Intelligent PPC

Learn how to do things the smart way

Archive for March, 2009

Beyond the Obvious: Day-parting Landing Pages

Posted by Michelle On March - 18 - 2009
Bud Light Smoothie (Without the Bud Light)

A Picture Is Worth 1000 Words!

One of the more esoteric aspects of paid ad management is day-parting. It’s hard to explain. It’s hard to analyze. Different platforms support day-parting in different ways. And not everyone calls it the same thing. Day-parting is confusing. But day-parting a landing page? That’s a concept that doesn’t naturally occur to us.

Let’s say you have an item you want to sell, but it’s an item that’s better in demonstration than in print – you can make a better impact by showing a video clip than by writing an explanation in text on the landing page for your ads. There are lots of times where this could be true; just look at www.willitblend.com and watch the dude put an iPhone or a sneaker into the blender he’s selling. That is way more effective than writing a description about how powerful the blender is.

Once you make the decision to feature video on your landing page, there’s one more question – do you make the video auto-play or do you make the user click to play it? The answer is “it depends.” Practical wisdom tells us that people shop at work when they aren’t supposed to. If you’re selling an item that gets good PPC traffic during the day, but you suspect auto-launching a noisy video will attract unwanted attention, you should allow the user to click to play. The problem is once the evening traffic sets in, it’s often not only OK, it’s more effective to auto-play the video.

Day-Part Landing Pages

Make two versions of the page, one with a click-to-play video and one with an auto-play video. Set up one campaign with a day-parting schedule for “work hours” and use the click-to-play page as the landing page.  Duplicate that campaign, change the ad schedule for “after hours” and land those ads on the auto-play landing page.

Presto. You have day-parted landing pages.

Of course, you will want to test for the optimal times for using auto-play versus click-to-play, but the work time/after hours divider should provide a good place to start. And video isn’t the only thing that merits day-part landing page testing. There may be instances where a text-intensive page about house-painting consistently converts better than a graphics-intensive page at 9AM on Saturday because more users are more apt to read details on that subject then as they prepare to go to the paint store.

Think like a consumer. What times of day (or days of the week) are you more likely to be interested in lots of detail? What times of day are you more likely to be interested in brevity? You’re a shopper too, you know. You can use your own tendencies and those of friends and relatives as a guideline for establishing your test times. Then learn how to use the Adwords hourly and daily reporting to figure out what works during which specific time periods for various criteria – time of day, day of the week, even day of the month. For example, any grandmother can tell you that you have garage sales on a pay-day weekends where people are more likely to have disposable income and you run your ad in the newspaper on Thursday. Look for those kinds of patterns online as well.

This gives your A/B testing a whole new dimension.

Proof vs Faith

Posted by Michelle On March - 5 - 2009

This week there’s a conference going on in New Orleans where people from advertising are debating the fate of the industry. There’s one group who predicts online ad shrinkage and another group who insists that online ads are the only accountable ad form. There’s even one group who thinks Twitter will replace Google Search.

PPC advertising has already demonstrated some shrinkage due to the economy. But why would businesses cut back on an ad model that’s almost completely transparent and has nearly total accountability in favor of “traditional” ad methods like television, print and direct mail, which are largely faith-based efforts? You got me – I don’t get it.

Proof

Google Analytics Evangelist, Avinash Kaushik, puts it this way:

“Don’t let your opinions get in the way of your success… part of the beauty of Web sites is their ability to be proven wrong fast.”

What does he mean?

There are two parts to this – first is the web site, second is the online ad. Because of the nature of analytics and online ad media, you can literally follow a shopper from the ad click to the point where they either complete the sale or leave the site, assuming you’re willing to put in the necessary effort to implement that level of technology.

The Ad Medium

If you put up a billboard on the highway, how do you measure its effectiveness in sending you qualified traffic? If you run a commercial on radio or television, how can you know which, if any, of your customers showed up as a result of those ads? With correctly implemented online advertising, this is never the question… you know within days if your online ads and your web site are getting the job done. So why doesn’t online advertising always work?

There’s the other part of the equation – the web site itself. Your PPC account might have the mightiest CTR ever but if 90% of the people who hit your web site bounce right back out, you’ve wasted all that traffic, not to mention the money it cost to get them there. In Kaushik’s words, a bounce rate is the shopper’s way of saying, “I came, I puked, I left.”  How do you know what percentage of users simply bailed? That’s the analytics’ job.

Web Analytics

Analytics provides the proof that the web site either works, or needs work. Your television ads might blast your web address all over the screen but that station can’t track who comes to your web site as a result, nor can it tell you if they did anything else after that. Online ads are, by their very nature, completely trackable.

However, online advertising only retains this level of accountability when it’s correctly integrated with an analytics plan of some sort. Whether you use Google Analytics, Omniture, Woopra, phpMyVisites or some other next great thing, you need to take advantage of the fact that online advertising (including email) is practically the only fully accountable form of advertising out there.

When push comes to shove, businesses should be spending the most money on ad models that provide proof of return, and reduce spend on faith-based advertising models. You’ve got to be accountable for the money you spend – shouldn’t your ad model also be accountable?

Theme Provided By: Wordpress Themes - Online Undergraduate Degree