Can the Long-Tail Hurt Your PPC Campaign?
This YouMoz entry was submitted by one of our community members. The author’s views are entirely their own (excluding an unlikely case of hypnosis) and may not reflect the views of Moz.
Yes, the long-tail can kill your pay-per-click campaign -- especially on Google.
The problem, in AdWords, is the minimum bid. You minimum bid is determined by your account history, Quality Score, and the history of the search vertical (the industry associated with your phrases). If you are a high volume click buyer with no history of poor advertisement you can buy anything at a reasonable rate.
I know this particular search is offering valid ads, but sometimes the eBays and BizRates of the world show up for strange things. Discovering that BizRate has bargain prices on "Carlos!" is heartwarming, but strange. Especially since a proper name is not a highly lucrative term, in most cases.
Right now, for Halloween, Target bids on peter to sell costumes, but through much of the year such bids seem strange. Target, eBay, etc. don't pay a very high cost per click. Small companies, on the other hand, do have to pay a higher cost. I am expected to pony up $0.20 for my name, even though it gets a Good or Great quality score.
Why is it that a big company like eBay or Amazon can make such a killing off the long-tail? Because they have time. One thousand clicks that do nothing don't leave much of a dent in a campaign that generates tens of thousands of clicks per hour. But if you only generate one thousand clicks per month, the long-tail can be a death by tiny cuts.
If you have too many phrases that only generate a few clicks per week/month, their combined cost can overwhelm a small budget. The important thing to remember is that organic search and paid search have a major difference: organic visibility lasts as long as your website exists, but paid only lasts 'til you run out of money. If you are running a small to medium campaign you may find better results from running large groupings of negative words rather than from a long list of long-tail phrases.
A secondary concern while using the long-tail in paid search is that the more obscure your phrase, the less likely that you will achieve a high quality sore, unless you are targeting the phrase in your copy. If you have a low quality score, even an on-topic phrase may cost more than it is worth in the long run.
Remember, paid and organic search are not the same game. They have different costs and benefits, so they should be played differently.
Comments
Please keep your comments TAGFEE by following the community etiquette
Comments are closed. Got a burning question? Head to our Q&A section to start a new conversation.