Like many people who run a business via the Internet, I use affiliate programs to supplement my income.
One of the affiliate products I use myself and love to promote –
Proposal Kit at – had been performing particularly well for me recently
and I decided to help things along by creating a Google AdWords campaign
based around my reviews of the product.
After one month, the campaign was going ok, I was getting a few
sales here and there and certainly making a good ROI on the promotion.
However, although my Click Through Rate (CTR) was pretty good (1.2%), it
was starting to slide backwards and I thought I could do better.
As you probably know, your ad position in Google relies heavily on
your CTR compared to that of your competitors, so I was keen to turn
things around and keep my high ad positions.
Around this time, I bought Nick Usborne’s book Net Words and started
to read it, taking notes as I went. I realized that according to Nick’s
philosophy, my AdWords ads were flat and boring. They were just not
appealing enough to entice people to click on them.
As Nick explains in his book, “Being blah guarantees you’ll never be heard”.
So I set about re-writing some of my ad text to speak more directly
to my audience and ask them a question that required a response. Below
is an example of an ad targeting the search query business proposal
before I changed the text:
Business Proposal Kit
Close the sale with a professional business proposal template kit.
And here is the text I replaced it with:
Need a business proposal?
Create your own professional proposal with our template kit.
The aim was to get my average CTR for the entire campaign up to
around 2% from the existing 1.2% it was sitting at. I logged off for the
evening and went to bed, not expecting too much. The next morning, I
had messages in my email in-box advising me that I had made 3 sales
overnight! I was quite excited and logged into AdWords to see how things
were going.
Sure enough, my clicks were way up and two of the three AdGroups I
had edited were showing an average 33% CTR! My overall campaign CTR had
risen from 1.2% to 2.4%. I had never experienced CTR that high before.
The ad I had changed used to show a 2.5% CTR and after a few days the
replacement ad displayed a 4.3% CTR.
More motivated now, I studied the ads that had attracted the most
clicks and created more ads around related keywords and phrases, using
similar headlines to the ads that were performing the best. This time, I
incorporated Nick’s advice to use short and punchy copy.
Below is an example of an ad I was using to target the search query seo contract before I changed the text:
Sample SEO contract
Proposal Kit provides a perfect SEO contract template. Read our review.
And here is the text I replaced it with:
Need an SEO contract?
Create yours. Today.
After another week, my average CTR for the whole campaign jumped
from 2.4% to 4% and I had a couple of ads showing 100% CTR! You can
imagine how excited I was. Of course the high CTR builds on itself
because the higher your CTR, the higher your ad position and the higher
your ad position, the more clicks it is likely to attract. So my
campaign had jumped from 1.3% in the first month, to 2.4% in the second
month and after my fine-tuning, it’s now showing a 4% CTR consistently.
And the sales? Well I now average between seven and ten sales per week,
up from two per week over the past six months and my affiliate
commission is at an all time record.
The exercise just goes to show that a few thoughtful tweaks to your
ad copy can make a HUGE difference to your bottom line. So what are you
waiting for? Go tweak that copy in your own PPC campaigns…
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