Hi all,
I am kind of new in PPC campaign and I am currently using Bing only due to budget restriction. In regards to CTR, do you think it must be at least 2% or any number is OK as long as there is a purchase? Is it also true that you should stop promoting the products if there is no purchase after 300 clicks?
I don't understand people who say "I only use xyz due to budget" or "I don't use adwords this month due to budget".
If that's how you think then you're doing it wrong.
It should be profitable in some shape or form.
"PPC Is not in my budget" is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard.
Maybe you mean "Learning PPC is not in my budget", now that makes more sense.
But people who say this month I'm not doing PPC I'm going to buy an ad in _____ instead... well, if PPC is working / profitable why the hell are you stopping it to run another campaign someplace else? do both!
- Look at Click Through rate
- Look at Conversion Rate
- Look at cost per conversion
- Look at LTV of customer
Look at profit / campaign working as a "big picture" not on a per-click basis.
For reference on some campaigns I get ~2.x% CTR and ~3%-4% conversion rate yet at times it's not profitable on the front-end, but I know we make it up since we're seeing 50% year-after-year re-purchase rate from existing customer base. But, most months it's slightly profitable or at-least breaks even.
I can't give you a magical formulate that works for you, you'll need to figure those #s out yourself.
Also 300 clicks and stopping a keyword/campaign doesn't make sense you need to know why they aren't converting. Are you monitoring their usage on your site? Mixpanel to track their events? You'd be surprised the difference of AdWords/PPC shoppers vs. organic vs. referral vs. repeat customers, maybe it's not the campaign at all but you're site needs some work. If everything is the same and I'm trying a new keyword that SHOULD convert for the same product/page then, yeah, after 300 clicks I for sure won't keep it going without seriously looking into why, making changes, and trying again. Likely you'll know this before 300 clicks, but depending on your niche you may need a lot of clicks to convert... again, look at cost and conversion vs just "300 clicks no go", this is also heavily dependent on your sale price / items, etc... 300 clicks may mean nothing if you're profiting 50% on a 10k$ item.
Since it sounds like you're just getting into this the #1 mistake new people to PPC make is sending all visitors to their "homepage" this is terrible, and will kill your conversions.... even my father hates clicking links/ads to go to a page to not find what he's looking for. The same is true for category landing pages with pages of products!!! If I clickaproduct take me to it!