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If you're running a PPC campaign you know how expensive top keywords can get.

Search Marketing Standard's series on Seven Habits of Highly Successful Search Engine Marketing gives solid and helpful advice on how to spend your online marketing budget wisely.

There are a couple of areas in Part II - Keyword Best Practices - that especially caught my interest.

Create Basic Keywords expands on the 5 types of keyword sets your campaign should encompass:

  1. Root terms
  2. Synonyms
  3. Action Prefixes and Suffixes
  4. Run-ons and Misspellings
  5. Plurals (Google only)

By carefully developing, assessing, and using these 5 types, you will generate a well-rounded keyword universe for your campaign, with many less expensive yet highly effective keywords. The author notes that:

"If you create five root terms, five synonyms, 10 prefixes and suffixes, and use plurals, this will result in a list of 200 keywords. Add in another 20 misspellings and you are up to 220 keywords. Add in all 50 states, specific cities, and combining prefixes and suffixes on the same keyword, and you can see how these five simple rules can quickly build a keyword set for you without ever touching a fancy keyword tool!"

The other area of interest to me is negative keywords. There are two ways to use them. One is to create a list of generic negatives like "lawsuit, complaint, free, cheap, etc." and append the ones that fit your service or product to your keywords.

The second way to use negative keywords is to find semantically related words that are not useful to searchers. You can save a lot of money if you specify, in your PPC campaigns, that your ads not be served if your negative words are part of the user’s search query. The author gives a clever example:

"...exclude the word “one” from an advertisement for “night stands” that are used for bedroom furniture."

I have only highlighted parts of the post - be sure to hop on over to Search Marketing Standard and read the complete article. Your wallet will thank you!

Reprinted from SEO Diva.

 
Post is included in group: Rainmaking - Internet Marketing Strategies
Post is included in group: Real Estate SEO
Post is included in group: ActiveSEO

17 Comments on Keyword Advice for PPC Marketing

HI Kay....what's PPC anyway...how have you been....I pop into your other blog here and there...I've been so busy (not complaining :) :) that I have been neglecting the rain..and my arch nemisis (we call him pig vomit....he looks like the guy from Howard Sterns movie "private parts" you know pig vomit ??) is catching up to me :) :) take care....good seein' ya

06/17/2008 06:11 PM by Konnie MAC Northern Virginia Real Estate (Konnie McKee )


Kay,

You always have great advice. Thanks!

John Powers

Selling Restaurants

www.Restaurants4SaleOnline.com

 

06/17/2008 07:20 PM by John Powers (Selling Restaurants)


@Konnie - Pay Per Click, as in Google ads! Glad you hear you're busy ;)

@John Powers - thanks!

06/17/2008 07:37 PM by Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)


How would you use 200 keywords in a site? I hear that anymore than 10 is a problem with search engines.

MY next project, or one of my next projects, is to revamp the content and key words throughout my site - focusing on specific rather than generic terms, and using numerous pages to localize the keywords.

The system described above seems to recommend a different approach, to work multiple variations for the same page.

For example - mortgage, home loan, homeloan, homlona, morgage, lone, laon

Am I understanding this correctly? How can this many variations be put on a keyword list for a web page?

Thanks,

Richard

06/17/2008 08:38 PM by Richard Smith Mortgages Home Loans FHA TN GA AL (American Acceptance Mortgage, Inc)


@Richard - you're right, you want to focus your web site pages on about 3-5 keywords each. PPC stands for Pay per Click, which are the Google, Yahoo and MSN ads you see at the top and/or right side of a search page.

06/17/2008 09:17 PM by Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)


Great info, Kay.  My understanding is that for any PPC campaign to be successful, you should be spending about $500/month.  that seems pretyy pricey to me= what are your thoughts for a minimum that could/should be spent??

06/17/2008 10:55 PM by Carol Lee Realtor ® Agoura, Oak Park, Westlake CA Homes (Coldwell Banker Residential)


@Carol - conversions are what make a PPC campaign successful. Only spend what your budget allows. I would start small and test test test. The areas you need to be concerned with are

1) keyword prices; if general kw's are too expensive, go for longer tail keywords
2) ad copy that pulls in the right traffic - create two or three ads and rotate them to see which works best
3) a landing page with a call to action.

Keep in mind you can specify geographic location and time of day for your ads. Merge an analytics account with your PPC account and you'll be amazed at what you learn!

06/17/2008 11:16 PM by Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)


Kay- too funny!  I am sure that response made perfect sense to you, as you do SEO, but I had to read it about 29 times for it to start to make any sense! I kind of understand the concept of long tail.  I am not creative to write great ad copy, and I assume when you say "landing page" you mean on my web site?  Like contact me, or something??

06/17/2008 11:38 PM by Carol Lee Realtor ® Agoura, Oak Park, Westlake CA Homes (Coldwell Banker Residential)


Hi Kay, I thought I had it all then I read your post.  Now I have to include the synonyms, action prefixes and suffixes.  Maybe I will have it all done in my lifetime.  Thank you for the post, as always your information is useful and informative.

06/18/2008 03:12 AM by Leolinda Bowers, MBA, CRS, Top 2% Ken Meade Realty Sun City Grand Real Estate (Ken Meade Realty)


Hi Kay Interesting how a small play on words can really affect what happens in the serps.

06/18/2008 07:38 AM by Bill Gassett Metrowest Massachusetts Real Estate (RE/MAX Executive Realty)


Hi Kay- Thank you for the links.  I also saw one of your comments about merging an "analytics account," what does that mean?  I've heard of Google Analytics (I think) is this just something that breaks down how your key words performed?  If so what do you look out for?  Thanks again!

06/18/2008 03:40 PM by Matt Moxhay Moorestown Real Estate (Prudential Fox & Roach)


Thanks Kay.

Let me get this in my small brain. The multiple layered keyword approach described in the post is just for pay per click keywords, which is also why the negative keywords apply?

Got it.

Now for a strategy to combine PPC on a budget with high PR back links.

Does it accomplish both to use long tail keywords, maybe with well considered negative keywords, to obtain back link juice from Google as well as good quality, restricted keywords. Even hoping that the keywords are not selected too frequently, and only for good potential clients.

I cannot imagine the bill for PPC at "chattanooga mortgages" or "credit score." The number of shoppers and curious surfers must be outrageous.

Something like "Home Loans in Ooltewah" as a PPC keyword phrase, that would not be hit too often. Would that give a back link from Google, even as it limited the likely clicks to focused borrowers?

I have not been able to get to the SEO Diva blog lately, just too stretched. I hope to do some reading there soon. Now linking this reference to SEO Diva does not help your site, because of the no follow link policy, right??

Richard

 

06/18/2008 09:15 PM by Richard Smith Mortgages Home Loans FHA TN GA AL (American Acceptance Mortgage, Inc)


@Carol - oops, sorry, I got carried away there! Long tail are the keywords that less commonly used but more specific. A landing page is the page that the ad points to.

@Lynda - you're welcome :)

@Leolinda - there's always something new!

@Matt - Google analytics gives you a huge amount of info, including how many visitors you get in a specified time period, how many new visitors, where they're from, what time...it can get very granular.

06/18/2008 10:05 PM by Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)


@Richard - you're so confused, you got me confused LOL!

PPC and backlinks are two totally different things. They can't be combined. Google ads do not give you backlinks.

The link in this post is not "no followed" but AR comments are. The link does lead the search engine back to my site, which may help in some way, but I do it mainly so this post is not considered duplicate content, but rather syndicated content.

06/18/2008 10:08 PM by Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)


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Real Estate Media: Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization)
Kay Frenzer ~ Real Estate SEO
Chandler, AZ
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