What is the most you would pay per click?

  • €1 or less

    Votes: 2 50.0%
  • €5 or less

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • €50 or less

    Votes: 2 50.0%
  • €50 or more

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    4
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mneylon

Administrator
Staff member
Ooooo this is interesting

Pity you can't have multiple sites per login - having to remember all these usernames is a PITA
 

batgirl13

New Member
I think the cost per click will usually depend on the industry or market you are working in. As long as you are getting a healthy return, you should be fine.
 

gav240z

New Member
$15 AU when I was working for a search engine marketing agency

When I was working for a search engine marketing agency in Australia the most I was bidding was around the $15 AU mark for Dedicated Hosting terms.

We were aiming to sell to big corporate clients and a sale on average was worth $20,000 + per year so it works out quite nicely.

If only they let me use the Website Optimiser Tool :(
 

casty23

New Member
1 dollar, but no more as I was often losing money. Actually i decided to stop using adwords cause it was too much of a hassle.
 

savvi

New Member
The most I pay nowdays is 50 cents, not going overboard anymore think it's hetting out of hand and the guys at google are raking the cash.
 

link8r

New Member
It all depends on the sales marging

We bid up to €20 for some clicks when selling investments, if you're selling a €100,000 product and you have to wait 100 clicks, thats only €2,000 for a €10k profit margin.

The lowest I go is €1.
 

cmcsoft

New Member
The most I spent was €1.40. To be honest it all depends on the site. I will have to ramp up for some sites but I find that most clients want to spend very little on advertising.

Do users find that spending large amounts actually pay off? I find that it just burns through my budget in a couple of days!
 

WoW

New Member
WowWee Gifts

My experience is you have to keep tweeking with the click price. Be very selective with you key words by putting brackets around the text.

This way customers will only look for what you are selling or providing ie if a customer is looking for an electric blanket they do not want to sieve through a large amount of other types of blankets before they come to the electric ones.
 

bradwilson55

New Member
These should be kept in mind while doing Pay Per Click...... coz its about money... an research

1.Advertise on a large number of relevant search phrases. Brainstorm beyond the first dozen terms that come to mind to describe your business. Advertise on the terms used to describe your products, the product names, product codes, and the questions a prospect might type into a search engine that your services answer, and more. Read our article, How to find good keywords5 for more on this.

2. Build unique ads for each search phrase. It takes a lot more time to write a unique ad for each search phrase relevant to your business rather than creating one ad for all of your search phrases, but the extra work will definitely be rewarded. Ads that are aligned with the corresponding search term receive more clicks, which will mean more targeted traffic, and in some cases paying less per click (on Google Adwords) due to the intricacies of how the advertising is priced.

3. Send visitors to the most appropriate page of your website. If you place an ad for a specific product within your online store, don't send visitors to your homepage and force them to dig for what they just searched. This will frustrate your visitors and increase the chance that they'll hit the dreaded Back button.
 

achieve

New Member
I've suspended my Googe AdWords campaign for the time being. The bidding war just got out of control for certain keyword phrases, rising from €0.50 to over €5.00 in th e space of a coupl of months. Decided to let the main competition have their bidding war battles, and when they're broke to resume my campaign.

Being responsible for half dozen or so Google Adwords campaigns for small to medium businesses, who advertise to both national and international audience, I find that majority of cost per click fall between €0.20 and €0.80, with good conversion rates.
 

StuartC

New Member
80c is probably the highest we have to go. It really does depend on the market competition and importantly, how much research you put into it.
 

offloadit

New Member
What are the most expensive keywords in Ireland? I would like to diversify my sites so that I can attract google ads with high paying keywords.


(If this query is already posted somewhere else please direct me to it as I could not find it)
 

nauert

New Member
It totally depends on what your industry is and what your ROI is (Obviously).

Recently, I have been spending $16 a click on a website I used Google website optimizer to optimize the landing page for a 20%+ conversion ratio.

It's an affiliate site selling a product for $299. I get $200 of that.
You do the math.

I have only recently gotten into affiliate marketing. I mush prefer low maintenance residual and passive revenue, but this is just too good to pass up. 2007 is the year of the affiliate for me. I'm going to pour my heart and soul into it.

Wow, $16 / click? That's way out of my league. Knowing my luck I'd get 500 clicks and 2 sales. That's great. Congratulations! I'd be concerned that a competitor would click the ad a bunch of times to off me...
 
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