a book). Under this
assumption, if 100 people clicked on your link, you would sell three books, making a total
gross profit of $12. This means that, to break even, each click must be worth $0.12. If
you bid less than $0.12 per click, you make money. If you bid more, you lose money.
Pay per click search engines provide you with real time reports that tell you how much
are people bidding for specific keywords. They also provide you with Keyword Suggestion
Tools to assist you in selecting the right keywords or keyphrases (to see an example,
check Overture's Keyword Suggestion
Tool). One of the most important functions of this tool is to show you alternative
keyphrases, which may be cheaper to bid for than the ones you had originally selected.
In summary, using pay per click search engines is the quickest and easiest way to gain
the top search positions in the major search engines. It can also be very costly, so it is
important that it be handled properly.
Recommended Pay Per Click resources:
Google AdWords: 21 Pay-Per-Click
Campaign Secrets Your Competition Doesn't Know (by Andrew Goodman): This
insightful analysis of how the Google Adwords system works will help you find the best
bargains and achieve the highest click-through rates. If you are ready to get
serious about pay per click, this ebook will save you time and will pay for itself many
times over.
The SEO Book (by
Aaron Wall): A comprehensive A to Z introduction to the Search Engine Optimization
world, devotes a chapter to Pay Per Click search engines.
You can freely reprint this article. Just include the following resource box at
the end:
Mario Sanchez publishes The Internet Digest ( http://www.theinternetdigest.net
), an online collection of web design and Internet marketing articles and resources.
You can freely reprint his weekly articles in your website, ezine, newsletter or
ebook.