High CTR, Low cpc using Google Trends
PPC and Media
In the world of PPC and Media Buying, it all comes down to paying the cheapest for your clicks and earning the most out your clicks. Cpc vs Epc. How do you optimize campaigns to get a high CTR which in return will lower my cpc. I'm going to share today the free tool I've been effectively using for months now to get some High CTRs and low cpcs. Ready ... Google Trends...
Google Trends allows you to see whats trending in all demographics in any interval of time. You can see whats been trending in Germany for the Past 7 days on their Web Search, Whats been trending in Brazil in the past 90 days on their News Search, and even find out whats trending on their Image Search. I use Web Search the most it has proved to be most effective. I do broad searches of whats hot and try to work based of that, but if you have a "search term" you can go based off the search term and see how hot or how not it is. For those of you who haven't been using this site don't know what you're missing. I'm going to break down how I achieved 300% roi campign on UK Diet using Google Trends.
Now around late September, early Octoberof 2012 there was a Kate M. Scandal going on where supposedly she had nude photo circling around the web. What does this mean for us internet marketers? Its time to capitalize. Every one will be searching Kate Middleton, and people will be more prone to click on ad with Kate Middleton's picture. So how do we capitalize? Create an Ad for the offer you're promoting and somehow incorporate the trend around your ad to increase CTR.
*WARNING* BlackHat Material below...
These are some of the Kate M ads that were ran during the trend unfortunately I don't have screenshots of how well they did, but CTRs on Eff Bee Ads were as high as .5% which resulted in me getting .15 cent clicks.
Scrape you up a well converting Landing page which I'll add a guide on later and PROFIT...
Epcs on the offer were really well and with a cpc as low as .15 you can't lose.
Last edited by a moderator: