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Get A Life

We sometimes get so buried in our day-to-day stuff, we often forget about promoting our business to keep us busy.  Let's not confuse busyness with profitability.  We juggle things at home and in our businesses.


In the early days, I would commit to a full-page Yellow Page ad.  However, I would put an unlisted number in the ad to where if the full page ad didn't work out, I could simply cancel the number and not have to be responsible for the ad.  The full page ad was $1,000/mo.  OUCH!
I never found it to not be profitable until YP was replaced by the internet.  I moved from Yellow Page thinking to internet thinking and it was quite the transition.  I learned the internet was so much more powerful.  With a few mouse clicks, I could turn off or turn on my paid ad.  Wow!
I hired internet ad agencies but wasn't happy with the results.  I eventually decided to do all my internet advertising myself via a crash course in learning by trial and error.  I not only watched a lot of YouTube videos on the subject, but I also read.  A lot. More than a lot because I love to read.  That's how I learned transmissions and now, it's how I would learn paid advertising online.  It was an awesome change for me.


My mouse and keyboard suddenly gave me an infinite amount of power.  I became my own internet promoting service. I felt better about every dollar I was spending because I was in control.   It cost me nothing except for the ads themselves.  There was no need to pay someone else $$$$ to do for me what I learned to do for myself.  It was great.
I slowly learned the MORE I paid for Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising, the more business I would get.  I eventually learned the ratio was 12-to-1.  For every dollar I spend on PPC ads, I would get $12 worth of new business.  Annual sales went from $700K to $1,2M seemingly overnight.  And I was only spending about $50K/yr. for my advertising, all in.  Spend $50K to get half a million more in business?  I'm in.


I suddenly (2 years) went from a builder to a PPC expert.  Anything to get me off the bench. 🙂 lol!  I was simply getting older and was happy about the change.  My advise is for you to do the change.  I simply learned that rebuilding didn't pay near  as well as well as running my internet PPC ads.  It was simple 2nd grade math.
My best advice is to follow what I did.  It will pay you ENORMOUSLY.


 

  • Like 1
Posted

If you become a PPC expert, then you are ahead of the game!   I fear that the game has evolved and sprouted some sharp knives that one must avoid.  Google is always playing cat-and-mouse with those trying to game the system.  So, once you land on a strategy, it gets reworked by Google.  

You and I, both have very healthy advertising budgets.    In this response, I'm going to champion a good advertising budget and push back on the need to DIY.    I could likely DIY this, but I just don't find it enjoyable.    I used to DIY my pool, but I was terrible at it because it wasn't enjoyable and I was lazy.  My paid experts seem to be lazy too (but that's an angry story for another day!).

For the rest of us, whom are either too lazy or busy to do this (I'm both), there can be value in hiring a competent PPC advertising expert to help you.  This is important, because bad PPC is very costly.   Good PPC is less costly.   Knowing how to tune the the results to get optimal costs takes skill and time, as some of the tuning comes from trial and error, feedback and trial and error some more.    Things that impact your costs are your Google Website score, Google Ratings, the quality of your ads, the quality of your landing pages and how well things that are searched are matched.   Ultimately Google ADs are a computerized bidding war.  My costs for a top advertising position for a given search term are lower with good fundamentals. 

For reference, I'm paying $350/month for managed Google PPC advertising.    Last month, I spent $700 on ads, which resulted in 7,716 impressions (# times one of my ads was presented) with 619 clicks @$1.13/click ($700/619) and 260 calls-to-action $2.69/calls-to-action ($700/260).  (I think the 2nd costing method (actions) is a better way to score success).   Do this wrong and you can easily pay 10X for the clicks and thus get less clicks overall.    I'm not tracking the actual conversions and true cost of conversions (because I don't want to invest that next bit of effort to do so and don't think I need it.  Yes, I'm violating the marketing rule that says you track every conversion).  I get monthly status reports with tons of data that I could review.  Instead, I have my ad manager interpret the results for me and send me a monthly summary in addition to the raw data.  She tells me how we are doing compared to previous months and where we are making changes, etc.   Reading the raw data can be overwhelming and interpreting it correctly more so.   I may spend 15 minutes on the detailed data reports.

With Google, we can specify a targeted ad budget and they reduce the number of impressions shown to stay within or close to your budget.   The real challenge is finding someone who is actually competent with PPC.  There are many who say that they are the best, but are they???   How can you tell?

Secondly, I'm not investing in SEO for my website.   It's hugely expensive to fight your way to the top.  I'm using advertising instead.   Now, there are some SEO principals that you must mind and it wouldn't hurt to have your website cleaned up to at least a C+ grade.  I follow an SEO technical forum, but do not have any desire to be an expert on this topic.  I try to pick up the latest buzz only.    

If someone had some good data, it might be interesting to see if using a hyper-SEO optimized website service such as Kukui @ $1000/month (or more) is more valuable than advertising?   I know nothing about this topic or vendor.

 

P.S.  Not that long ago, I was only paying $300/month for this SAME service.   They had the audacity to raise my rates!   😡   Later, I followed suit.  😇

  • Like 1
Posted
On 4/20/2022 at 4:40 PM, bantar said:

If you become a PPC expert, then you are ahead of the game!   I fear that the game has evolved and sprouted some sharp knives that one must avoid.  Google is always playing cat-and-mouse with those trying to game the system.  So, once you land on a strategy, it gets reworked by Google.  

You and I, both have very healthy advertising budgets.    In this response, I'm going to champion a good advertising budget and push back on the need to DIY.    I could likely DIY this, but I just don't find it enjoyable.    I used to DIY my pool, but I was terrible at it because it wasn't enjoyable and I was lazy.  My paid experts seem to be lazy too (but that's an angry story for another day!).

For the rest of us, whom are either too lazy or busy to do this (I'm both), there can be value in hiring a competent PPC advertising expert to help you.  This is important, because bad PPC is very costly.   Good PPC is less costly.   Knowing how to tune the the results to get optimal costs takes skill and time, as some of the tuning comes from trial and error, feedback and trial and error some more.    Things that impact your costs are your Google Website score, Google Ratings, the quality of your ads, the quality of your landing pages and how well things that are searched are matched.   Ultimately Google ADs are a computerized bidding war.  My costs for a top advertising position for a given search term are lower with good fundamentals. 

For reference, I'm paying $350/month for managed Google PPC advertising.    Last month, I spent $700 on ads, which resulted in 7,716 impressions (# times one of my ads was presented) with 619 clicks @$1.13/click ($700/619) and 260 calls-to-action $2.69/calls-to-action ($700/260).  (I think the 2nd costing method (actions) is a better way to score success).   Do this wrong and you can easily pay 10X for the clicks and thus get less clicks overall.    I'm not tracking the actual conversions and true cost of conversions (because I don't want to invest that next bit of effort to do so and don't think I need it.  Yes, I'm violating the marketing rule that says you track every conversion).  I get monthly status reports with tons of data that I could review.  Instead, I have my ad manager interpret the results for me and send me a monthly summary in addition to the raw data.  She tells me how we are doing compared to previous months and where we are making changes, etc.   Reading the raw data can be overwhelming and interpreting it correctly more so.   I may spend 15 minutes on the detailed data reports.

With Google, we can specify a targeted ad budget and they reduce the number of impressions shown to stay within or close to your budget.   The real challenge is finding someone who is actually competent with PPC.  There are many who say that they are the best, but are they???   How can you tell?

Secondly, I'm not investing in SEO for my website.   It's hugely expensive to fight your way to the top.  I'm using advertising instead.   Now, there are some SEO principals that you must mind and it wouldn't hurt to have your website cleaned up to at least a C+ grade.  I follow an SEO technical forum, but do not have any desire to be an expert on this topic.  I try to pick up the latest buzz only.    

If someone had some good data, it might be interesting to see if using a hyper-SEO optimized website service such as Kukui @ $1000/month (or more) is more valuable than advertising?   I know nothing about this topic or vendor.

 

P.S.  Not that long ago, I was only paying $300/month for this SAME service.   They had the audacity to raise my rates!   😡   Later, I followed suit.  😇

Hiring a PPC company is how 95% of the shop owners handle their PPC marketing.  You're not alone, there. I devoted a huge amount of time learning through reading, YouTube, and a lot of trial & error.  The reason I  spent so much on PPC was I was always #1 at the top Google whenever anybody searched anything related to transmission repair.  I thought of it sort of like a "contest" to always be listed at the top simply because that's usually the default choice for most people searching.

With that being said, most shop owners don't have the energy or time to learn PPC marketing like I did.  I usually stayed in my office and once I got home, I would try to learn more or come up with more keywords.  I started out with well over a 1,000 key words and over time, I whittled down to only 30 or so.  It was a lot of fun while it lasted.

However, when the new owner took over the business, one of the first thing he cut was PPC expenditures.  Transmissions aren't like regular automotive repair shops where you develop relationships and get repeat business.  If we get repeat business, it's more that likely a warranty job or somebody with very bad luck. 😞  I learned transmission are normally a 1-shot deal and a prominent listing at the top of Google is much more crucial than in general automotive repair.

The only way I could actually measure effectiveness of PPC was to use call tracking  That way, I knew what jobs came in from PPC and which ones didn't.  I used 

edit[1]

Posted
7 hours ago, Theta said:

Interesting insights on advertising!

Does anyone have experience with Kukui and they effectiveness?

 

 

I have no experience with Kukui, but I know of them.  Personally, I would not hire anybody who doesn't use call tracking so you can SEE the effectiveness of your PPC.  Paid call tracking is much better than Google's free call tracking.  Not enough data with Google.

Check this spreadsheet out:  

 

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