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What's the Problem? and The Solution Is™ Addresses SEO for Hotels
publication date: Jan 25, 2015
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author/source: David Backes, technical account executive at Anvil Media.
What's the ProblemTM? Knowing where to look and what to do in order to maximize Search Engine Optimization. The Solution IsTM More than 100 specific answers for today's hoteliers to tackle this must-know issue.101 search marketing tips for hotels This is a guest article by David Backes, technical account executive at Anvil Media Inc.That's right folks, 101 PPC tips. These tips, tricks, and quick How Tos range from beginner to intermediate to advanced players in the hotel sector. With these these pointers, property owners can can use search engine marketing to glean searches away from OTAs and their high commissions. We have divided the sections of the PPC 101 as follows:
1. Before beginning any PPC campaign, ensure that your analytics setup is correctly collecting data (Google Analytics is free and easy!) 2. Work with your booking engine to get conversion and revenue tracking installed 3. Being able to attribute revenue data to all online campaigns is essential to gain insight into how ad dollars are contributing to the bottom line. 4. Managing multiple Google AdWords accounts? Consider using Google's My Client Manager (MCC) as an umbrella account to house each property's account beneath allowing single sign on and easier management 5. Begin by thinking about the audience you're trying to target and frame your online initiatives based on the people 6. If you're a luxury hotel brand, avoid framing all of your PPC ads around discounts and special deals-test ads focusing on luxury against ads that might be promotional and see how your audience responds Terminology - Best know your acronyms 7. PPC: pay per click 8. CPC: cost per click 9. CPM: cost per thousand impressions (the M is Latin for thousand) 10. CPA: cost per acquisition (or action) 11. ROI: return on investment 12. ROAS: return on ad spend 13. CTA: Call to action, eg: "Book Today" Terminology 2.0 - Best know your words 14. AdCenter: Microsoft's ad network 15. Search Alliance: The name given to the Microsoft (Bing)/Yahoo ad network merger 16. AdWords: Google's ad network 17. A/B Testing: Testing 1 element against another, using data to pick a winner 18. Algorithm: A set of rules and calculations used to determine results, eg. which website to display first on Google 19. Bounce Rate: The percentage of visitors who hit a website and leave without continuing deeper into the site-they hit the site and bounce off 20. Click Fraud: A type of cyber crime where a person or bot clicks on ads to run up costs without the intent of taking action after clicking the ad 21. Conversion: When a target user completes the action that the advertiser is pushing, such as booking a hotel room or filling out an RFQ for an event space 22. Local Search: The term given to any search queries that trigger maps to be displayed in the search engines, including maps specific searches (maps.google.com) 23. Organic Listings: The non-paid search listings that occur below ads on search engines 24. Retargeting/Remarketing: The practice of serving ads to people based on actions they took on your website (eg. visited your website but didn't book a hotel room) Keywords & Match Types 25. Never stop refining your negative keyword list 26. Specific is terrific! While "hotels" might be too general, "boutique hotels in Portland" could do the trick 27. Research keyword matching (broad, phrase, exact) before launching your first campaign: 28. Broad match allows your ad to be shown on keywords that are similar to the user's search query 29. "phrase match" shows up in quotes, and must include the phrase in the search query 30. [exact match] keywords use brackets, and must exactly match the searcher's query to trigger an ad 31. Consider putting different keyword match types in their own adgroups 32. Base adgroups on both semantics and user intent-know which keywords are being search on for purely research purposes, and which ones are used when customers are ready to buy Text ads testing and settings 33. Always use calls to action in your ads 34. A/B test your ads on an ongoing basis-never have just 1 ad in an adgroup 35. Get granular with your testing-rather than having 2 completely different ads, see if tweaking just a headline or destination URL makes a difference 36. Look beyond just click through rate changes during ad testing-did 1 ad actually increase conversion rates? 37. Use Google Analytics to check times of day that conversion rates are the highest and increase bids using Ad Scheduling 38. Microsoft AdCenter only lets you bid down, so look for low conversion times and adjust accordingly Dynamic keyword insertion 39. Test dynamic keyword insertion to give your ads higher click through rates 40. Dynamic keyword insertion uses the searcher's actually query in the ad text. 41. To do this, add in a variation of "keyword" (see below) along with your fall back text in case the searcher's query is too long to stuff into your add. Like this: {keyword:Portland Hotels} 42. {keyword} - No capitalization, all word(s) are in lower case 43. {Keyword} - The first word is capitalized 44. {KeyWord} - Every Word Is Capitalized 45. {KEYword} - EVERY letter in first word is capitalized 46. {KEYWord} - EVERY Letter in the first word and the first letter of the second 47. {KEYWORD} - EVERY LETTER IS CAPITALIZED PPC Management Tools (free) 48. AdWords Editor - Google's tool 49. AdCenter Desktop - Microsoft's tool (caution: it's buggy!) 50. Google URL Builder - Use this to quickly and easily add UTM tracking parameters to non-Google ad campaigns so data gets pulled into Google Analytics correctly PPC management tools (paid) 51. Searchforce 52. Acquisio 53. Marin Software 54. Channel Advisor 55. Kenshoo Research tools 56. SEMrush - Keyword research 57. SEO Moz - Multiple keyword research & SEO tools 58. Keyword Spy - See what your competitors are targeting 59. SpyFu - See what your competitors are targeting (recommended) 60. Google Traffic Estimator - See if the keywords you're targeting have potential for traffic 61. AdBeat - See what kinds of display ads your competitors are running Display ads and retargeting 62. Similar to text ads, display ads should have a clear call to action 63. Display ads can be used to test user response to specific promotions-is a "20% Off" or "Free Valet Parking" a better incentive to get people to book? 64. Use Google AdWords to create specific audiences (buckets of people based on actions you define) 65. Ads can be served to these audiences in very specific ways-an ad highlighting a promotion on your site could be served to somebody who views that promotion page but doesn't book a room 66. Be careful though! Serving ads that are too specific can begin to creep out potential customers 67. As a precaution, add the retargeting privacy policy that Google provides to your website's privacy policy 68. Check performance of retargeting ads by factoring in both click conversions and view through conversions 69. View through conversions are counted when a user is exposed to an ad, doesn't click on it, and then returns to the website to convert Non-Google PPC 70. Facebook ads are a great way to mine demographic information by analyzing who responds to your ads 71. Images are important: use close-up shots of people's faces whenever possible 72. Facebook ads get stale fast: swap out images and creative as soon as you notice even the smallest drop in CTR 73. Sponsored stories are a great way to get started with Facebook ads-instead of writing creative, Facebook will auto generate ads based on actions that users take (eg. "liking" your page) 74. Although Linkedin ads are generally thought of as specific to B2B companies, hotels can target specific conferences and businesses to attract large groups 75. Depending on the market, CitySearch ads can help drive revenue back to your site-make sure to tag links though to properly attribute revenue coming from CitySearch Landing pages 76. Whatever you say/promise in your ad copy must be seen immediately when people arrive on the landing page 77. Strip down navigation (leave a link to the home page but cut out everything else) 78. Make sure to demonstrate that you're a trustworthy company, either through reviews or awards 79. Include perks and specials 80. For PPC, include keyword that you're bidding on in the page title or sub-title for good quality score 81. No more than two calls to action 82. Streamline the booking process so users don't get frustrated 83. Give users a reason to book NOW 84. Ensure an uncluttered layout with plenty of white space so that it looks like booking won't be too much work 85. Always have links to privacy policy, terms, and the about us and contact page in the footer of the page to ensure compliance with PPC networks Mobile 86. Set up dedicated mobile PPC campaigns separate from campaigns targeting computers or tablets. 87. Take your existing keywords list and plug it into the Google keyword tool for mobile only to get additional keyword ideas specific to mobile users. 88. Take advantage of click-to-call extensions to make it easy for users to call you. 89. Use location extensions to give your ad more mobile screen real estate and to make it easier for users to find your physical locations. 90. Adjust bid levels to place your ad in the top 2 positions; mobile search results screens will usually only show the top 2 ads on the first page. 91. Break up display and search mobile campaigns; makes it easier to control budget and targeting. 92. Make sure your sending users to a mobile-optimized landing page. 93. Is your booking engine mobile friendly? Test the checkout process on a smart phone before beginning mobile PPC. 94. Ensure your entire conversion funnel has been simplified and streamlined for mobile users. 95. Treat mobile and tablet users as separate campaigns; tablets tend to show full search results screens instead of mobile phone type results. 96. Use a mobile display network that is cross-platform; Apple and Android users now split the mobile market. Localized PPC 97. Use Google Analytics to figure out pockets of the world (specific cities or even countries) that convert best on your site 98. Find a place that has great conversion rates? Target an entire PPC campaign and set the location to only target that area. 99. Close the loop with a location specific landing page (potentially calling out a specific offer for the region you're targeting) 100. Newer advertisers with claimed Google Place pages should consider testing AdWords Express. 101. AdWords Express serves text ads for local queries based on your place's location and categories-setup is simple and management is minimal. NB: This is a guest article by David Backes, technical account executive at Anvil Media. |
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