SEO Vs Pay Per Click Advertising
In the world of modern business, the key to success is getting
your product seen and understood by your target audience. Simple
numbers don't always accomplish the goal - it doesn't matter
how many millions of vegetarians see your commercial for Grade-A
double-plus chuck steak, after all. The key is advertising to a
targeted audience, the ones who need or at least want the goods
or service being offered. The best way to accomplish this goal of
course will vary among different media, however, having a target
market strategy is a must on the Internet.
In particular, the Internet has embraced this truth and virtually
exploded with a variety of means toward the end of successful,
specific advertising. Internet advertising campaigns range from
the obvious and the notorious (tasteful banner advertising versus
badly-worded spam emails) to the clever and the outrageous
(Amazon's 'Still not big enough' television campaign from the
late 90s, and Halo 2's legendary 'I Heart Bees' viral
marketing alternate reality game).
Obviously, some of these efforts are more successful than others,
and some are successful in all the wrong ways. The exiled
Nigerian prince who wants to share his vast wealth with lucky,
lucky you has become a pop-culture meme and in-joke, practically
an obligatory reference in any discussion of modern marketing or
Internet spam.
However, a great deal of web advertising is quite a bit less
flashy than the aforementioned efforts, yet is seen by every user
who runs a request through a search engine. When engines return a
search, they generally include two sections in the result. The
first is the target of the search itself, which is the Organic
SEO result, the second is a series of advertisements off to the
side of or above the organic result, known as Pay Per Click
advertisements.
SEO
For those who don't know what SEO is, this acronym stands for
Search Engine Optimization. In short and simple terms, every
search engine provides results based on a series of criteria,
generally keyword and content related. The engine compares the
search request to its index of websites and their descriptions,
and provides the most relevant answers it can, ranked in order of
precedence.
The first sites to come up are the most closely related to the
search terms as the engine understands them. This is why
different engines may rank sites differently - Yahoo, Google and
Bing have different indexing and keyword criteria, so their
responses to a particular search may vary. It is termed Organic
SEO because the results are returned organically, or naturally -
there is no external interference or override changing the
results, they simply return per the standard operating practices
of the search engine.
Organic SEO has the advantage of having no inherent costs
associated with it. Proper search engines don't charge
businesses for their ranking in the list, so the only required
investment is building a noteworthy site that generates the
traffic and keyword results that will bring a high ranking. The
downside is that it requires a great deal of research to properly
take advantage of this strategy. Craigslist alone abounds with
writing jobs catering to experienced SEO writers, and entire
websites exist discussing the ins and outs of the practice. In
addition, it relies entirely on users searching for terms that
relate to your site, leaving the situation far less in your
business's hands than some owners may be comfortable with.
PPC
In pay per click advertising, businesses contact a search engine
and bid on certain keywords they feel are particularly relevant
to their website. For example, a company making horse saddles
might bid on keywords pertaining to horses, riding events, and
saddles. Then, when someone searches these terms, the search
engine provides a link to this business in the form of a pay per
click advertisement. The name pay per click comes from the fact
that the company must pay the website a fee every time a user
clicks the advertisement.
Pay per click advertising is attractive because it increases the
odds of really snagging a targeted audience. Rather than having
one result possibly come up in a search, there's another result
just off to the side, increasing the chances of gaining user
attention. On the flip side, PPC can quickly become a cost
burden. Every single click must be paid for, and there's no
guarantee that every click will result in a sale, meaning costs
could skyrocket before a business is prepared to deal with them.
Making the Choice
Often times, the best choice is to strike a balanced approach
between SEO and PPC style advertising. Just where that balance
lies depends entirely on the business in question. The savvy web
advertiser will carefully consider keyword popularity before
choosing a PPC campaign, and perhaps even set aside an actual
budget to account for those users who will click through but are
not looking to buy.
Additionally, there are literally thousands of experienced SEO
writers available for employ at inexpensive rates for short term
work, meaning the organic SEO standing of a page can be improved
with relatively little investment. As ever, the keys are research
and understanding, both of the target audience and the means with
which you intend to reach them.
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Enzo F. Cesario is a Copywriter and co-founder of Brandsplat.
Brandcasting uses informative content and state-of-the-art
internet distribution and optimization to build links and
drive the right kind of traffic to your website. Go to
www.Brandsplat.com
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