Why would you want to undertake a PPC campaign if you are already investing in SEO? Here are four good reasons:
1. PPC is a great way to identify effective keywords and assess your competition.
Data you collect when running PPC advertising campaigns provides you with precious “long-tail keywords” and at the same time lets you see who is competing for similar phrases. This knowledge can be leveraged to strengthen your content marketing plan for better SEO.
2. PPC can help protect your top organic search ranking
SEO reality check: if and when your website reaches one of the top spots on Google or Bing search results pages (SERPs), chances are there will be at least a couple of paid ads appearing above your organic entry. It’s infuriating when you work so hard to keep your site ranking only to have potential customers see a competitor’s website on top.
PPC gives you a way to show your ads multiple times in different positions on the SERPs. So if your site already appears organically on the first page of Google you can more or less dominate that page using just a few sets of really relevant search phrases.
3. PPC lets you reach a more focused target audience across a broad spectrum of sites
PPC ads aren’t limited to the three- or four-line text links you see on Google SERPs. You now have the ability to advertise on other websites (known as Google’s Display Network) to a very narrow audience segment, targeting them to users based on demographics (age, gender) and their preferred browsing topics and areas interests. You can select the types of websites you want to advertise on – or even select specific websites that you know to be popular with your likely customers. In this way you draw in new visitors and introduce them to your products and services even if they didn’t run a search. While it’s not exactly SEO, it does increase your visibility exponentially.
4. PPC keeps you “top of mind,” giving you a second chance to engage lost visitors.
Let’s imagine that a person who visits your site decides to leave without taking any action. Maybe they look around a bit, but they do not convert — that is, they don’t take the action you had hoped they would, like making a purchase or filling in an inquiry form. Running PPC ads on Google’s Display Network gives you a way to remind this visitor, “hey you might want to check back.”