Marketing Digest

PPC Insights: The Why and How of Effective Pay-Per-Click Advertising

Since its debut in the late 1990s, pay-per-click (PPC) advertising has become a staple of online marketing. Despite facing stiff competition from other fronts like social media, PPC advertising continues to thrive and evolve.  As a matter of fact, there are many PPC news articles that feature updates and tips on how to properly pull off a PPC campaign.

Before initiating your own PPC campaign, it always pays to question your objectives. How would your competitors initiate and maintain their own PPC campaigns? Do you have enough money to conduct a campaign at your competitor’s scale? More importantly, what will you do if the PPC campaign doesn’t generate the results you want?

That’s how The Globe and Mail’s (@globeandmail) Jennifer Osborne wants to tackle PPC campaign creation first. In her article entitled “Ten Questions to Ask Before Launching a Pay-Per-Click Campaign,” she believes that the answers to these questions will form the substance of your PPC campaign. A daunting task like proper planning will yield fruitful results like a shot in the ROI arm.

Below are Osborne’s answers to the aforementioned questions.

If you’re asking why you should do PPC, look no further than “The Essentials of PPC for Small Business” by Bianca Rothschild for The Huffington Post (@HuffingtonPost). PPC is a great way to reach out to new customer bases across the U.S. (and around the world, if you operate globally) because these ads will be seen and clicked by every person on a computer with an internet connection.

Marketers, Rothschild writes, benefit from PPC’s quick results. You can see the results of your PPC as early as the first week of the campaign and work from there. At times, the results may reveal a couple of important trends to consider in planning your next move. If most viewers are viewing the website on their mobile devices, it makes sense to refocus on optimizing for mobile.

These are just some of the many positive PPC insights you’ll find here at Marketing Digest (@mktgdigest). It always pays to seek advice from those who’ve been there. 

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