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Facebook Relevance Score: 4 Key Facts to Know

Internet Marketing Blog by WordStream

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Facebook Relevance Score: 4 Key Facts to Know

Every decent online ad platform has a metric for measuring ad quality. The better your ad quality, the lower your costs and the more people get to see your ads. For Google AdWords, that metric is Quality Score. For Facebook, that metric is Relevance Score.

In an ideal world, this quality metric would be hyper-transparent, helping advertisers understand what they’re doing wrong and rewarding those who put in the work with lower CPCs and advantageous placements. Unfortunately, we don’t live in an ideal world. Things like the AdWords Quality Score and Facebook Relevance score are notoriously difficult to wrap your head around.

As Facebook ads become more prevalent among advertisers of all sizes, so too does the focus on the channel’s proprietary health metric, Relevance Score. Today I’ll dive into Facebook’s Relevance Score, addressing what it is, how it’s calculated, and, most important, what you can do to improve your ads’ performance.

1. What Is Facebook Relevance Score?

Relevance Score is Facebook’s measure of the quality and engagement level of your ads. Your Relevance Score is important because it determines both your cost per click on Facebook and how frequently Facebook shows your ad. It’s their way of telling you one of two things: either “hey, your ad kicks ass” or “get outta here with that junk.”

Like the AdWords Quality Score, Relevance Score exists at the base unit of your Facebook account structure (in AdWords, that’s the keyword level; in Facebook, the ad) and is presented as a number between 1 and 10. A Relevance Score of 1 is bad. It means that your ad barely pertains to your audience and in order for Facebook to continue to serve it, you’re going to have to pay a premium. Conversely, a high Relevance Score—somewhere in the 8, 9, or 10 range—increases the likelihood of your ad being served.

example of a facebook ad with a great relevance score 

Half a dozen paragraphs into this post I’ve used some form of the word “relevance” an annoying number of times.

I’m sorry: it’s only going to get worse.

2. The Components of Relevance Score

While the components of the AdWords Quality Score (expected CTR, ad relevance, and landing page experience) are straightforward enough, Facebook Relevance Score is a bit more subjective. It’s primarily based on expected positive and negative feedback.

Once your ad has been served more than 500 times it will be assigned a score. Facebook decided that’s the number of impressions it requires to determine your audience’s expected reaction to your ad creative (note that if you’ve got a small budget or you manually selected your placements this could take a while).

components of facebook ad relevance score visualized

I’ve italicized expected because Relevance Score isn’t based on actual feedback (likes, shares, comments, views, conversions, etc.). Instead, Facebook calculates an audience’s anticipated response to your ad using your campaign goal and audience granularity to determine the likelihood of your desired action being taken (positive feedback) or your ad being hidden or flagged (negative feedback). 

If, after your ad’s been served more than 500 times, you’ve got a Relevance Score of 10, congratulations! You’ve successfully aligned your ad creative and offer with your audience, and Facebook’s algorithm says they’re probably going to drink the Kool-Aid.

Unfortunately, you won’t be able to rest on your laurels for long.

expected feedback and its impact on relevance score

Relevance Score is not static. In fact, it can fluctuate daily. This is Facebook’s way of mitigating staleness; when your Facebook ad’s engagement starts falling off a cliff, it’s time to present that audience with something new.

Putting a ton of effort into understanding who you’re advertising to and how your offering addresses one of their problems—be it a top-of-funnel content promotion or a product to be purchased—is the best way to position yourself for success. From there, it’s all about continuously creating Facebook ads that stand out in a sea of parental complaints and food porn.

3. How to Find Your Facebook Ad Relevance Scores

Since Relevance Score exists at the ad level, navigate to the “Ads tab” in your Facebook Business Manager.

 facebook ad manager ad tab location

From there, open the “Columns” dropdown and select the “Customize Columns” Option.

facebook ad manager customize columns 

This will open an unreasonably confusing set of submenus. It’ll look slightly more approachable than Google Analytics or a relatively ornery komodo dragon. To save time here, you’re going to want to use the search function to pull “Relevance Score,” “Positive Feedback,” and “Negative Feedback” into your current view (I recommend saving this setup so that, moving forward, you can check in on your ads’ Relevance Scores with a single click).

 facebook ads manager creating custom view for relevance score and expected feedback

With these columns added to your view, you can analyze the current Relevance Score of all your ads, as well as their expected degrees of positive and negative feedback.

relevance score with high positive feedback and low negative feedback 

If any piece of creative has a low degree of positive feedback and a high degree of negative feedback, it’s time to change things up….

4. How to Improve Your Relevance Score

As you already know, Relevance Score is all about the relationship between an ad and its target audience. And you need a high Relevance Score if you want to save money on your Facebook ad campaigns and get higher ROI.

As such, the two most important factors you can work on to improve your ad’s Relevance Sore are targeting (what your audience looks like) and your Facebook ad creative.

Hyper-specific targeting

Really whittling down your audiences will allow you to ensure a high degree of commonality among each member of a given audience. That means you can craft ads and offers that speak to the exact needs of a given group. If your company offers PPC software for savvy digital marketers, an audience that looks like this:

the key to relevance score is granular audience defnition 

…will inherently possess a higher relevance score than one comprised of all men and women between 18-65 years of age living the continental US.

Granular audience construction becomes even easier when you leverage custom audiences to target people who have taken specific action on your website.

Make great ads

Facebook’s sea of statuses and offerings can create a lot of static; people scroll blindly as a force of habit and stand a decent chance of skipping over your ad. Unless it’s completely unmissable. Like this:

wordstream's top performing facebook ad based on relevance score uses bold image creative 

This is an undoubtedly attention-grabbing image. Once someone stops to check it out, they’re likely to read the surrounding text; if we’ve done a good enough job of audience creation, the copy will entice a prospect into clicking through to our website and downloading a white paper that solves a legitimate business problem (writing copy that converts).

Here are more tips on creating awesomely effective Facebook ads.

TEST EVERYTHING

Facebook is a firm believer in diminishing returns.

Audiences will get tired of your creative, so refreshing your ads frequently is key. Analyze your Relevance Score early and often to ensure that an ad gets traction; from there, begin rotating different ads into the same Ad Set. When you see a trend, make a note and use it to influence your next batch of killer ad creative.

***

Relevance Score can be a fickle metric, but its heart is in the right place. If your ads are at once aesthetically pleasing and problem solving, you’re in the perfect position to make Facebook advertising work for your business.

About the Author

Allen Finn is a content marketing specialist and the reigning fantasy football champion at WordStream. He enjoys couth menswear, dank eats, and the dulcet tones of the Wu-Tang Clan. If you know what’s good for you, you’ll follow him on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Why You Need To Stop Pitching Influencers

SEMrush blog
Why You Need To Stop Pitching Influencers

Why You Need To Stop Pitching Influencers

The power of influencers continues to grow stronger, and with this comes an outpouring of brands attempting to create relationships and work with these influencers. But how can you stand out from all the other brands in your target influencer‘s inbox? The answer comes when you stop trying to pitch them, and start involving them.

How Much Are Mobile Brand Searches Really Worth? (Data)

Internet Marketing Blog by WordStream

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How Much Are Mobile Brand Searches Really Worth? (Data)

When I initially started working in SEO, I was working for then-unknown start-ups (including this one), and branded searches seemed to me to be the most boring part of SEO and PPC. Those searches are already there (they get created by other channels), you’re almost certainly going to rank for them in organic search, and you likely have to “defend” them in PPC. So who really cares about branded searches?

But as I did more work in SEO and PPC with companies of varying shapes and sizes, I quickly learned that for many sites branded searches make up a majority of their organic and paid traffic. Beyond that, for very large brands that traffic can be worth millions and millions of dollars.

I also learned that there are different variations of “branded searches” (e.g. “{brand name} reviews,” “{brand name} coupons,” etc.) that are valuable and can be trickier than one might expect for a brand itself to rank for and defend.

The one thing that’s particularly jumped out at me recently, though, is what an amazing growth opportunity branded searches are for Google as a company.

top brands using google adwords

Many people (though not most, it turns out) know that a vast majority of Google’s (and Alphabet’s) revenues come from AdWords, and specifically paid search. And the assumption is of course that that spend is because of the efficacy of search advertising. Lots of insurance companies want to be in front of people who are actively searching for things like “best life insurance plans.”

I own a search marketing consulting company, and I also own multiple web properties whose traffic is driven primarily by search, so I certainly believe in the power and value of unbranded search traffic. I also think that not everyone realizes just how much of Google’s revenue is driven by branded search.

And I further think that not everyone realizes that a general move to mobile searches represents a large opportunity (in the very least in the short term) for Google to grow revenues aggressively on branded searches.

Why is that?

The Relationship Between Mobile and Brand Searches

The number of people searching on mobile devices varies by industry and topic, but according to Google statements and Hitwise data mobile is now responsible for more than half of all Google searches (and likely more like 60%+). It’s not controversial to assume that that number will continue to grow.

Given all of this, I wanted to look into two things:

How much are branded searches actually worth to Google (and to the brands in question and their competitors)?
What do Google search results for some of the most valuable branded terms look like on mobile versus desktop?

So in this post I’ll walk through some estimates on the actual value of branded searches, as well as take you screenshot-by-screenshot through what appears to be in the billions of dollars worth of branded searches on desktop versus mobile to show you why I suspect much of the search traffic on those specific terms will be shifting from organic to paid (thus generating lots of advertising revenue for Google).

How Much Are Branded Searches Actually Worth?

To start with, I looked at the branded traffic and clicks available for each of the top five advertisers in Google’s most profitable industries, according to a WordStream study from a few years ago. This obviously doesn’t give us a comprehensive picture of every brand search on Google, and there are likely some other brands who have more search volume and potentially higher costs, but I thought it was a good starting place to begin to get a sense of the opportunity here.

Here is the projected estimated data for branded searches for these 50 companies:

cost value of brand searches on google

Estimated costs for top brand searches

A few notes on the data here:

These are all exact match forecasts from Google’s Keyword Planner, so the global branded search volume for modified versions of these terms would likely be quite a bit higher.
These are of course very rough estimates, for example with Gifts.com the tool had some difficulty estimating branded traffic given that much of that would wind up as type-in traffic.
The brands themselves would likely have much lower costs per click on these terms (as they’d have very high Quality Scores), and to get a sense of the global market we ratcheted bids and budget up to extremely high levels. The brand would get most of the clicks, so the numbers here are almost certainly inflated.

All of that said, I found the numbers interesting. Over $171 million per month for just 50 brands – that’s over $2 billion annually. For a company that makes 90 billion that’s just a few percentage points of total annual revenue, but think of the aggregate market for brand searches across every consumer brand, Fortune 500 company, local business, etc. Seems like a potentially significant piece of a pretty large pie.

So we understand that these branded searches are potentially big business for Google. Now let’s take a look at how searchers are experiencing them (and what it may mean for these brands).

What Do Branded Searches Look Like on Mobile Versus Desktop?

Now let’s look specifically at the SERP layout for the branded search result for the company in each of Google’s top spending industries (again according to the above-linked WordStream study) that was spending the most on paid search (with a few exceptions where the branded search had a URL as the brand name – e.g. Booking.com – in which case I grabbed the second result).

Let’s go screenshot-by-screenshot through what I’m seeing on my personal laptop and my personal phone (so of note is that some of the search results will be based on my search history and obviously this isn’t a boil-the-earth, comprehensive review of every possible screen size or device, etc.).

State Farm

First up is State Farm.

Their desktop branded search is really pretty good – they’re having to spend to have their ad (which takes up a good chunk of real estate) featured on the SERP, but they also have their site, a site search bar, and a description of their company (including their URL) featured prominently.

When I look at their mobile branded result, meanwhile, their ad is literally the only thing I can see on my screen. If I’m a typical user trying to get in touch with State Farm or navigate to their site, it seems pretty unlikely I’d make my way down to their website without making Google some money in most instances.

Desktop:

state farm brand search on desktop

Mobile:

state farm mobile brand searches

Amazon

Amazon is probably getting the best deal of the lot in the move from desktop to mobile! Their desktop result is relatively good as well (again featuring company info and getting to their organic listing quickly), but their mobile result (for me anyway) is completely organic! As we run through the rest of the branded searches we’ll see that this is not the norm.

amazon brand serp

 

Mobile:

brand search for amazon on mobile

Expedia 

Expedia is effectively the inverse of Amazon here on my screens, moving from a very organic-friendly desktop layout (with a big organic result, company info, and stories about the company) to a single big branded ad.

Desktop:

expedia mobile brand serp

Mobile:

mobile serp for expedia brand search

University of Phoenix

The University of Phoenix probably has the toughest before/after on the list, where they’re going from a big organic result, a company Twitter account, and a local campus listing to…a competitor’s ad!

Below the competitor’s ad is another listing from an affiliate site that compares different colleges. Not exactly where you want to be driving all of the people who have seen or heard all your TV and radio commercials.

Desktop:

desktop branded searches vs. mobile

Mobile:

mobile branded queries

Lowe’s

Lowe’s is getting one of the better deals of the ten sites I looked at with the move from desktop to mobile. While their desktop result is very good (lots of organic real estate, nice company info, and a list of stories about the company), the mobile result also only features a map and the local Lowe’s locations nearest to me.

Desktop:

branded searches on mobile versus desktop

Mobile:

how much are brand searches on mobile worth

Hewlett Packard

HP’s desktop result is fairly ad-heavy and features two reseller/competitors, but I can at least see the organic listing and some general company info here. In their mobile result I’m getting virtually all ad, with the tip of some news results: here again it seems likely that many mobile searches will navigate to the site through paid search clicks.

Desktop:

hp brand search on desktop

Mobile:

hp brand query serp on mobile device

Autotrader

Autotrader’s desktop search allows me to quickly see the organic site (along with multiple site links) and information about the company in addition to the prominently displayed ad. The immediately visible portion of the mobile SERP? All ad.

Desktop:

comparing branded searches across devices

Mobile:

mobile branded search serp

AT&T 

AT&T’s desktop search once again has a large ad from the brand, but allows me to quickly see the organic listing, a site search box, and sitelinks as well as general company info in the right nav.

Mobile? Just an ad.

Desktop:

brand serp above the fold

Mobile:

cost of branded traffic on mobile

Uline

Uline continues this trend with a prominent organic listing below the paid listing, organic site links, a site search bar, and company info.

Juxtaposed against the visible part of the mobile SERP: only their ad.

Desktop:

desktop searchs for brand terms

Mobile:

mobile search for brand queries

1-800-Flowers

1 800 Flowers is another victim of the move to mobile on my devices: they go from an ad-heavy desktop SERP (complete with shopping results and a couple of competitor ads) that at least has a sliver of above-the-fold organic hope, to an above-the-fold experience where nothing but a competitor ad is featured.

Desktop:

desktop vs mobile brand terms

Mobile:

mobile serp for branded searches

Now 10 sets of screenshots is obviously not a comprehensive look at all branded searches on desktop versus mobile, but given how much money these brand searches represent, it’s striking that:

Only one of these brands saw their above-the-fold branded result get less ad dense (Amazon)
Only one even saw the result stay effectively neutral (Lowe’s)
The other eight effectively moved from having their organic listing visible on desktop to having their entire above-the-fold experience be an ad on mobile, and two of these brands actually have competitors taking up almost the entire above-the-fold area on mobile searches!

That’s the same number of brands that effectively lost their branded search to competitors as those that saw a neutral to positive change in ad-real estate when looking at desktop versus mobile.

What Does All of This Mean for the Brands Themselves?

So it seems pretty clear that:

Branded searches are increasingly moving from desktop to mobile
These branded searches are a big business for Google and very valuable for brands themselves (and their competitors)
Some of the largest brands in the world have much more ad-heavy mobile results for branded searches than they enjoy on desktop

Beyond the idea that these brands are suffering from less advantageous search results as branded traffic moves from desktop to mobile, it also occurred to me that even if they can protect their branded queries and get mobile searchers to their sites, this could be a major issue for these brands beyond simply having to pay more for the same branded traffic.

Why? Well for many sites, the mobile versions of their websites aren’t as well built and well maintained as the desktop version, and in many instances mobile traffic doesn’t monetize as well as desktop traffic, even for high-intent terms like branded searches.

We obviously can’t peak behind the scenes at how effectively each of these companies are monetizing different types of traffic, but I thought it would be interesting to look at how Google’s own tools view the performance of these different brands on mobile and desktop. So I ran each of the sites through one of my favorite SEO tools, URL Profiler, and got the Google Page Speed Insights mobile and desktop page speed scores for each site.

mobile vs desktop page speed

Mobile vs. desktop page speed scores for top brands

These scores clearly aren’t definitive proof that these sites are or aren’t monetizing mobile traffic less efficiently than desktop traffic (and Google Speed Scores generally are an imperfect measurement), but Google has certainly dialed up the impact of page speed and usability.

All of that said: 40 of the 48 sites listed here (the other two had been acquired or moved to other URLs) have page speed scores that are lower on mobile than on desktop, and in some cases significantly so.

So what’s the takeaway from all of this?

Unfortunately I don’t think there’s much that most companies can do about Google’s more aggressive ad placement in mobile SERPs, but one area that companies in this predicament can focus is to seriously consider investing more in the performance and user experience of your site for mobile users.

Take a look at your analytics and see how traffic by device is trending over the last 12-24 months, look at your profit/revenue per user by device, look for low-hanging fruit for improving page speed, and then think about how much time, energy, and money you dedicate to development for desktop versus mobile. Based on this data it seems like there’s a strong chance you may want to reallocate some of those efforts.

About the author

Tom Demers is Co-Founder & Managing Partner at Measured SEM and Cornerstone Content.

SearchCap: Google AdWords addiction ads, Bing on links & Google Home mini

Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing
SearchCap: Google AdWords addiction ads, Bing on links & Google Home mini
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

The post SearchCap: Google AdWords addiction ads, Bing on links & Google Home mini appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

5 Easy Ways to Write an Irresistible Introduction

Internet Marketing Blog by WordStream

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5 Easy Ways to Write an Irresistible Introduction

“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.” 

So begins J.D. Salinger’s iconic novel, Catcher in the Rye, arguably one of the finest opening sentences of any American novel ever written.

How to write great introductions

I’m not here to talk Salinger or the writing life or the greats of 20th century American literature. This is a marketing blog, not a book club.

I am, however, going to talk about introductions, and how to write them well.

We hear a great deal of talk about the importance of headlines, but much less is said about the value of a great introduction. Sure, you need a tempting headline to catch your reader’s eye, but without a strong, compelling introduction, the best headline ever written won’t save you.

In this post, we’ll take a look at five of the many different ways you can open a blog post, article, interview, white paper – pretty much anything with words. This is by no means a comprehensive or definitive list; there are almost as many ways to introduce your writing as there are ways to write. There are, however, some general techniques that lend themselves well to marketing copy that can be extraordinarily effective.

Introduction #1: The Quote

I chose to open this post with a quote not because I’m a fan of Catcher in the Rye. Truth be told, I’m not the biggest Catcher fan (despite my personal appreciation for Salinger’s immense literary talent and commitment to being a hardcore recluse).

 How to write introductions JD Salinger quote

True dat. Image via XXY Magazine.

The real reason I chose to open with that quote is because introductory quotes are a lazy but highly effective way of grabbing your reader’s attention without doing any real work – especially when the quote in question has a negative or otherwise memorable tone, as Salinger’s (or rather, his protagonist Holden Caulfield’s) does.

Before you’ve even read the quote in its entirety, you’re already wondering what was so lousy about the quoted individual’s life, or what “all that David Copperfield crap” really means and why the person being quoted doesn’t really feel like going into it.

Why Is This Type of Introduction So Effective?

Before we get into why this technique is so effective, it’s worth mentioning that opening with a quote only works well if the quote itself is interesting. There’s no point using a quote as your introduction if it’s something boring or predictable.

How to write introductions avoid using obvious quotes

No kidding

Aside from the quote itself, which should ideally be as attention-grabbing as possible, the fact that quotation marks are used indicates – obviously – that a specific individual said those words. It may not sound like it, but this can be very enticing to the reader, encouraging them to read on to see who said it. This is especially true if the quote is controversial or contrarian.

Let’s say you’re writing a piece about the potential impact of artificial intelligence on human society. Sure, you could open with a bland, generic introduction about how AI and technology have revolutionized the world as we know it, but you could also let someone else do the talking for you.

“With artificial intelligence we are summoning the demon. In all those stories where there’s the guy with the pentagram and the holy water, it’s like – yeah, he’s sure he can control the demon. Doesn’t work out.”

How to write introductions Elon Musk MIT AeroAstro 2014 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk in conversation at MIT’s AeroAstro Centennial Symposium in 2014.
Image via MIT.

The quote above is one of many such memorable insights offered by technologist Elon Musk about the potentially existential threat posed by AI. Yes, it’s a little sensationalist – Musk certainly knows how to leverage provocative language to great effect – but it’s also a lot more interesting than most of the introductions I’ve read in articles on the topic. (Note that this particular quote was not used as an introduction in any piece I’ve found or read on the topic, and is used solely for illustrative purposes.)

It’s worth noting that this technique can be a little tricky or unorthodox within the context of established journalistic conventions. As anyone who’s ever worked with me as an editor could tell you, I’m a stickler for the correct attribution of quotes, which demands that, in most cases, the person being quoted should be identified after the first complete sentence. If we follow this convention (which we should, unless we have a very good reason not to), our example quote from Musk (with additions italicized) would read:

“With artificial intelligence we are summoning the demon,” Elon Musk said during an interview at MIT’s AeroAstro Centennial Symposium in 2014. “In all those stories where there’s the guy with the pentagram and the holy water, it’s like – yeah, he’s sure he can control the demon. Doesn’t work out.”

How to write introductions let's summon demons childrens book cover threadless

Don’t mess around with artificial intelligence or arcane demonic rituals.
Image via Threadless.

Unfortunately, if we (correctly) identify Elon Musk as the quoted individual after the first complete sentence, this introductory technique loses most, if not all, of its impact.

Notice how Salinger’s opening quote from Catcher in the Rye is a single sentence? This allowed me to include it without worrying about correctly attributing the quote as I would have if I’d used Musk’s quote as my intro. If in doubt, talk to your editor – they’ll thank you for it later.

Introduction #2: The Statistic or Fun Fact

Did you know that the first American movie to show a toilet being flushed on-screen was Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 psychological horror classic, Psycho?

How to write introductions Psycho shower scene

TFW the water’s too hot

Everybody loves trivia, and even if you’re a hardcore Hitchcock fan, you might not have known the fun fact above.

This technique is another powerfully effective way to grab your reader’s attention from the outset. It’s also one of the most commonly used introductions in a lot of marketing writing. This makes sense; it establishes the general topic of the piece in a fun way and offers the reader something snappy and memorable.

However, the real reason using facts or statistics as an introduction works is because it pushes our emotional buttons.

Why Is This Type of Introduction So Effective?

When it comes to content, whether a 500-word blog post or a 4,000-word long-form journalistic feature, some emotional triggers are more effective than others. In particular, there’s a scientific principle known as the von Restorff effect (named for the German pediatrician Hedwig von Restorff who first wrote of the phenomena in the early 1930s) which states that people tend to remember unusual things much more effectively than routine, expected things.

How to write introductions fight or flight response caveman illustration

How it feels reading bad articles

This is an extension of our natural survival instincts; our brains are wired to perceive strange or unusual things as potential threats, making them much more memorable as whatever strange thing we’re fixated on might kill us. It’s also why, if you don’t take much else away from this post, I can practically guarantee that you’ll remember the Psycho toilet-flushing fact, which you can and should use to impress your friends at your next get-together at the pub.

Here at WordStream, we use this technique a great deal, and not only in introductions. To this day, I still remember that you’re 475 times more likely to survive a plane crash than you are to click on a banner ad – a fact I first included in a post for the WordStream blog back in 2014. Admittedly, I had to look up the publication date of that post, but I didn’t need to double-check the statistic itself because it’s just that memorable.

How to write introductions more likely to survive a plane crash than click a banner ad 

Something to consider next time you despair about
your display conversion rates. Image via NBC Los Angeles.

Take care, however, to select your facts and statistics carefully. In the banner ad example above, this stat isn’t just memorable because of the staggering odds against you clicking on a banner ad, but because it’s framed within the context of surviving a plane crash – a particularly striking hypothetical scenario, and one that aligns closely with the survival instincts I mentioned earlier. Merely tossing in a statistic about how many daily active users Facebook has, for example, will not have the same effect. Just as you should think carefully about the quotes you use in your introductions, choose your statistics with similar care.

Introduction #3: The Classical Narrative

In May of 1940, as war raged across Europe, a squad of infantrymen belonging to the famous Manchester Regiment encroached upon the village of l’Epinette in northern France.

Both German and Allied forces sought to capture the strategically located village, and the Manchester Regiment came under heavy fire from the Nazi soldiers. The squadron eventually managed to pin down the Nazis with suppressing fire, and as the German soldiers took cover behind the low wall of a farmhouse, one of the Germans cried out. His commanding officer glanced over at the dying soldier, believing him to be shot, only to see a long, feathered arrow protruding from the man’s chest.

How to write introductions Captain "Mad Jack" Churchill

The man, the legend, Captain “Mad Jack” Churchill.
Image via Dirk de Klein/History of Sorts.

The Nazi soldier had been killed by the improbably yet fantastically named John Malcolm Thorpe Fleming Churchill, also known as “Mad Captain Jack” Churchill, the only soldier known to have carried a longbow – and an authentic claymore sword – into battle during World War II. Churchill held a deep appreciation of his Scottish heritage, and when asked why he carried such a large, antiquated weapon into battle, Churchill respectfully replied that, in his opinion, “any officer who goes into action without his sword is improperly dressed.”

As much as I’d love to tell you more about Mad Jack Churchill – and unbelievably, there’s plenty more to tell – I used this tale as an example of how employing a classical narrative in your introductions can be extraordinarily powerful. Granted, this particular example as I’ve presented it isn’t technically a true narrative; it has a beginning (the approach of the Manchester Regiment upon l’Epinette) and rising action (Churchill killing a Nazi soldier with a bow and arrow), but it lacks a real ending. Still, hopefully you see what I’m getting at with this example.

Why Is This Type of Introduction So Effective?

Simply put, traditional stories work so well as introductions because, as human beings, we’re hardwired to respond to stories. Far from mere entertainment, stories served humanity for millennia as cautionary tales and a means of survival, and even today, with all our technology and knowledge, a good story told well is still one of the most gripping forms of entertainment we know.

How to write introductions oral storytelling illustration 

Original artwork by Elena Stebakova

Just as a good novel draws you in from the outset and keeps you reading, using a traditional narrative as an introduction offers all of the same benefits to your piece. This technique allows you to introduce one or more characters – in our example, Mad Jack Churchill – before moving on to the dramatic rise that every good story has. This grabs the reader’s attention immediately, and if done well, can serve as an almost irresistible hook for the rest of the piece.

Introduction #4: The Question

If you had to, would you rather fight a single, horse-sized duck, or 100 duck-sized horses?

How to write introductions would you rather fight horse sized duck or 100 duck sized horses

Image via Flipline Studios 

Asking questions can be a powerfully effective technique in introductions. It poses a hypothetical scenario to the reader and invites them to imagine their response and relate their own lived experience to the material that follows. From the outset of your piece, you’re engaging the reader by asking them to apply their own judgment or opinion to the topic at hand – in our example, preferential combat with an improbably large duck or a small army of improbably tiny horses.

Why Is This Type of Introduction So Effective?

Posing questions to your readers in your introduction is an effective technique precisely because you’re inviting your reader to think about a highly specific scenario. This technique is similar to the use of statistics or facts in introductions; by asking questions of your audience, you’re providing them with a potentially memorable situation and inviting them to consider their perspective on the issue. For example, I’d personally rather fight 100 duck-sized horses than a single, menacing horse-sized duck.

How to write introductions clickbait question examples

I don’t know, maybe? Image via TED/Ganesh Pai.

However, this technique is not without its pitfalls. Firstly, this method has been thoroughly exploited by thousands of clickbait publishers as a lazy way to entice people to click through from a question-based headline to an inevitably disappointing article. Whether the question is posed in the headline or the introduction, many people are understandably fatigued by and wary of questions in content.

Secondly, there’s the problem of structure. In my waterfowl combat example above, there’s no “correct” answer. This means the question is virtually impossible to conclusively answer, which can lead to disappointment in your reader, especially if you pose a question that they expect the rest of the piece to answer. This blog post about conversion rates is a great example. Larry asks a question of the reader in the headline, and the rest of the article answers and supports that question with data and logical, scientific reasoning. Now imagine if he had asked the question yet failed to answer. How would this make you feel as a reader?

Introduction #5: Setting the Scene

By 2017, the world economy has collapsed. Food, natural resources, and oil are in short supply. A police state, divided into paramilitary zones, rules with an iron hand.

Although this introduction could aptly describe our current geopolitical nightmare, it’s actually the introductory text from Paul Michael Glaser’s 1987 cinematic adaptation of Stephen King’s disturbingly prescient short story, The Running Man (which King wrote under his Richard Bachman pseudonym, before you hardcore King fans yell at me).

This technique is known as setting the scene, and it can be a highly effective way of drawing your reader into your piece. (If you’re interested, David Hogan’s 1996 action movie Barb Wire also came surprisingly close with its speculative take on what a dystopian 2017 might look like.)

Why Is This Type of Introduction So Effective?

This introductory technique is similar to the narrative example, in that the writer sets the stage for not only what is happening at the outset of the piece, but for what the reader can expect to follow. This method can be incredibly powerful when dealing with emerging topics or subjects with strong newsworthy elements.

Editorially, this technique offers many benefits to the writer. It allows you to choose and establish a clearly defined position on an issue, and enables you to quickly assume a contrarian stance on contentious topics. It also allows you to manipulate the emotions of your readers by summarizing and highlighting the positive or negative aspects of a story how you see fit, or to support the points you want to make.

Stylistically, this introduction can be structured similarly to narrative introductions – by telling a self-contained story at the outset of the piece before transitioning into the rest of the content – or by helping the reader get up to speed quickly on a developing topic they may not be aware of, as many in-depth news reports from Houston in the wake of Hurricane Harvey did. Many reports framed the catastrophic damage caused by Harvey within the wider political contexts of disaster relief funding, contentious proposed cuts to scientific research, and the volatile political climate that surrounds emergency management in crisis-prone regions such as the southern and southeastern United States.

A well-written introduction setting the scene can help your readers quickly understand why what you’re about to say is important, as well as giving them a solid grounding in the often highly nuanced background information essential to understanding complex, multifaceted issues.

Introduce Yourself

Hopefully you’re spending plenty of time coming up with catchy headlines for your content. I hope that you now have a greater appreciation for the value and importance of a solid introduction, too.

Next time you sit down to write, spare a thought for the daring bravery of Mad Jack Churchill charging into battle with his longbow and claymore like a Viking warrior – then ask whether your intro would make Mad Jack proud.

5 Ways to Write an Introduction [Summary]
Start with a quotation
Open with a relevant stat or fun fact
Start with a fascinating story
Ask your readers an intriguing question
Set the scene

Why Should You Care About Your Mobile Site’s Load Time? How to Optimize It?

SEMrush blog
Why Should You Care About Your Mobile Site’s Load Time? How to Optimize It?

Why Should You Care About Your Mobile Site’s Load Time? How to Optimize It?

47% users want sites to load within 3 seconds or less. Nearly 40% visitors bounce off a site if it doesn’t load within 3 seconds. Clearly, your mobile website’s loading time can easily spell the difference between success and failure for your ecommerce business. Optimizing your mobile site for speed can actually help you rank well on Google, drive in torrents of traffic, generate sales-ready leads and optimize your conversions easily.

How to Drive More Ecommerce Sales with Your Product Pages

Internet Marketing Blog by WordStream

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How to Drive More Ecommerce Sales with Your Product Pages
Landing page basics

ecommerce landing pages

Most ecommerce websites have many pages: the homepage, an “About” page, individual product pages, product category pages, etc.

Although the homepage is often thought of as the first page your visitor sees, in practice, this isn’t usually what happens. The prevalence of search engines means that any page could potentially be a visitor’s first experience with your site.

Whenever a visitor reaches your ecommerce website, they expect to find content that will keep them interested. Getting them to buy a product from you requires that your website create sufficient motivation and credibility for them to feel safe enough to buy—and helping visitors feel safe means much more than simply convincing them that it’s not risky to leave their personal data with you.

This means that all of the information a prospect needs to make a split-second “Do I trust this?” decision should be visible on the very first page they visit, whatever page that may be.

The idea that a prospect could reach any page on a website directly gave rise to the notion of a landing page, which is simply the page a prospect sees (or “lands on”) first.

Prospects can reach landing pages in multiple ways—via organic search, social media posts, paid campaigns, emails, you name it. Although all pages on a website are landing pages by strict definition, the most important are landing pages designed to receive traffic from paid search or PPC campaigns.

Why are PPC landing pages so important? Well, because you’re paying for ad spend! So that traffic isn’t free. As with most investments, store owners expect a positive return on their paid ad campaigns, both in revenue and number of customers.

With this in mind, let’s talk about ecommerce landing pages in the context of conversion rate optimization (CRO) for PPC or paid search campaigns. In fact, the ruling maxim, postulated by a number of leaders in the field, is that every PPC campaign should have its own dedicated landing page.

What’s the difference between a SaaS landing page & an ecommerce landing page?

Many of the articles about landing pages you’ll find explain software-as-a-service (SaaS) landing pages.

These landing pages are tailor-made to promote a single product or offer. This singular focus simplifies things in terms of what content the page needs to include to convert customers. Plus, a single-product landing page (even with customizable options) can be much easier to promote using PPC.

landing page optimization for ecommerce

This Wistia landing page focuses on one thing: “selling” a free trial of the product

An ecommerce website, on the other hand, likely has multiple products (or even hundreds or thousands)… which means that to sell products in this way, it would need to create an equal number of dedicated single-product landing pages and corresponding marketing campaigns to bring prospects to every product.

This is the reason most ecommerce sites elect to use their existing product pages as landing pages.

From a search perspective, product pages make the most readily usable landing pages.

Most prospects, when they search for something to buy online, will use a product name as their starting search point. In fact, according to one study, 60% of potential buyers will start by searching for a product on a search engine.

ecommerce conversion rate stats

So if your product page is set up correctly, its content—especially the page headline or product description—is likely to appear in relevant search engine results.

Good things to know before you start paying for traffic

Directing prospects directly to a page for a product they might want means you’re setting up motivated prospects with relevant content. It’s a recipe for high conversion.

The only remaining concern is to ensure that your offer is clear, credible, and as friction-free as possible. Friction is one of the main impediments to customer conversion. Friction manifests in your prospects’ reluctance to complete steps in the conversion process. It can be the result of various issues from purely technical problems to ease of use or inadequate content on the page.

Your goal is to make it simple and painless to buy from you instead of a competitor—remember, 61% of buyers will research products online by reading or watching reviews. And about the same proportion will check three different sites for the same product before they buy.

This is where your site can stand out by showing that the purchase process is simple, clear, and safe. A huge proportion of potential customers (69%) will drop out if they find the buying process too complicated. And over half will leave if they have doubts about their payment security.

ecommerce site trust signals

Shipping cost and speed also have an effect on ecommerce sales. The study above showed that 6 out of 10 online shoppers will abandon their cart if there is no free shipping, and 51% will leave if shipping isn’t fast enough.

Have you addressed all of these concerns? Great. Now let’s look at the basic elements of an ecommerce product page that functions effectively as a landing page.

6 elements of an effective ecommerce product page
1. A headline that matches the user’s query and differentiates the product

The headline is a critical element of your product page, as it’s one of the most visible. On product pages, the headline is often the name of the product itself. Match the product page headline copy as closely as possible to the way prospects will search for your product.

KISSmetrics notes,

“Without a good headline, no one reads your copy. And if no one reads your copy, no one clicks your call to action.

That’s why the headline is the most important element on the page. David Ogilvy, the great mad man, found that of everyone who reads a headline, only 20% read the copy.”

When you’re launching a campaign, especially a PPC campaign, tie your ad headline to a product page headline.

ecommerce ppc

In addition, to make sure your product differentiates itself from others online, your headline should immediately transmit the product’s unique value proposition to visitors.

2. Compelling, informative product description copy

Your product landing page copy should, at a minimum:

Describe the product: its construction, materials, overall look and size
Point out the ways it can be used
Explain its advantages and benefits: AKA the ways it solves the customer’s problem and makes their life easier

As Chad Kearns put it in a blog post on the Portent blog:

“After grabbing your next customer’s attention with the headline, use a unique value proposition to help your offer stand out from the competition. What makes you better than the other advertisers you’re displayed with? Why should I buy your product or use your service over the competition?”

Along with helping sell your product, a well-written product description can be used as a base for your PPC campaigns. Using parts of your product copy in your ads can make it easier for customers to find the product, and encourage them to click on the ad.

3. High-resolution, professional product imagery

Of course, to have a credible product page, you’ll need product images. These images must accurately represent your product; they need to be high-quality photos, ideally taken by a professional.

Product images should dispel distrust and create desire to own the product. To do this, you’ll need to convince the customer that the product is real, allow them to examine it in detail, and make it clear that your site will be ready to deliver upon payment.

ecommerce product images

It also helps customers to imagine products in context, so try to feature the product in situations resembling its actual use (for example, show people wearing the clothes, or shoot photos of your laundry stain-removing product next to a washer and dryer).

Bonus points for using video on your landing pages instead of, or alongside, still imagery. According to BigCommerce:

“Humans process imagery much faster than we do text, so naturally we’re drawn to visuals. But there’s more to having an aesthetically pleasing website than a nice color scheme and a great typeface. Believe it or not, product images have the power to make or break a sale.”

4. Clear, convincing shipping and inventory information

As we’ve seen, shipping policies have a major impact on a prospect’s decision to buy. Fast delivery and free shipping go a long way toward convincing customers to buy.

So if your store offers these benefits, your product pages should make them clear immediately—especially if you’re sending traffic to the page from a PPC campaign.

If you can’t offer free shipping on every item, try offering it for certain order minimums or on multiple-item purchases.

You can also point out products’ limited availability by showing the number available in stock (if inventory is actually low). This creates a sense of scarcity in the prospect, which can help push them toward buying before their chance is gone.

5. Trustworthy payment policies and security indicators

A majority of prospects are turned off if they perceive that an ecommerce store’s payment options or the site itself are not secure enough. In order to overcome this obstacle, offer as many different payment methods as possible.

how to increase ecommerce product sales

Try to offer at least one third-party payment system, such as PayPal, where the customer doesn’t have to reveal their data to your store. According to Comscore, PayPal sees a much better conversion rate than other billing methods.

Offering guest checkouts also makes customers more likely to trust the payment process.

As always, the message that customers can purchase using a guest account and third-party payment should be noticeable on the product page.

6. Reviews and social proof

While all of the above elements are important, this last one is absolutely critical.

Remember the study above, which saw that 61% of prospects search for reviews online? You can and should shorten the prospect’s journey by offering these reviews on the product page itself. Include reviews from real customers, both good and bad, or link to trusted reviewers elsewhere.

social proof for ecommerce landing pages

Including reviews, social proof and other trust symbols is the best way to convey the usefulness of your product to prospects. If their peer group provides them with proof of how useful a product is, they will be much more likely to buy.

How to match a PPC campaign to an individual product page

When you’re starting a PPC campaign tied to a product page, follow these basic principles.

Match your message

When you create an ad campaign that sends users to a product page, be sure that your ad content (both copy and design) is consistent with the product page, and vice versa. This principle is called relevance or message match, and it reassures customers that they’ve found what they’re looking for. It can also raise your Quality Score.

Let’s look at an example. I searched for “Canon EOS Rebel T6i” and was served PPC ads by QVC and Best Buy.

QVC sells Canon digital cameras, and they’re featured in the ad headline here. Yet in their PPC ad body copy, they show a generic message and link to all sorts of other products—instead of matching that body copy to the particular product.

adwords for ecommerce product pages

This is an example of poor relevance/bad message-match in a PPC ad

Best Buy, on the other hand, runs a competing ad that looks like this:

best product pages to increase ecommerce sales

This ad shows important information on the camera

While both ads succeed in matching the particular product name in the headline, Best Buy’s ad is better, since it also shows the product name in the ad body copy, and includes links that lead visitors directly to those specific product pages.

Exhaustive keyword coverage

You should attempt to cover as many relevant search keywords as possible with your PPC campaign. More keywords create more opportunities for people to find your products. Do extensive keyword research on what words and phrases qualified prospects would use to search for your product, and use those keywords for your PPC.

keyword research for ecommerce ppc

You can expand your PPC keyword coverage by adding variations on existing keywords, and removing those that are less popular or downright irrelevant. The keywords should be present within the product description copy, both for Quality Score reasons and to reinforce the message from the PPC ad.

For more tips on keyword research for PPC, check out:

The Big, Easy Guide to Keyword Research for Businesses
5 Tips for Dominating Your E-Commerce Keyword Research
Finding The High Converting PPC Keywords That Are Right Under Your Nose
How to turn product category pages into successful landing pages

Product pages make for rather obvious landing pages for ecommerce. But they have a terrible flaw. They put individual products in silos, making it hard for visitors to browse other products that might work better for their needs. According to Demac Media, “The problem with product specific pages is it segments one product from a whole line of products.”

However, there is another type of potential landing page that you shouldn’t ignore: your product category pages.

using product pages as ecommerce landing pages

Product category pages are an indispensable element of any ecommerce store that offers many different products.

These pages allow potential customers to quickly access and compare different products. They’re also much more likely to appear in search engine results when a prospect types in a more general product search term.

Category pages as landing pages have an additional benefit. Because they contain multiple products within that prospect’s original search query, a higher percentage of prospects may find the right product for them, and convert.

In addition, a category page can show shipping options, discounts, and similar trust indicators. In the absence of the kind of direct social proof (like reviews) that you’ll display on individual product pages, you can use indicators inside product thumbnails or a similar display of social proof on a category page.

For example, you might show use starred or numerical ratings near each product, such as here:

increasing ecommerce product sales

How to match your PPC campaign to your product category page

The basic principles of PPC ad content that apply to individual product pages also apply to category pages.

However, instead of matching specific keywords (and thus linking to a specific product), your PPC campaign for a product category page should match keywords for a broad, yet still relevant line of products. For example, you could link to a category page from a PPC ad when the user searches for “DSLR cameras” instead of a specific brand name or model of camera.

And don’t forget to mention any applicable discounts or offers on the category page, especially if they apply to the entire category.

Treat every page like a landing page

Using PPC campaigns to get visitors to your ecommerce store makes sense if you bring visitors to a page where they can take action. In most cases, it’s not your homepage.

Including just one call to action on your individual product page leaves your prospects little choice but to buy (or not).

Now, chances are that you might lose a number of customers who research on their mobile devices, but who plan to purchase at home using their desktop devices. To avoid this potential loss, consider adding an “Add to Wish List” call to action button on your product pages instead of one single “Buy” or “Add to Cart” button. To avoid having users to register, you can allow them to sign in using a popular social media login like Facebook or Twitter. Also, invite users to subscribe to your email list.

If you’ve read articles focusing on SaaS landing page creation, you’ve probably heard “limit navigation options” or links on your landing page. This is not a viable option for ecommerce stores. Although restricting navigation can help remove potential distractions, your visitors may want to see other products and parts of your website. Sometimes, the product or category page just isn’t enough!

A simple rule of thumb for ecommerce store owners: Treat every product page and category page as a landing page using the guidance above, and you’ll avoid some very costly mistakes.

About the Author

Edin Šabanović is a senior CRO consultant working for Objeqt. He helps e-commerce stores improve their conversion rates through analytics, scientific research, and A/B testing. Edin is passionate about analytics and conversion rate optimization, but for fun, he likes reading history books.

SearchCap: Bing fact checking, Google mobile tips & Bing agency awards

Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing
SearchCap: Bing fact checking, Google mobile tips & Bing agency awards
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

The post SearchCap: Bing fact checking, Google mobile tips & Bing agency awards appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

Leading up to the mobile-first index, Google has some advice

Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing
Leading up to the mobile-first index, Google has some advice
Want to take your mobile site from an m-dot to responsive? Here is how Google recommends you do it.

The post Leading up to the mobile-first index, Google has some advice appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

SearchCap: SEO content audits, a search marketer’s view of Facebook & a link study

Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing
SearchCap: SEO content audits, a search marketer’s view of Facebook & a link study
Below is what happened in search today, as reported on Search Engine Land and from other places across the web.

The post SearchCap: SEO content audits, a search marketer’s view of Facebook & a link study appeared first on Search Engine Land.

Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.

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