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Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Education Case Study about CTR

Friday, February 1st, 2013

 

There has been a ton of hype in the EDU space in the news, with companies and start-ups funded left and right and literally millions of dollars pouring into the space. As this happens, the changes in the EDU space are paralleling those in the online marketing space, and it’s instructive to look at the similarities and how you can take advantage of them.


In this post we’ll show you what BoostCTR is doing in the educations space and why Click-Through Rates (CTR) are becoming a determining factor (if not THE determining factor) in engagement and search rankings within the EDU space.


Today we’ll be talking about TareasPlus, a spanish-language educational platform created to help teach people math.


As background, I’ve previously written a post showing how I took this stie from 2K unique visitors a day to over 50K uniques a day with Facebook ads.


And while those are impressive results no matter how you slice them, they’re even more noteworthy when you learrn that we only spent $500 per month to get that much traffic!


How?


High CTR! Because of our high click through rates and cleverly written ads our ad budget performed far beyond it’s relatively meager size. Which is the point: CTR is quickly becoming THE essential success metric in this space. Not only because CTR is determinant in driving traffic, but because CTR weighs so heavily in determining relevance for search rankings, ad placement, quality scores, etc.


Of course, to get the results we achieved with Tareaplus we had to go beyond the basics to setup an amazing remarketing campaign for all those people coming to the site.  Once you get them to the site, you’ve still got to convert them to customers. So we’re now targeting all those unique visitors by remarketing our edu banners to them daily.


But before we go too far into that, let’s get back to the point of the article: the importance of CTR in campaign success…


How important is CTR in edu links on popular sites like Facebook?


So a couple of weeks ago I created a file to track the tareasplus site’s ranking on certain Key Word Search (KWS) terms, in relation to their Facebook ad’s CTR. As you might guess, different pages on the site ranked differently for differing KWS terms.


For example:


Now here’s where it gets interesting. If you take a look at the tracking sheet below, you’ll see that out outlined the results for “Factorization” (aka “casos de factorizacion”). And what you should notice is that the search results for that page improved dramatically from December to January, almost in exact parallel to the improvement in ad CTR.


As the CTR more than doubled from 2% to 5%, the page rankings climbed from 8.8 to 6.1! Take a look:


 

And this is the same general pattern I’ve been seeing for any page that we’ve promoted through Facebook ads: in about two weeks it moves up the ladder for advertised keywords, typically big and important keywords, too, like “ecuaciones diferenciales” “quimica general” and so on.


Now, the interesting part is that these are the same keywords that we’ve been working on dominating for months. And yet we only really started seeing movement AFTER we heavily advertised and promoted those pages through Facebook PPC ads.


How Heavily DOES Google Weight Social?


So the question I had was: Has Google really began weighing social factors that heavily for it’s page rankings?


Also, why is it taking 2+ weeks for these links to show up at the top of the search results?


So I did a little bit more digging and here’s what I found


When I have a 2%+ click through rate on my Facebook links it rankes around 4x better than when I have below a 2% click through rate. And this effect holds regardless of what other, seemingly common and important SEO factors would indicate — some of those affected pages don’t even have a lot of content… heck, one of the links doesn’t even have anything but a video on the page and yet it still ranks extremely high for the keywords that we’re going after.


So this is HUGE, right? So much so that I did a little bit more digging…


When there is a page with just a video, boosting its Facebook ads CTR to +5% will cause it to rank 2 entire positions higher in Google when you search for the keywords in the link.


It’s insane how such an easily achieved boost in Social CTR so dramatically improves everything else.


So I’m not just reporting my findings, I’m also asking you: have any of you experienced this? I would love to know if this is just a fluke or something that’s actually happening across the board. So please let us know in the comments.


As for us, we’ve seen these results across the board on our last 50+ posts. It takes around 2 weeks but after that all of the linked pages begin ranking higher and higher in Google. So I’m asking: are you guys seeing the same thing?


P.S. Before answering, please make sure that the pages your commenting on are getting at least a 2%+ CTR on Facebook, to ensure your results are comparable to ours. That’s the minimum really, too. Our actual average for promoted pages is 3.5%+ CTR.


 



Is Shorter Better?

Thursday, August 30th, 2012

 

First, choose which Ad won:




Now, in choosing your winner, it may have occurred to you that the central difference between the two ads is one of length. Ad B is shorter than Ad A. So which one wins: the shorter or the longer ad?


This is interesting because it pits two clashing observations against each other. On the longer side, you’ve got traditional direct mail copywriting wisdom, which says longer is better. And on the other side, you’ve got the Advertising Team at Facebook who believe that shorter, more direct ad copy tends to outperform longer copy, at least statistically.


So what gives?


First, a lot of it boils down to context. The length of copy in Direct Mail sales letters is measured in pages. Facebook Ad’s copy length is measured in characters. So in some sense, there’s no such thing as long copy on a Facebook Ad to be able to really test long vs. short.


Second, most direct mail is sent with competent copywriters penning the letters. So it’s a good bet that the extra length of longer letter is put to good use, whereas most Facebook Ads feature poor creative, with not-so-great copy. So shorter Facebook ads mean less room to bore readers or stuff in adspeak, which would tend to give shorter copy an edge overall.


But that’s Facebook; what about regular Search-based PPC Ads?


Word Power = Message Power Divided by Length


If your added length ads persuasive power to the message with added information, the ability to get readers to take a new perspective on the offered product, or some kind of deal sweetener, then the longer ad will win because the words are worth more than the effort and time to read.


But if your words aren’t adding anything, you’re just weakening your ad by sticking them in where they aren’t needed. You end up with the same message delivered with more words. And how can that be good?


So the question is: do the added words (and characters) in Ad A add more info or persuasive power than what’s already communicated in Ad B? No? Then you now know which Ad most likely won the contest, right?


And that is the right answer, as Ad B did indeed win the contest.


So are your ads carrying more words than they need? Or are you failing to offer as much information as you could? Give it some thought and then put it to the test.


 



Do Your Facebook Ads Fall Prey to These Common Mistakes?

Wednesday, August 1st, 2012

 

Compared to Search or Display Advertising, Facebook Ads are relatively new. There also a different animal than either of those online advertising standbies, which means that a lot of advertisers tend to fall into the same common pitfalls when creating Facebook pay-per-click ads. Avoid them and you’ll be well ahead of the game. Here are the

 

Top 3 Facebook Mistakes to Avoid

 

1. Generic Campaigns: Facebook users read what interests them, and unflinchingly ignore anything that doesn’t. So if you expect them to read your Facebook ad, you’d better make it interesting. And that means simply copying your search campaigns over to Facebook and adding a photo will all-but guarantee failure. — as will any generic, boring ad, such as this one:

 

To avoid this, create your Facebook Ads with the assumption that your ad will be ingored without some kind of compelling engagement strategy. Many high-performing ads have turned to contests, interesting polls, sponsored stories, sweepstakes, giveaways, and good-old un-ignorable headlines and imagery. generic ad with a photo. But whatever techniques and strategies you use, make sure they result in an interesting, fun and utterly non-generic ad.

 

2. Creepy Images: When it comes to grabbing attention, creepy images definitely get the job done, and that’s good. Unfortunately, that creepy feeling created by the image usually rubs off onto your brand, and that’s far from good. This dog daycare ad is a great example of that. The image looks an ink-stamp of Cujo — dark and threateningly haunted. After seeing that image, do you want your dog anywhere near that daycare?

 

Before launching your ad, test your images by asking other people in your office how they would respond to the ad. In this case, another good resource to find opinions about this ad image would be any friends with dog owners.

 

3. Not-so-catchy Headlines: Unlike display ads, you don’t get to bold your text or call to action. Facebook only bolds your headline, making it the most important text that will attract your audience’s attention. For this particular cleaning ad, the headline says nothing about cleaning and has no real relation to the product.

For ad headlines on Facebook, make sure that they’re catchy and that they can stand alone without the ad copy. Consumers’ attention will mainly be focused on the bolded headline, so if they miss the rest of the ad, the headline should convey what you’re trying to advertise.

 

For insights on ad copy and image ads in your industry, try using the MixRank search engine for display ads. This will give you some ideas on what kind of ads you might want to run on Facebook. Register for a free account here. Good luck!

 

About MixRank

 

MixRank is a spy tool for contextual and display ads. With MixRank you can see exactly where your competitors are buying traffic and which ad copy is performing best for them across over 95,000 Google AdSense sites. You can use MixRank to watch your competitors spend money testing different ads and traffic sources, see which ones worked best, and use that data to build your own campaign.

 

 



Weekly PPC Update – Friday the 13th Edition

Friday, July 13th, 2012

 

Hope everyone is staying out of trouble this Friday the 13th!  Here are some recent summaries of the top PPC stories from around the web to get your weekend started off right.

 

In case there was any question, the web is working for American businesses, according to Google. Directly from Google:  “in 2011, Google’s search and advertising tools helped provide $80 billion of economic activity for 1.8 million advertisers, website publishers and nonprofits across the U.S. You can see the state-by-state breakdown on our economic impact website.”

 

And, in a turn of events, Google is sending money back to advertisers. Barry Schwartz got a check for $25.05 from the Hanson vs. Google AdWords settlement. I got one too!  Did you? (more…)

 



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…)