In: Categories » Internet and online » Search engines » Google and your business
Without satisfied searchers, the business side has no value. Consumers may freely focus on the search experience, with no awareness of the business forces competing in the background. But business users who ignore consumer-search priorities court their own downfall. Google’s Empowerment Model At the top of this article, I stated that Google’s business model makes money when you do. But as I also mentioned, Google makes money even if you don’t. That’s not a situation Google likes, and it tries to help you correct it, as I discuss in Part II. Google wants you to succeed. This reciprocity is built into Google’s advertising services in three ways:
- They are democratic. Anyone can get involved, from a first-time entrepreneur with a new Web site to a billion-dollar corporation. As in any great democracy, ingenuity, knowledge, and persistence can compete with, and sometimes triumph over, incumbency and deep pockets.
- They are reciprocal. Google’s success is good for you, and your success is good for Google. Google’s consumer users win, too, when you work effectively in Google’s advertising programs. This three-way reciprocity is difficult to establish (and even measure) in traditional media advertising.
- They are efficient. And that’s an understatement. Google’s innovations in search advertising strive for an ideal match of advertiser to customer, hinged on a keyword. You pay only for reasonably good matches recognized by your potential customers. Google’s AdSense program, in which participating sites share ad revenue with Google, doesn’t cost the participant a dime now that’s efficiency. eBay, the most successful dot-com venture through the collapse of the Internet bubble, was founded on the same three principles: democracy (anybody could get involved), reciprocity (eBay and its users benefited when its participants succeeded), and efficiency (participants controlled their costs and tracked their returns). In time, the advantages of eBay’s system got the attention of midsize brick-and-mortar stores, which now operate eBay outlets as an essential part of their business plan.
Much larger corporations routinely use eBay to dispose of inventory. The playing field is level and the economics are equally favorable, whether you are selling computers or a lamp in your attic. Google’s two prime-time revenue programs, AdWords and AdSense, have followed an adoption curve similar to eBay’s. Fashioned for universal participation, both programs were adopted first by small players single Webmasters, entrepreneurs, and one-product companies. Word spread, and now both programs are in far-flung use by the Internet’s largest publishers, manufacturers, and e-tailers. As with eBay, small and large participants enjoy the same benefits. The Three Goals of Every Webmaster Innumerable business plans operate side by side on the Web. But all these sites online stores, travel agencies, virtual magazines, community portals, even modest personal sites share three fundamental goals:
- Increase presence. Putting up a Web site is like mounting a billboard in a desert: Nobody sees it. Article 3 explains how to network your site to greater visibility by getting other sites to link to it. In the context of Google, increasing Web presence means increasing presence in Google’s Web index the gigantic collection of Web pages from which Google derives its search results. And that means raising the site’s PageRank, which I discuss in Article 3.
- Drive traffic. Traffic is the natural extension of presence. For our purposes, presence is visibility in Google, but that presence, by itself, doesn’t do a Webmaster much good. Google visibility must be turned into traffic, which happens when Google searchers click your link.
- Convert visitors. Traffic is enough for some Webmastering purposes. In nonrevenue sites, the goal might be just to get eyeballs on the home page. But that simple ambition is rarely the objective of a site. Almost every Webmaster wants to get visitors to do something visit a certain page, fill out a form, join a mailing list, travel across an opt-out page, buy a product, click an ad. Whatever the aim, the conversion of traffic from unproductive visits to productive visits is the final step that nearly all Webmasters seek. Google is a powerful ally in the first two goals.
Nothing increases presence like a high listing on a Google search results page. If high positioning isn’t enough to drive traffic or isn’t possible in certain searches, Google’s advertising program (AdWords) can help divert the flow of traffic in your direction. Google can’t magically convert visitors, but it does help its AdWords users track visitors who do convert. Google and Your Web Site Google’s come-one, come-all advertising programs (AdWords and AdSense) are enticing to every Webmaster with entrepreneurial inclinations. “The main Google index a marketing venue in itself presents you with three significant opportunities for business growth:”
- Google search listings. Getting into the listings (see Article 2) is the first major step. As you work your way in, concentrate on building up your PageRank. Many Webmasters attain ongoing success without any advertising by fighting for and retaining a high searchpage position for important keywords.
- AdWords. Google’s search advertising program, AdWords increases presence and drives traffic. And the first part increasing presence is free. AdWords ads appear on the right side (and sometimes at the top) of Google search pages. Advertisers pay for their ad only when a Google user clicks on it. The AdWords program offers a quick way to place your site on a search results page without necessarily being in the Google index. (Part II explores AdWords in detail.)
- AdSense. Google’s ad-syndication program, AdSense is a method of making money on your site. Webmasters in the AdSense program display AdWords ads on their pages and share advertiser payments with Google. The goal of an AdSense page is to get visitors to scoot off the page by clicking an ad. The ads are supplied by Google, and in fact are the same AdWords you see on Google search results pages. When a visitor clicks one, the AdSense publisher shares the cost-per-click ad revenue with Google. Participating in the AdSense program is free to any qualifying page or site. (Part III fully describes the AdSense program.) The three marketing venues just described search listings, AdWords, and AdSense roughly correspond to three business activities. Understanding how and to what degree to approach these three activities helps guide you toward the best Google marketing service for your talent and taste:
- Optimize. Site optimization is ongoing, detail-minded work that asks for writing talent, organizational skill, a willingness to update and tweak daily, and an eagerness to stay on top of an evolving field. Optimization is the foremost activity for those aspiring to climb upwards to greater visibility in Google’s search results listings. Don’t forget, though, that certain optimization tasks are necessary in all aspects of online marketing. To some extent, site optimization is integral to every site’s greater success. If you love to optimize, climbing the listings is your marketing arena. (Article 4 is all about optimization.)
- Publicize. If your site has the goods by which I mean great information, saleable products, interactive features, or an essential service the slow grind of optimization might be too gradual a path for you. If you’re ready to transact business now and are confident in your site’s ability to convert visitors without an optimization overhaul, advertising might be your bet. AdWords offers a cost-efficient method of sending qualified leads to your domain. You pay by the click which means you’re buying actual visitors, not ad displays so your return on investment (ROI) depends on your site’s ability to convert. As you learn in Part II, you can strictly control your costs in AdWords by placing a ceiling on the amount you pay per click and on your overall expenditures.
- Monetize. If you don’t sell products, and want your site itself to generate revenue, AdSense is a program made for your entrepreneurial needs. AdSense is a free way to join Google’s advertising network and display AdWords ads. Revenue earned in this manner by publishing ads that generate income is called passive revenue. Unlike the busy lifestyle of fulfilling orders taken through a Web site, the passive-revenue lifestyle lets the site do the work, not you. Google and Your Product E-tailers whose catalogs range from one product to thousands can be represented in Google’s two shopping portals: Google Catalogs and Froogle. Google Catalogs is a search engine dedicated to displaying printed catalogs and linking to their sites. It’s available only to companies that publish such catalogs. Froogle is available to any business that sells a product through a Web site.
legal notice
Our website is not responsible for the information contained by this article. Web-articles is a free articles resource.
Suggestion: If you need fresh, daily updated content for your website, feel free to use our service. Click here for more information.
Useful tools and features
related articles
This article is about partnering with Google: getting into the index, improving your PageRank, advertising on Google, distributing other people’s Google ads on your site, and other ways of building your online business through Google. So a section about rebuffing Google might seem counterproductive. But in the interest of covering all bases, here it is. Sometimes even publicity-hungry Webmasters want to keep Google away from certain parts of their business. Private pages designed for friends and semiprivate ...
2. Optimizing a Site for Google
The field of search engine optimization (SEO) is both simple and complex. It’s simple in that the principles of preparing your site for beneficial crawling are a lot easier than SEO companies (who want you as a client) might have you believe. It’s also complex because ideal SEO goes beyond tweaking a site’s tags or page structure to a deeper consideration of a site’s purpose, who it wants to attract, and how it wants visitors to behave. SEO might or might not be connected to making money. (Fo...
3. Putting Google Search on Your Site
The simplest and most identifiable method of partnering with Google is to incorporate Google searching on your site. You may offer Google search to your visitors free of charge (to them and to you), and you may customize the search to a reasonable degree. Giving your users options to search the Web or your site (or other specific sites) is fairly easy. Google offers four free search services and three paid services: - Google Free. A Google-branded search box that delivers Web results. ...
4. Introducing Search Advertising and Google AdWords
This first article on AdWords is an overview of both search advertising in theory and AdWords in practice. I sketch the main points of Google’s service here, and get into the details in later articles. Search advertising brings new marketing propositions to the table. This is not to say that search advertising is brand new, but it is reaching a tipping point (to borrow author Malcolm Gladwell’s phrase). Nobody knows what we are tipping into. But there’s no question that search adve...
5. Understanding How AdWords Works
As a preview, the following list outlines the basic steps of designing and running ads in Google, in roughly the order in which most people proceed: - Start an account. Starting an AdWords account is pain-free and expensefree. You don’t even have to be certain that you’ll ever run a single ad. Opening the account simply lets you into Google’s AdWords staging area, called the Control Center, where you create and deploy campaigns. No ads are displayed, and no billin...
6. Creating Effective Ad Groups
Ad Groups are the fundamental marketing units that propel your AdWords campaign. If keywords are the sparks of AdWords success, Ad Groups are the flames. And, one hopes, your campaign is a roaring bonfire. But forget the heated analogy. The point is that success in AdWords depends largely on the effective creation and manipulation of Ad Groups. Why is the Ad Group the most powerful element of your campaign? Because it contains the four motors of your advertising and conversion strategy: ads, keywords, bid...
7. AdWords bid on keywords
The Control Center provides three ways to edit the crucial CPC (cost-per-click) bid. This is the bid that helps determine your ad’s position on search pages. Normally, the bid applies to all keywords in an Ad Group, but you may also specify unique bids for individual keywords. Following are the three methods of tweaking your CPC bid: - Using the Edit Keywords link. I describe this method in the preceding section, in the discussion about editing keywords. The same screen allows keyword ed...
8. Managing AdWords Campaigns
This article is about the daily operation of AdWords campaigns. I emphasize five important topics in this article: - Pausing and resuming campaigns and Ad Groups - Understanding why accounts are slowed, and knowing how to reactivate a slowed account - Coping with slowed and disabled keywords, situations that can be baffling to the uninitiated - Understanding and choosing geo-targeting - Implementing Google’s conversion tracking feature Pausing and Resuming...
9. Getting into Froogle and Google Catalogs
Because of the huge amount of publicity doled out to AdWords and AdSense, you might think that Google’s business services are only advertising services. Not true. Google is really in the exposure business, increasing visibility for both advertisers and sites listed in the Google indexes including its two shopping indexes, the subjects of this article. To put Google’s business services in an even broader light, you might say that Google is in the keyword business. As a keyword services company, Google bri...
