I have number one positions organically, should I run an additional PPC campaign?
-
My local dental practice has some pretty awesome number 1-3 rankings locally and nationally for all the keywords and topics we're interested in (thanks Moz) I was searching on my mobile locally for a keyword and notice that each time I search on my smartphone the first thing I see is a competitors ad for that keyword or phrase. Then you scroll through four ads and the map pack (which we're in) and you find us at the number one position.
I want to completely dominate the serp and was reading this: https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.com/en//pubs/archive/37161.pdf but if I' honest I don't really understand it.
Should I run ads on the mobile to get that number one position on the ads so that everyone who searches locally for our keywords sees us on their smartphone before they even start to scroll and then see us again in the map and again in the 1-3 position?
Is this a good idea or a waste of money? PPC had never delivered decent ROI for us and will typically break even so we are just busy fools chasing leads for not much gain. But I was thinking a more 'branding' related number one position ad might increase the conversion rate, CTR or help in some way. Would it cost a fortune to keep it at the top of the mobile results for maybe 10-20 keywords just on the mobile?
I know this is what google want me to be doing and i also want to choke my competition and completely dominate the SERPS because we provide the best service by miles and often the ads are shoddy and poorly executed. What's the consensus amongst you wonderful PPC / SEO experts. Obviously there's lots of SEO's saying it's a great idea because they just want to sell SEO services. And google is in this camp. So I don't know who to trust for the right answer.
-
Yeah they really suck though. They are mean to patients and do a bad job and overcharge them. So it's a good thing really. I sound evil but my team do really beautiful work for fair fees and make hundreds of people a week smile and feel better about themselves. So every patient I acquire I see as being saved from potential dental disaster at the hands of some incompetent or greedy practitioner. It's a cool culture.
I feel sorry for our competition because I don't ever want to see businesses fail. But some of them don't deserve to be in business. Not in 2018.
-
Wow! It sounds like you are really reaching for your competitors' throats.
-
I agree. I have asked an agency to set it up for me and then I'm going to run it once it's set up with all the bells and whistles and fancy new adwords additions that i'm not familiar with. Then once we have the targeting and bid strategy organised and optimised I will be free to re-write the ads. I've offered to write each individual ad for the agency to save time and the budget they've given is more than fair to set it up with skill and aptitude for the correct keywords and all in the right ad groups etc.
I'm running exact match high traffic high position and then a before and after (we have the best before and afters of anyone) and cost (we have the best prices, payment terms etc and also best dentist and our qualifications etc. The emergencies idea is fantastic for me. And I can control that. We are open later than all our competition and google in it's wisdom is putting us in position one in the maps when we are open for emergencies. Even above the national health service. So their algorithms are getting really, really smart now. I've also marked up reviews for a 'reviews' ad set. because we have the best and most number of reviews. It's a ballsy campaign but I want to totally dominate and we have the budget.
Thanks for your advice. I love Moz. You just can't get this level of insight anywhere else.
-
Will it impact your quality score?
Yes, because it might be less relevant to the query. Yes, because it might be clicked LESS.
But, if you can get clicked more often than your competitors your quality score might rise.
Keep in mind that in the adwords auction it is not the size of your bid that influences your position. Instead it is the size of your bid x your CTR. So a $1 per click ad that gets clicked 4x as much as a $3 per click ad can be in superior position.
That is what makes outrageous possible. Make your ad say what ALL of your customers want. Do you have a value proposition? do you have unique service, are you the best dentist, do you have the best location, do you have late evening service, do you have openings TODAY? You can use these things if you have panache and can manage your ads actively through the day.
I would never recommend outsourcing the aggressive campaign. YOU know your business, your clients, where you have competitive advantage, where you can appeal, better than anyone. And, with a small amount of training your receptionist might be able to weak your ads to say... appts today at 3 and 5.
-
EGOL this is precisely what I was thinking. Thanks for the reply. And thanks too Brett for your detailed one. I was wondering whether the outrageous or more brand focussed messaging might affect the quality score of the ad and make it more difficult to retain the number one position on the mobile. I want it to be the fitst thing ALL searchers see when they type the phrase in. So to be more 'seen' than 'clicked' is that going to make it super costly to keep it up there or does google not care because it's pay per click not pay per impression I worry it's not going to stay for long were I need it.
-
PPC allows you to present entirely different offers to the searcher.
While the optimization of your webpage used to compete in the SERPs must be worded to win position, your adwords ad can be different - even outrageous. Match it to your local offline advertising slogan, match it to an additional service that is profitable but not visible in your organic listing, use it to present a click-to-call, use it if you are aggressive and want to run the competition out of town or swamp them with your message.
-
This is a tricky question to answer because you're asking about the overall strategy and tactics for running a successful PPC campaign and integrating that with your SEO strategy. I'll share with you some personal results and tactics we've used, and some learnings, and hopefully that will help answer your question.
First, some context. We do a lot of SEM and SEO for local services, so I'll be using HVAC as my go to reference point.
1. Brand keywords are super cheap for us. We've always found this to be a good investment as it doesn't normally cost much and if we don't buy those keywords, some of our competitors do.
2. Buying other brands - just as you want to keep competition out of your space, you can invade theirs. Also hasn't every cost us very much money in the past. Much lower conversion rate from these, but every one you snag is a customer won.
3. CPC varies greatly. Especially for local keywords. Different regions have different competition levels it seems. I've seen some guys with a total Cost per Lead of $45. I've also seen it skyrocket to over $100 CPL in a different region.
4. Don't confuse SEO and SEM. There's a big difference. SEM/PPC is referring to paid ads, SEO is the organic listings. They are two separate disciplines that require two separate skill sets, so you shouldn't have any SEOs trying to sell you SEM unless their agency does both.
5. Bid for profitability, not revenue, and you can keep your costs down so you're bringing in leads at an acceptable cost. As long as you've set up a tracking and attribution model that works you shouldn't have any problems making adjustments until your campaign is running smoothly. You can axe the keywords that are costing too much and improve the ones that are bringing solid leads.
Hope that helps. I do recommend doing SEM on top of your SEO. If you're having trouble running a profitable campaign, find an expert you trust and commit a stable budget for a year and see what they can do.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Multiple keywords in one article?
Hi guys! I will be soon getting my article published in local newspaper (online edition) with DA 50. They told me i can choose whatever anchor text I want. The article is about towing business and my keyword is going to be also "towing". Is it smart to add another keyword in the same article (which is similar and is also a money keyword) ? Thanks!
Local SEO | | Suksinho0 -
Advice needed; Scrap mature .co.uk and move to .com, or run two separate domains?
Asked before, we have a .co.uk domain name and it has grown with rankings over many years with many quality links made to it. Since, we also have acquired the .com of our agency brand, and want to also focus on US market - something hard to do with a UK domain. However, we aren't sure which route to go from here... Should we keep the .co.uk active and allow that to focus on the UK market, and grow the .com from scratch with a site that looks the same with slightly different content and interlink the two with regional flags. Or move across to the .com totally and scrap the .co.uk. I know we could do a redirect and save a good number of the links made on the .co.uk, but is that worth even doing? And what would the risk be of having two sites the same with similar content? Since this isn't an area I've dealt with before, we are interested to get some real advice to understand which decision is right given the scenario.
Local SEO | | thewebpreneur0 -
Reduction in organic visits due to AdWord changes
Wondering if anyone else has noticed a change in site performance since Google has changed the way Adwords are displayed. We have a site that has been performing well, however this year visits have dropped by 20%. The performance of the keywords has remained the same and bounce rate has actually reduced. My suspicion is that with Google removing the Ad links from the right side of the page and placing 4 ads at the top of the page, this has pushed down the organinc results. Looking at some of the search results we now appear beyond the results page fold despite being the 1st orgainc result. The Ad results has site links and there is the Map with local results all pushing our first organic result of the screen. Has anyone else found this an issue or should I look elsewhere for the drop in visits? (The overall searches for our search terms has not dropped, just our percentage share has)
Local SEO | | smartcow1 -
Usability: Using Letters in Phone Numbers
A manager wants change our 800 phone number to use letters instead of numbers. This would involve changing our toll free number, changing phone number on website/blog/quote forms (different platforms) and changing on Social Media, Local and citations. i.e. 1-800-GoReds1 versus 1-800-555-5555 Is there any research that shows customers appreciate a Brand Named phone number over simple numbers? It seems it would make using the phone number more difficult except on mobile, where it can be clicked. I have looked online but have found nothing, but am not sure I'm searching the correct terms.
Local SEO | | RoxBrock0 -
Click to view phone number
Well hello there! We run a local directory site for a specific vertical and use several thousand call tracking numbers (one per listing) to track calls to the local business and report on those metrics (number of calls, appointment set, etc). We are familiar with dynamic phone number insertion to be able to track phone calls back to the type of traffic or campaign sending it. If we wanted to implement this, it would require an exorbitant amount of call tracking numbers as we already start out with several thousand numbers to begin with. We are toying with the idea to hide the phone number in the directory listing and require the user to click to show the full phone number. We know this is an additional action required by the user, but we assume that this would then help us see the folks who are more serious about calling the number of the local business. We could then use that click metric to then tie out all the goals within GA to look at how effective a given medium is and even look at what content is sending traffic that clicks on the phone number. Two areas for comments: Any input on others who use this metric? Any input on if anyone thinks this is a good/bad metric? Anyone have a better idea/technique? Do you think that the search engines would see this technique as a negative? If so, why or why not? Thanks!
Local SEO | | HeaHea0 -
2 websites or one .ca and .com
Hi I have a client with a lighting business in Canada but ship to all US- they have ecommerce web site .ca and .com the .ca has always brought more traffic. (they have a store in Canada) they are now redoing the site and trying to decide should they have just one site and the other redirected to it or should they have two and which one the main one- they would like to sell to the us but are obviously stronger in Canada- don't want to lose on both sides.. Appreciate any help!
Local SEO | | maryk920 -
Using hreflang on multiple domains when one has been penalized
Hi, I have two sites. One is a new .co.uk site which contains duplicate information to a .ie site. Currently, if I do a search for the company name in Google.co.uk it returns the .ie site. The .co.uk site needs some localisation done and some links (really is brand new). I was going to place hreflang tags as follows on both sites:- The order would flip for the .co.uk site from the above order. However, just to make things interesting, the .ie site was hit by Penguin and it hasn't recovered yet (and won't recover for another few months while I fix the issues). So the question is, what should I do? Do I go ahead an let Google know for sure that these sites are linked despite one of them having been penalized? Or do I let Google think that there is a .co.uk site with duplicate content to another .ie site?
Local SEO | | Serpstone0 -
Citations for a non-local campaign?
Is it worth building citations if one is targeting a national campaign with NO local keywords? Even if they have some effect, are they really worth the time, effort and costs?
Local SEO | | Gavo0