Increase Internet ROI Why and How to Measure and Improve Pay Per Click ROI

I just read the disturbing results of a joint study on the performance of
search marketing firms. Jupiter Research and iProspect surveyed 636
qualified search marketers and 224 search agencies, and found that:

   - Most internet marketing firms look at web site traffic or search
   engine rankings, rather than *business results *such as ROI (return on
   investment) or total sales generated from search engine leads.
   - Fewer than 40% of search engine marketers are evaluated on ROI or
   total sales.
   - Only 1 out of 7 search marketers measure overall ROI of combined SEO
   (search engine optimization) and PPC (pay per click) campaigns.
   - Most marketers cannot separate the individual ROI of the two
   different channels - 45% said they cannot determine whether SEO or PPC
   provides a higher ROI.

Is there a philosophy behind your business's approach to pay per click
(PPC)? The picture painted by my consultant peers is that most companies
think you just choose a bunch of keywords, set a monthly budget, and then
pay it. Fine-tuning for higher profits hasn't occurred to them.

For other companies, there may be some thought behind it. Some believe that
expansion, higher revenues, and customer acquisition outweigh nearly any
cost. But the last 6 years of hard knocks entrepreneurship have drilled some
different business basics into my soul.

I believe every advertising campaign should break even or profit on its own
merit. This conviction grew while I was investing my own money in my
business efforts. Now I work for someone else (feelgoodstore.com) as an
internet marketer, and one of our major revenue sources is pay per click. I
understand their money isn't limitless, and I treat it as if it's my own- I
don't take ad spending lightly.

Thus, my modus operandi is to treat each keyword individually. It either
converts for us at a rate and for a price which is sustainable and
profitable, or it's a loser, and I delete it. I generally give a keyword 100
clicks before cutting it loose. That 1% conversion rate is my cut-off point.

With Google AdWords, it's been easy (Overture has been unable to get us
conversion numbers or explain what the problem is, so we're going to have to
write our own code to track it). The conversion rate and cost per conversion
are calculated for you, so I compare those numbers to the profit margin on
the items that correlate to each keyword. Oh, by the way, AdWords' "Budget
Optimizer", by their own admission, isn't recommended if you're "focused on
measuring conversions or values of ad clicks." Ummm, yeah, give me some of
the invaluable ones that don't convert, please? Duh!

Let me break that down for you? to increase your internet ROI, you must
understand the business basics of profit margin, conversion rate, and
break-even point. Many articles have been written on these topics, so here's
a summary: For each item, subtract the cost from the price, and you have
profit margin. Conversion rate is the percentage of click-throughs who
actually buy from you. The break-even point for any item is the profit
margin multiplied by the conversion rate.

*Click here to read full
articlesÂ…*<http://www.scriptinn.com/misc/money_adsense_increase_roi/>


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