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Your Website: Use Google Ads to Market Your CPA Practice
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| Guest post by: Brian O'Connell |
Article Overview: Learn to acquire new clients your firm by publicizing your CPA website using Google "PPC", or "Pay-Per-Click" advertising.
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Free Download - The CPAs' Fundamental Principles of Marketing By Brian O'Connell |
Your Website: Use Google Ads to Market Your CPA Practice
It's never been an especially well kept secret that you can buy your website a great listing in the search results on Google for any keyword you want.
You have no doubt seen the sponsored listings on Google search results pages. They are displayed on the right side of the search results page, and often up to the first three positions on the left side. These websites are using "pay-per-click" (or "PPC") advertisements through Google's Adwords advertising platform. When Google displays an ad, that ad incurs an impression. When you click on a sponsored listing, that advertiser pays Google for that click. In other words, that advertiser pays Google per each click their ad receives.
The cost of the click that is payed to Google it ultimately impacted by the landing page quality score. Quality score is driven by many factors, including the relevance of the content on the landing page to the search term, as well as the Click Through Rate, or "CTR".
Click through rate is the rate of clicks to impressions. If your ad has 200 impressions, and receives 100 clicks, then your CTR is 50%. If you have a higher click through rate then Google will believe your ad is more relevant for the search phrase being searched on. This will improve your quality score for that keyword
The higher your landing page quality score, the lower you will pay per click. Adwords is essentially an auction. You bid on keywords. In very straight forward terms, the higher your bid, the higher your website's ad will be displayed.
Now there are a number of valuations and specific calculations Google makes to specify where your ad will be placed. These calculations occur in real time when a search is performed. In a future article, we will take a closer look at the specifics of these calculations. For today, it is just important to understand that your bid, is not what you will ultimately pay for the click. If your quality score is 7 and you bid $5.00 for a click, you will pay less for a click then if your quality score is 4, and you will never pay more then your bid, or $5.00, for a click.
Remember Google's 1st priority is to display relevant search results, even for the sponsored listings. Certainly they could just give the first spot to the person who bids the most, but that would only ensure the advertiser willing to spend the most money would be listed first. The most relevant search result however may not be ad with the highest bid.
The best example of this is your company name. Let's say you are Adidas, and you want to bid on the keyword "Nike". The most relevant search result for the keyword "Nike", is obviously the Nike website. Google is going to give Nike a higher quality score for that keyword, in effect rewarding them for their relevancy for that keyword.
Before we look at tips to improving your quality score, it's important to also understand match types. There are three match types you can and should bid on for each keyword. The three match types are broad, phrase, and exact.
- Exact Match: Exact match is the best keyword to bid on. An exact match means the search phrase being searched on is an exact match for the keyword for which you are bidding. For example if you are bidding on exact match for "Accounting Firms", your website's ad will be displayed only when someone searches for "Accounting Firms".
- Phrase Match: Phrase match means your keyword is a phrase within the search string. For example, if you bid on a phrase match of "Accounting Firms", you ad will be displayed when someone searches on things like "small accounting firms", or "accounting firms and CPAs".
- Broad Match: Broad match essentially let's the search engine determine if the search phrase is a match for your broad match keyword or not. Bidding on broad match keywords is both worthy, and dangerous. It's important because a broad match for "accounting firms" might be triggered when someone searches for "accounting services". It also can be triggered when someone misspells a word, such as "acounting firms". The danger is that Google may decide that "Accounting Supplies" is a close enough match to "Accounting Services", and trigger your broad match keyword. This is why Google allows advertisers to declare "negative keywords". We'll talk more about negative keywords in a moment.
Ad Copy
Your ad copy should reflect the search phrase, or keyword you are bidding on. The person doing the search will be more apt to click an ad that has their search string. For example, if you bid on "CPA Services", you want the headline of your ad to be something like "Quality CPA Services". If your ad title says "Bob's Financial Consulting", the searcher then has to stop and decide... if they click your sponsored link, are they going to find what they are looking for? Their decision is often made within a split second, so you don't want the prospect to have to stop and think. Show them exactly what they are looking for. If that means writing 25 different ad titles for 25 different keywords, so be it. Your work will pay off in the end.
Landing Page
The page on your site that the searcher is taken to when they click your ad is called the landing page. Ordinarily this should not be the homepage of your website. If someone searches for "Strategic Business Planning", they should be taken directly to the page on your website that explains your business planning services rather than a generic accounting related homepage. If the ad goes to your homepage, and they have to search through a big pile of CPA related content just to find what they are looking for, they'll probably just click the back button and go to the next advertiser.
If your website doesn't have a suitable landing page for the keyword, add one. It really is that important.
Just like the ad copy, you want to remove as much of the decision making out the process as possible. Make it as trouble-free as possible for the searcher to find what it is they are looking for. Google will reward your quality score for having a landing page that is specific to the keyword, because it improves the search experience for people who find you through their search engine.
Negative Keywords
Defining what keywords you don't want to trigger your ads is just as important as knowing what keywords you do want to bid on. Phrase and broad matching make this essential. If you bid on the broad match of "accounting services", you probably do not want your ad displayed if someone searches for "accounting supplies", so you would want to add "supplies" as a negative keyword.
Your ad will not be displayed, when a search phrase has one of your negative keywords.
Location Targeting
I've saved the best for last. Location targeting is extremely important, especially for firms that provide a service such as accounting or CPA services. CPA and accounting firms typically will want to be able to meet with their clients, and more importantly the client is very likely looking for an accountant close to their business. Having propsects more then 100 miles away clicking on yoru ad is going to become a big waste of money.
There are two ways to target a location. The first is to target your ads to only be displayed within a certain radius, such as 10 to 20 miles from your business location. You might bid on more general keywords, like "tax preparation", within a very specific location.
The second way to target location is with very specific keywords in a more general area. For example, you might display your ads to anyone in Texas, or even the country, if they type in the specific keyword "Dallas CPA" or "Houston Accounting".
Keep these basic principles in mind while you're setting up your websites with Adwords campaigns and you'll find the learning curve a lot easier and your initial results will be a lot more profitable!
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About the Author: Brian O'Connell RSS for Brian's articles - Visit Brian's website Brian O'Connell is the owner and founder of CPA Site Solutions, one of the country's largest web design firms devoted exclusively to designing Accounting and CPA websites. We only make websites; ranging from custom site designs to economical ready-to-use modifiable style templates; for CPA, accounting, bookkeeping, and tax preparation firms. If you're an accounting or tax professional you don't have to teach us your business. Click here to visit Brian's website 3 Strategies for Getting Others Talking About Your CPA Website Finding the Best CPA Website Design for Your Practice 3 Website Benefits that Improve Client Satisfaction and Retention Dress Up That Accounting Website with Photos Cut Your Website Costs With New Point and Click Web Design Technology |
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