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Brooke Newbold on:

Common Paid Search Mistakes

POSTED IN Interactive, White Papers on June 25th, 2009

Common Paid Search Mistake #1

Not too long ago, I lived in a cockroach-infested apartment where a transient stored his belongings in an Albertsons shopping cart outside my window and someone sawed halfway through my bike lock with a pocket knife.  For three months I paid rent hoping to find something redeeming in my new abode before cutting losses and moving out. Similarly, I’ve paid “rent” bidding on keyword terms, hoping to find value before deleting and moving on.

Richter7 recently launched a new paid search website on which we listed seven common paid search mistakes. Number one on the list is the failure to conduct proper keyword research.  While I was not very thorough in my apartment hunting research, there are many tools and tactics that have helped me (and may help you) become thorough in keyword hunting and avoid the first common mistake.  I’ve listed a few tips below.

Learn from your competitors

If you have established competitors, it’s likely they’ve put a lot of time and money into testing lists of keywords.  They are going to be two steps ahead of you but you can catch up and preempt them by watching what they are currently bidding on and what they’ve stopped bidding on. Review their keywords, bids, budgets, and text ads for clues as to what’s working for them and what’s not. Chances are, you’ll have similar results running your paid search campaign and their history can cut out the guesswork.

Choose keywords with commercial intent

Avoid spending your budget on tire kickers who have no intent to buy, sign up, or participate in what you’re offering.  Anticipate what keywords focused buyers are querying before they purchase.   For example, a person searching for “sports cars” is going to be a lot less likely than someone searching for “2009 Porsche Carrera.”

Review your server log

Choosing keywords to bid on can involve a lot of speculation, but if you have an active website receiving visitors, your server log will tell you exactly what search terms visitors typed in to land on your site.  If you’re not sure where to find your server log, contact your hosting provider for help.

Think negatively

A common mistake in the keyword creation phase is not researching possible negative keywords.  While the positive keywords drive traffic to your site, negative keywords will filter out the wrong visitors, decrease your bounce rate, and save you from paying for unwanted clicks.  For example, a company selling Elvis Costello posters would want to spend an equal amount of time adding keywords to find Elvis Costello fans as they would trying to weed out Elvis Presley fans  by adding negative keywords like “Presley,” “The King,” “jumpsuits,” “Hawaii,” “impersonator,” etc.

Responses

  1. Whoopassvertising says:

    August 20th, 2009 at 12:02 pm (#)

    This is SO boring. Like, pain-inducing boring. Please stop clogging the internet with such boring drivel.

  2. Brooke Newbold says:

    August 20th, 2009 at 5:34 pm (#)

    You’re right. Paid search strategy is not light reading.

  3. bcrockett says:

    September 15th, 2009 at 3:31 pm (#)

    Whoopassvertising just put me to sleepzzz.

    I enjoyed the article. Never knew about negative keywords—thanks for the tip!

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