Ten different factors will determine how quickly your ads pay off.
Your answers to questions 5 & 6 indicate your product purchase cycle. Here are those questions again:
Generally speaking, the longer your product purchase cycle, the longer it will take before your mass-media ads deliver a positive R.O.I.
Online ads, however, work immediately. But will the customer type your name into the search block? If they do, you have already won the heart of that customer. They have chosen you as their preferred provider. This means you will enjoy an extremely low cost-per-click with a high conversion rate.
But if they type the name of your competitor into the search block, then it will be your competitor that enjoys an extremely low cost-per-click and a high conversion rate.
The starting pistol fires the moment a customer types your category into the search block instead of your name or the name of a competitor. Their computer screen overflows with the names of companies making them offers. If they see a name they recognize, the footrace is over in moments. But if no name is recognized, the names of several runners will be clicked.
Every runner will pay a high cost-per-click due to gambling on an “unbranded” keyword.
But only one runner will take home the prize money.
Costs-per-click have never been higher.
Mass media costs have never been lower.
If you sell a product or a service with a long purchase cycle, the bad news about mass media is that it will take 3 to 6 months of weekly advertising before you begin to gain any real momentum.
The good news is that the longer you use mass media, the better it works.1 This is how you make your name the one that customers type into the search block.
Ten years ago, Inc. magazine published an article by Jeff Haden titled, “How Google is Killing Organic Search.”
“If your business depends on customers finding you in search results, you’re in trouble–and it’s likely to get worse. If case you haven’t noticed, pay-per-click ads are slowly taking over Google’s search engine results. That should come as no surprise since approximately 97% of Google’s revenues are generated by its core business, search engine advertising; Google is understandably protecting and extending its revenue turf… If you’re a business that depends on