1. Did your
business advertise in the Yellow Pages?
One of the most
revealing indicators that your business might benefit from Google
Search Ads is whether your business bought (or would have bought) an ad
in the Yellow Pages 20 years ago. That means local and regional
businesses and professionals like plumbers, accountants, landscapers,
personal injury attorneys, etc.
Google search results
have since taken the place of the Yellow Pages, essentially becoming a
more dynamic and complete version of them. So, if you were or could
have been a Yellow Page advertiser there is a very good chance Google
Search Ads are good for you now.
2. Are your
customers searching for you or your product or service?
Keyword research is
essential to ensuring your prospects are indeed using search to
discover your products/services and to hone in all variations in search
syntax. If folks aren’t searching what you’re selling, there is
obviously no point in buying placement in search results.
Google’s Keyword
Planner Tool is your best friend during Google Search Ads campaign
creation as it gives you the ability to check and compare search
volumes, create budget estimates, find additional keywords and more.
Pay very close
attention to search volumes, if you’re seeing that all your relevant
searches have very low volumes, say 0 – 10, it’s a good indication that
your customers are not seeking your service/product via search. On the
flip side, thousands of monthly searches for your keywords is a great
indicator that Google Search Ads are a very good fit for your business.
3. What Do the
Numbers Say?
Google’s Keyword
Planner Tool provides estimates on the cost-per-click for each keyword.
With this information, you can estimate how much money you’ll need to
spend to gain a new customer and whether that expense is affordable.
For example, let’s say you’re an accountant and each new customer is
worth about $1000 to you. In your area, the average cost-per-click is
$5 and for every 100 clicks, you get about 2 new customers… a 2%
conversion rate. That means, for every 100 clicks you spend $500 but you
bring in $2000.
On the flip side, let’s
imagine a business where the cost-per-click remains $5, the conversion
rate remains 2%, but a new customer is only worth $100. For every 100
clicks, you’re spending $500 and only bringing in $200. The best that
the campaign can hope for is to break even.
Not knowing your
numbers in advance is a very common mistake for small business owners
and often leads to a lot of wasted money. Beware!
4. Do You Have
The Budget?
The issue with
everything above is that it’s based on Google’s estimates over long
periods of time. You will need enough budget to test everything and
optimize. Often, this means running campaigns which could initially
lose money but then make money as you refine the targeting and bidding
over multiple months.
Any business
considering Google Ads needs to have some extra runway, so to speak, to
test out the effectiveness of search campaigns.
Conclusion
Google Search Ads are a
remarkable tool for a lot of small-to-medium size businesses, local,
regional and international. Ask yourself these fours questions and
you’ll be on the road to building profitable AdWords campaigns.
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