Archive for September, 2007

Increase Your AdWords Conversion Rate by 126% in a Few Hours

Though I’ve had the data for this post for a while, I wanted to share it along with the results of the landing page contest that ran at SEOmoz. It turned out that my page was filtered, because “it got filtered out in the process.”

At any rate, I want to share my experience from another project and some knowledge with you.

Earlier, I was working on optimizing Google AdWords performance to increase software download conversions. After I had tweaked the landing page, split the ad group in two and rewritten the ads, the conversions from search ads have more than doubled. So I thought I’d share the case with you.

Below you’ll find a table, where the data is presented (the numbers are real, that’s why the subject/client/page isn’t identified). The data was gathered during two weeks (one week one group, another two groups). Below the table, you’ll find details on what was changed and comments on the results.

Enjoy.

Table: AdWords conversion increase and cost reduction due to optimization.
Clicks CTR Conversion
Rate
Conversions Cost per
Conversion
Average CPC Cost
Content 1567 0.14% 8.58% 129 $0.48 $0.04 $51.36
Total 2589 0.23% 11.24% 291 $0.94 $0.11 $261.86
Content 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Content 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 1101 3.60% 35.88% 395 $0.54 $0.20 $215.33
Content -1567
(-100%)
-0.14%
(-100%)
-8.58%
(-100%)
-129
(-100%)
-$0.48
(-100%)
-$0.04
(-100%)
-$51.36
(-100%)
Total -1488
(-57.47%)
+3.37%
(+1465.22%)
+24.64%
(+219.21%)
+104
(+35.74%)
-$0.40
(-42.55%)
+$0.09
(+81.81%)
-$46.53
(-17.77%)
Clicks CTR Conversion
Rate
Conversions Cost per
Conversion
Av. CPC Cost

(the increase percentage did not include the initial 100%. Thus, +20 from 100 is +20%, not +120%)

Details

Before

  • the “Before” data is taken from the week before the test was started
  • the conversion was a software download
  • the initial landing page has a 3 field form
  • the page listed features, along with a thumbnail of a screenshot, system requirements, etc (no benefits, though)

After

  • the “After” data is taken after a month has passed, during which the tweaks were done to the AdWords campaign
  • the landing page listed the the benefits the owner of the software would get
  • beneath them, shown were the ways how the software can help the owner and his customers to get the benefits
  • to download, the visitor would need to click on a Verdana 14pt blue underlined link (did you hover over or click it? it isn’t a live link)
  • after the link, file size was shown (11Mb)
  • becides the header, the above described contents and the footer, the page didn’t have any other elements (a more obvious click path)
  • during the test, content network was disabled, because it yielded absolutely no sales
  • in the AdWords campaign, an ad group was split in two to focus on two distinct kinds of visitors and keyword groups
  • along with the landing page, the ads were changed to reflect the benefits and the relevant keywords

Commentary

  • search clicks have increased due to a slight increase in CTR, most likely, since the search audience was the same
  • removal of content network resulted in:
    • less clicks (sales only went from search clicks, though)
    • relatively low total conversion increase, due to downloads from content network before the test
    • drastic total increase in CTR, since people don’t click on content network ads a lot
    • increase of total CPC even though search PPC dropped by 5%
    • a total decrease in cost by 17.77% even though search costs upped by 2.3%
  • conversions still increased by 35.74% during removing content network, which means how powerful were the search clicks (+162.35% extra conversions from search)
  • overall, the pattern is this:
    • search clicks remained the same
    • conversion rate more than doubled
    • optimized search beat old search and content performance
    • cost per conversion was reduced almost by half (-50.77% in search)
    • search CPC even got lower, reinforced by increased CTR and conversions rate
    • even though search cost has slightly increased (2.3%), total costs went down by 17.77%

So, to me, this means that the generally known tips to increase conversions and reduce costs work:

  • make it easy to convert is the best way to increase conversions (who knew?)
  • focus ad groups, keywords and ad groups around very specific subjects/keyphrases
  • us keywords in ads, too, along with call to action
  • explain the benefits of the conversion (a page with plain added info was tested and didn’t perform as well as a page w/o it)
  • test, test and test some more to increase maximum conversions

Read more about increasing AdWords conversions and reducing costs.

However, here’s the thing.

The amount of attempted orders stayed the same or even dropped by a small margin (less than 10%).

This means that just tweaking the landing page and the ads won’t help you sell if the intermediate conversion isn’t a sale, but it will help people to go the conversion path.

To sell, you need to have all the information a customer might need on the website and an easy way to order the product, coupled with things that increase trust, such as customer testimonials, trust signs (there are many for various industries) and so on.

Rounding up

Increasing intermediate conversions may not help you with sales, if you don’t make it easy and convenient to learn about your product and buy from you.

However, if your conversion is what you need and the visitors can get it from the page (free book download, for example), then even just landing page and ad optimization work like a charm.

Read the tips to improve AdWords conversions and costs from Search Engine Journal.

Link to this post:

http://www.improvetheweb.com/

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How To Unzip Files

In this short video tutorial I show you:

Where to get a free unzip software program.
How to easily unzip files.

I've been asked by a number of folks what the report is in the video. (…)

Interesting SEO Expert Video Interviews from SES

Recent Search Engine Strategies conference has given us plenty of videos, filmed by Mike McDonald of WebProNews.

Paid Links: Michael Gray and Rand Fishkin

Rand and Michael discuss Google’s policy on paid links, how Google uses fear, uncertainty and doubt, why there are some questions left still and what webmasters are supposed to do.

Also contains an indirect proof that Matt said that (something like) “nofollow is an option for the webmasters, not a requirement” during the session.

User Contributed Content in Retail: Matt McGee

How retail can use user contributed content on their websites and in marketing and why it is important.

Local Search: Patricia Hursh

Patricia Hursh dwells upon things to remember about local search, such as:

  • there is more than one way to reach local searchers
  • you need to utilize local speak
  • focus on decision criteria the customers have

Large Scale SEO: Lee Odden

Lee Odden on corporate, large scale SEO techniques.

Usability: Matt Bailey

Interview with Matt Bailey on website usability: how it relates to search, why it is important.

Linkbait: Todd Malicoat

Todd Malicoat on social marketing and linkbait.

Vanessa Fox

An interview with Vanessa Fox about Vanessa Fox: what she’s been up to, how differently people treat her now, why she went to Zillow from Google and stuff.

Opinions on the Conference: Kim Krause Berg and Bill Slawski

Kim and Bill are interviewed about the conference, about the forums and so forth.

There are more 2007 San Jose SES videos from WPN, too.

Enjoy.

P.S. You can reduce the video quality to speed up the loading.

P.P.S. If you are an RSS reader, you might wonna click on the links to the videos, if you can’t view them in the reader.

P.P.P.S. Posting might be light in this week or two (or three), as I try to take a vacation from the computer, but you can check these blogs and forums for interesting stuff:

Link to this post:

http://www.improvetheweb.com/

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