View Full Version : Beginer - Few questions regarding Adwords
AlexleGrand
February 8th, 2007, 09:05 PM
Hey guys,
I'm actually just starting out in affiliate marketing and got a few questions. I've set up my website as well as my google adword add, but I'm a little confused regarding the bidding. If by example i set all my keywords to a maximum bid for every click to $1.00, does this mean I will pay $1.00 everytime somebody clicks on my add? Also, if you can, could you give me a few pointers on my site? It is the following:
www.keyworddelite.com
Thanks a bunch,
Alex
KuZz
February 8th, 2007, 09:54 PM
You wont pay $1.00 per click, it depends on what your competitors are bidding, quality score and a few other things I don't recall at the moment. You'll probably end up paying anywhere from $.75 to $.90 I'd say.
cjshu
February 9th, 2007, 09:26 AM
You're just starting out and already promoting "make money on the internet" stuff?
And in that market you probably will pay $1 per click - if you get any.
CJ
AlexleGrand
February 10th, 2007, 12:49 AM
You're just starting out and already promoting "make money on the internet" stuff?
And in that market you probably will pay $1 per click - if you get any.
CJ
This wasn't very constructive....Thanks anyway.
-Alex
BoogalooDude
February 10th, 2007, 06:19 AM
This wasn't very constructive....Thanks anyway.
-Alex
Actually it was he just didn't explain it. The 'make money' niche is the classic nOOb niche, it's super saturated and extremely competative. You'll pay more for strong keywords than you will in many other niches.
Bottom line though is that it doesn't matter what you're paying for your clicks as long as your making more in sales. It's all about ROI. Try and pay as little as you can for clicks but make sure you're making more than you're spending.
This forum has a lot of very experienced and knowledgable members so feel free to ask any other questions you may have :)
AlexleGrand
February 10th, 2007, 01:14 PM
Thanks. What would be a reasonnable "money per day" price I should pay?
-Alex
super
February 10th, 2007, 01:14 PM
Yeah, its very saturated, but what would you advice to promote for starters?
BoogalooDude
February 10th, 2007, 07:43 PM
Thanks. What would be a reasonnable "money per day" price I should pay?
-Alex
Like I said, it doesn't matter as long as you're making more than you're spending. Once you have a conversion rate you know if something has a good ROI or not.
Forget about 'normal' or 'expected' prices, there's no such thing. Pay as little as you can get away with and make more.
AlexleGrand
February 13th, 2007, 04:49 PM
Alright. Thanks for your advices. I made my first sale (wasn't much. It was only $6.15) and obviously i need to be making a lot more. I'm having difficulties getting sign ups for my list. Is there any thing I could do to improve that? Once again my website is : www.keyworddelite.com. Thanks.
-Alex
dppls
February 13th, 2007, 05:46 PM
Alright. Thanks for your advices. I made my first sale (wasn't much. It was only $6.15) and obviously i need to be making a lot more. I'm having difficulties getting sign ups for my list. Is there any thing I could do to improve that? Once again my website is : www.keyworddelite.com. Thanks.
-Alex
Congrats on your first sale!!!
WOOHOO!
6.15$ hmmm... Was it Rich Jerk by any chance? LoL
Was it profitable for you? How many sales do you think you'Re going to get out of your campaign?
Trudat
February 13th, 2007, 06:09 PM
If you're only getting 6.15 on a sale, the product better convert like crazy and cost next to nothing to promote, otherwise its probably not worth the work in the long run (although it may be a good learning campaign).
AlexleGrand
February 13th, 2007, 06:35 PM
Yea it was richjerk. And no it wasn't profitable. I actually lost $1.00.
samdeane
April 25th, 2007, 07:01 PM
Alex
Part of the game online as in any business is to stick to your guns - seems like you havent really got a game plan but if you really got behind yourself and went for it full out you can make good money online.
Perry marshall is a good start ofr you I reckon.
Best wishes
Sam
---
Take the Two Minute Profits from AdWords
http://urlfreeze.com/abc/adwords/
homebizguru
April 29th, 2007, 11:55 PM
Traffic generation is accomplished through a mix of both free and paid methods of advertising.
The bulk of your paid traffic will come from pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns that you run on search
engines like Google (Google Adwords).
PPC advertising allows you to target actual market keywords and key phrases for your advertising,
meaning it allows you to reach the actual people who are searching for your offer.
You may also pay for advertising by buying text links or banner ads on other websites, running
classified ads in your local newspaper or buying up virtual 'real estate' (eg, grabbing expired domain
names which have existing search engine rankings on your target keywords)
Free methods of generating traffic are centered primarily on content. This means using methods like:
1 Writing and submitting articles to article directories
2 Giving away free, viral reports
3 Maintaining a blog/syndicating content
4 Getting your content linked to at the 'social bookmarking' sites (e.g. Technorati.com,
digg.it, del.icio.us)
5 Ezine advertising (free or paid)
6 Joint ventures with other list owners
These tactics are just the tip of the iceberg. The important point, though, is that they are all proven
methods. Don't waste your money on sites that promise things like “1 million visitors for $99”.
Traffic generation is not difficult. It can be learned. It’s more of a science than an art. It’s just like a
school subject. If you learn and apply it, you WILL get traffic.
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