Back in the old days of the
Internet - in 1993, - there were 284 locations on the entire
World Wide Web. According to Bill Clinton, only 8 of them
ended in .com or .net when he was sworn into office. As
of January 1, 2003, there were 171,000,000 domain hosts
in use. In 1995, the largest search engine database was
Altavista, and it had most of the Internet categorized.
Today Google and FASTsearch own the largest databases. Yet
neither one of them has even 10% of the Internet covered.
It's estimated that more than 8,000,000 web pages are added
to the Internet every day. None of the search engines are
able to keep up to that pace. So how will your website stand
out? How will it acquire the traffic it needs to succeed?
There are many ways to approach the issue of marketing an
online business, but for the sake of this article, we'll
concern ourselves solely with online tools, and ways to
expedite success. In that vein, we'll concern ourselves
with Pay for Inclusion and Pay for Placement (or Pay per
Click) advertising.
Some engines, such as AltaVista, Inktomi, Looksmart and
FAST, use a pay for inclusion model. What this means is
that to be guaranteed to be found within that specific search
engine index, the website operator must pay a fee to be
listed. It's similar to the fee a business pays for a Yellow
Pages listing. These fees vary from monthly to annual. Looksmart
charges a listing fee, plus a fee of $0.15 per clickthrough.
Engaging a Pay-for-Inclusion service does not come with
any placement guarantees. If your website is not properly
optimized, but you paid an inclusion fee, it is guaranteed
to be indexed and listed somewhere within that search engine.
If you want to ensure success with a Pay-for-Inclusion search
engine, then your website must still be optimized. Without
proper optimization, which includes an analysis from the
perspective of all the factors that the search engines look
for, a pay for inclusion service will not deliver the desired
benefits to the website operator.
When properly matched with a comprehensive Search Engine
Optimization regimen, a Pay for Inclusion program will result
in powerful results: Qualified Traffic, Customers, and Relevant
Traffic.
Pay per Click advertising is the process by which a web
site operator can arrange for a website to be placed in
a pre-defined position within certain search engines, such
as Overture.
Search Engine Placement is always a Pay-Per-Click solution.
While advertising websites are only permitted to buy advertising
in search queries that are relevant to their content, they
are not sorted by relevance but rather purely based on bid
value.
Pay per click services allow advertisers to bid for each
visitor directed through to their web site, based upon the
number of clicks the ad receives. Pay per Click search engine
placement should be realistically viewed for what it is
- an online auction. Advertisers bid against each other
for a fixed position within a list of search results. The
advertiser who bids the most is given the top spot in the
list. Each advertiser bids according to their budget, and
has to know his or her Return On Investment (ROI) to determine
how much money should be spent on acquiring new customers.
How Do I Know Which Strategy Is
Right For My Website?
For those advertisers where the ROI is sensible or worthwhile,
pay per click search engines are valuable customer acquisition
tools. But is it right for you? While it can be expensive,
here's a way for you to easily determine the ROI for your
online business, and determine if it is the right choice
for you. Take out a sheet of paper, and at the top of the
sheet mark down the average price of the goods you sell
- we'll use $100.00 for the purpose of the example. From
that number, make some simple and basic calculations, outlined
here:
$100.00 Sale Amount -$ 50.00 Cost of Goods -$ 5.00 Transaction
Cost (bank charges, credit card) -$ 8.50 Shipping Fees (This
assumes you're delivering a product, it needs a box, label,
and has a delivery cost. -$ 10.00 Customer support costs
- time on phone, email, etc... supporting and processing
the transaction. What's 1 hour of your time worth? $ 26.50
= Margin
Assuming this margin is correct for your website, is a Pay
per Click campaign right for you? You'll need to look at
your stats to judge this properly. You need to determine
how many of your visitors are converting into buyers. IF
your website has a 4% conversion rate, and your category
is moderately competitive, you will probably need to budget
at least $1.00 per click to get spot #3. Spot #3 is important
because more often than not it's the top 3 spots per page
of search engine results that are reserved for Pay per Click
advertisers.
Assuming your website gets into the top three spots, here's
how the math works if you get 100 clicks in a month. Since
it's all percentage based, the same holds true if you get
25 clicks or 10,000 clicks.
100 clicks @ $1.00 per click = $100.00 cost 4% conversion
= 4 sales = 4x $26.50 (margin on sale) = $106.00 Profit
= $ 6.00
So, if the above were true, and IF the pay per click advertisement
sent you 100 visitors per month, you would make only $6.00.
Would you make much less having spot #4 instead of spot
#3 ? If it meant one less sale a month, that would be worth
it. You would make $70.00 more by selling less! Does spot
#3 get much more traffic than relevant results in spots
4 through 10? Not at all for spot # 4, 5, 6, and only a
little bit more for spot #'s 7-10. Remember, people usually
look at the title or site description to see if it is relevant.
Pay per Click is worth the money if your website is not
found under any relevant queries in the top 20, but its
value drops quickly if a website is found easily in the
free listings within the search engines.
Is Pay for Inclusion Less Expensive?
If we use the same calculation as above, and your website
had 4 sales from a pay for inclusion engine where you paid
$39.00 per year, or $3.25 / month, your profit would have
been $103.25.
What About The Cost Of Search Engine
Optimization?
Search engine optimization does not have to be expensive.
You can do the work yourself, but you need to ensure that
it makes sense to do so. By this I mean, is doing it yourself
a cost efficient, business proposition? Any time that you
as an individual put into search engine optimization is
time that you take away from business fundamentals and essentials.
It's time away from customer support, content creation,
service, administration, product research, other marketing,
etc... What is that time worth? It's got to be part of the
ROI calculation too. More and more people are choosing to
outsource this work. It's estimated that 70% of online businesses
will outsource non-core operations this year. It only makes
sense. It's smart business to focus on what you know and
do well and to hire others to support you in the other areas.
Not many smart businessmen write their own contracts - they
get their lawyer to do it. They want to ensure it's done
right. Doing it right in the first place saves money in
the long run. Outsourcing means getting someone else to
do the work for you, properly. It does not mean getting
someone to tell you what to do, or how to do things.
What's Right For Your Website?
In the long run, a website operator that has a well optimized
website will beat out a non-optimized website that concentrates
on Pay per Click advertising for customer acquisition every
day of the year. He may make fewer sales in a year, but
he will make more profit from each sale. If the website
is properly optimized, it will enjoy better placement in
more search engines. This means it will survive, and prosper
in the long run.
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