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Posts Tagged ‘Curiosity’

Clarity, Clarity, Clarity… and Just a Dash of Curiosity

Tuesday, February 12th, 2013

 

OK, I’ll admit: clarity without relevance isn’t going to get you anywhere with your PPC Ads.


Ultimately, your ads and their essential offerings have to match the motivations of the searcher in order for her to bother reading and clicking on your ad. But if the searcher can’t understand what your offering, she’ll ignore your ad altogether.


So your ad has to be clear and relevant — AND at least credible enough in its claims to make it worthwhile to click for more information.


So is it any wonder why this contest resulted in such a huge win? See for yourself how the winning ad more than doubled CTR — boosting it by 135%:




Think of it this way, if you’re planning a trip to Chicago with your kids and one of the places you want to take the kiddos is the Shedd Aquarium, which ad is going to make more sense and seem the most relevant? We’ll let’s start with the headline:


  • “Visit the Shedd Aquarium” or
  • “Shedd Aquarium & More”


Well, they start out almost as a kind of a tie, really. The winning ad more directly fits my motivations, but the losing ad pushes the key phrase to the beginning of the headline, which is important and generally considered a best practice.


Where things tip in the favor of the winning ad is the “& More” of the losing ad’s headline. See, if I’m searching on Shedd Aquarium, I’m looking just for that, at least initially, so the “& More” makes me feel like I’m getting set up to be pitched something I’m not interested in.


But really, those differences are relatively minor. Where the big difference comes in is the ultimate clarity of the offer. The winning ad makes it clear that I can save 55% off of the entrance fees for Chicago attractions and activities by buying some kind of multi-pass that would allow me to see the Shedd Aquarium plus 24 additional attractions.


I may or may not end up wanting that deal, but at least I can clearly understand it in order to make that decision. That’s where CLARITY comes in and why it’s so


And really, how can I know if I want the deal until I learn what the other 24 attractions are and how much the multipass costs, right? So even if I’m not quite sure whether I want this deal, the offer is at least sufficiently credible to be worth the click — I still want to CLICK ON THE AD. That’s where the dash of curiosity helps to spike the CTR scores.


Compare that to the losing ad: if you read the body copy, are you at all clear on what they’re offering?


  • Does the Shedd Aquarium offer tours and museums and cruises?
  • Or are these tours museums and cruises offered by someone or someplace else?
  • And why would I want to buy all that when I’m just researching a trip to the aquarium?
  • What’s in it for me?


Mediocre and amateur PPC copywriters worry about squeezing in as many appeals and buzzwords/keywords as possible. But they almost never worry about being clear about their offer and what’s in it for the searcher.


Professionals START with clarity as a must-have baseline, and then work on “boosting up” an ad from there. So take a tip from the boosters and do the same.


 



Ads in the Wild: Rocket Science? No. Scientific? Yes.

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

 

[originally posted on www.PPCHero.com]

 

So I saw this “meh” ad on my wife’s Facebook page, and thought it would make a pretty good example of “Things to Test on Your Facebook Ads.”

 

 

But before I list off everything that could probably be improved or might be worth testing, here are a few things that are well done, or at least OK: (more…)

 



PPC Ad Text Win of the Week – 123% Improvement for Oak Furniture

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

 

Which of these two PPC ads do you think had a higher CTR? Read both ads, make your decision, then scroll down to discover the answer.

 

PPC Ad #1

PPC Win of the Week - Ad #1
PPC Ad #2

PPC Win of the Week - Ad #2

 

In my opinion, this is probably one of the most challenging contests to guess the correct winner. Both ads read well. Both ads use strong copy. But one of these ads absolutely clobbered the other ad — an upset if there ever was one.

 

Made your best guess? Okay…

 
(more…)

 



PPC Strategy: Search Marketing vs. Interruption Marketing

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

 

Your PPC advertising strategy will be vastly different depending on the platform you’re using.

 

That’s because getting a person’s attention via search marketing (say, Google Adwords) is a much different process than getting a person’s attention via interruption marketing (say, Facebook Ads). Let’s examine those differences for a moment.

 

When writing a PPC ad for Google Adwords, you’re simply trying to mirror what the person is searching for. If they search for “dog leashes,” you want your ad to deliver “dog leashes.” What’s more, you want your ad to stand out from your competition so your ad gets clicked instead of theirs.

 

But the mindset of a person searching Google is extremely different from a person surfing Facebook and checking the latest updates.

 

A person on Facebook isn’t actively searching for anything. They’re probably updating their profile, reading their friends’ updates, responding to a few of them. They’re basically engaged in leisure activity.

 

They’re not trying to solve a problem or find information.

 

So how do you get a Facebook user’s attention?

 
(more…)

 



PPC Ad Text Win of the Week – 175% Improvement for Stretch Mark Creams

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

 

 

If you’ve been following the Win of the Week feature here on the BoostCTR blog, then you’ve probably noticed that our team of writers is able to generate big wins in a variety of markets.

 

In the past three weeks, our writers have beaten control ads promoting digital cameras, themed t-shirts, and even handicapped parking signs. And this week we turn to yet another product: stretch mark creams.

 

Check out this week’s big win written by “cashcow”:

 

BoostCTR Win of the Week - January 11, 2011

Why the Challenger Won

 

If you examine the two ads, you’ll notice many differences. The old control ad: (more…)