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| High CTR, Low Conversion? We're running a small handful of "test" ads for one of our customers. One such product is a Workplace ***ual Harassment video training package. It's a fairly high-traffic segment with about 7,000 impressions per day on our keywords. On one of our ads we're getting a CTR of 5.2% even though we're bidding quite low for the competition and "suggested" PPC by Google's Sandbox (the tool, not the "effect"). We're driving traffic and have tried a number of different conversion methods on the site but we are getting nowhere. We are impressed with every area of the "campaign" but conversion -- which is what really counts. If you're so inclined, Google the keyphrase "***ual harassment" and click on the FoleyServices ad. We rotate two different ads, each of which go to a different page. The ad that includes the price (which is less-than 24 hours old) goes right to the buy page, the other (high CTR) ad goes to an info page which then leads to the buy page (or so we hope) to avoid "sticker shock" before getting the info. Obviously this isn't working as we've had THOUSANDS of clickthrus without a SINGLE purchase -- talk about bad conversion. Are we too verbose? Too chaotic? Not specific enough? This isn't the only ad with high CTR that is underperforming on conversion, but it's the worst. So we may be going about the conversion process all wrong. It could be a tiny little bit of info that puts us over the hump, but I'm beginning to exhaust reasons here. Thanks in advance. Brendan |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? Hi Brendan, If I understood properly, people come to your shop following an ad of yours, look what you have to offer and leave your shop. If so, I would see 3 problems: - either your visitors are searching for something else and your ad shows for wrong keywords. they wanted to come and see and not buy anything; - or you have a bad page of your product and people get discouraged; - or your ads say too much (they are simply too good). cheers, wlodi |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? My first reaction was "holy ****" that is expensive! If your product really is worth $349 then this is not conveyed by your advertisement. Drop the price to $25 and see if sales pick up. "wlodi" <mwlodarski@gmail.com> wrote in message news:1110355052.867961.327230@o13g2000cwo.googlegr oups.com... > Hi Brendan, > > If I understood properly, people come to your shop following an ad of > yours, look what you have to offer and leave your shop. > If so, I would see 3 problems: > - either your visitors are searching for something else and your ad > shows for wrong keywords. they wanted to come and see and not buy > anything; > - or you have a bad page of your product and people get discouraged; > - or your ads say too much (they are simply too good). > > cheers, > > wlodi > |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? On Tue, 08 Mar 2005 22:05:31 GMT, The Horta <horta@janus6.org> wrote: >Are we too verbose? Too chaotic? Not specific enough? It might help to post the URLs of the pages the ads go to, so we can see for ourselves without clicking on a Google Ad and costing your client money! Listing the ads text as well would be a good idea also. David -- Free Search Engine Optimization Tutorial http://www.seo-gold.com/tutorial/ |
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| Good ideas ;-) SEO Dave <seodave@search-engine-optimization-services.co.uk> wrote in news:6gvt2153smlco43uhlmr23vehf58n5dj9o@4ax.com: > It might help to post the URLs of the pages the ads go to, so > we can see for ourselves without clicking on a Google Ad and > costing your client money! > > Listing the ads text as well would be a good idea also. This is the higher-performing AW ad with a CTR of ~4% on ~8,000 impressions per day: ----- ***ual Harassment at Work Covers Every Aspect from A-to-Z Supervisor and Employee Training! www.FoleyServices.com ----- This ad links to this "pre-sell" page: http://www.foleyservices.com/***ual_harassment.cfm This one is, naturally, lower-performing, but is still above 1% even though we try to "pre-shock" people with the price: ----- ***ual Harassment Course Video Training Package - Only $349 Sample Video - 30 Day Money-Back www.FoleyServices.com ----- This ad links right to the "action" buy page because we've already dispensed with the sticker shock: http://www.foleyservices.com/itemInfo.cfm?itemID=38 Both ads are in the rotation. We'd hoped that the second ad would better qualify people, and it's only been a couple of days, but we're not seeing any conversion yet. Thanks again for the help. Brendan |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? "Colin Wilson" <siegrunen@hotmail.com> wrote in news:422eccfc@clear.net.nz: > My first reaction was "holy ****" that is expensive! > > If your product really is worth $349 then this is not conveyed > by your advertisement. Price-wise it's in the middle of the pack. There are just as many more expensive options as there are less expensive ones. We are seriously considering a reduction below $300, as there are cheaper alternatives in the $250-300 price range that we are competing with. I'm trying to word the sell page to differentiate the benefits of our package over the "modulized" ones put out by video training companies. Our client's package comes from their years of experience in managing various federal and state-regulated compliance programs, not just something put together by a "jack-of- all-trades" training company that puts out ***ual Harassment "Training" one day and Pet Grooming the next. I'd like to exhaust any alternatives we're overlooking before I go back and recommend a price drop to be more competitive. However, we'd naturally prefer to sell 500 copies at $200 then zero or a handful at nearly twice the price. Thanks for your input. I really appreciate it. Brendan |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? On Tue, 08 Mar 2005 22:05:31 +0000, The Horta wrote: > We're running a small handful of "test" ads for one of our > customers. One such product is a Workplace ***ual Harassment video > training package. It's a fairly high-traffic segment with about > 7,000 impressions per day on our keywords. On one of our ads we're > getting a CTR of 5.2% even though we're bidding quite low for the > competition and "suggested" PPC by Google's Sandbox (the tool, not > the "effect"). > > We're driving traffic and have tried a number of different > conversion methods on the site but we are getting nowhere. We are > impressed with every area of the "campaign" but conversion -- which > is what really counts. I would imagine that the term "***ual harassment" has many connotations besides a workplace scenario, which is reflected in your high CTR and low conversion. Try bidding under longer keywords i.e. "workplace ***ual harassment"; "training ***ual harassment" etc. They often have low CTR but high conversion. regards - n |
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| Re: High CTR, Low Conversion? Niel Drummond <nntp@cyan-unlinkthis-escent.co.uk> wrote in news > I would imagine that the term "***ual harassment" has many > connotations besides a workplace scenario, which is reflected > in your high CTR and low conversion. Try bidding under longer > keywords i.e. "workplace ***ual harassment"; "training ***ual > harassment" etc. They often have low CTR but high conversion. We are, naturally, using the whole gamut of related keywords and phrases, including those you stated. We get even higher CTR on the more specific KWs, and one of our ads even has the product price in it, but we're still getting no joy at all. Any thoughts on the page(s) or price? I think our conversion is so low because we're simply not compelling people to choose our product over the others out there. Brendan |