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Category: Google Adwords Call Tracking

AdInsight on Google PPCall – “bid for calls”

The announcement of “bid for calls”, a pay per call (PPCall) offering from Google, demonstrates that the search giant is now becoming wise to just how important phone calls are to businesses in the UK and worldwide. In association with Call Metrics, it is apparent that Google is trying hard to increase their presence in the online to offline conversion space.

With Google’s bid for calls, advertisers will bid for phone calls in addition to bidding for clicks. This will only affect Google searches on computers and tablets, as mobile devices handle phone numbers differently in a “click to call” method. Bidding for phone calls could lead to a new ranking factor for Google AdWords; “call-through rate” could be born out of this depending on the amount of bids and how many calls are received.

Despite this, Google’s Surojit Chatterjee has expressed that those advertisers who don’t participate in bid for calls won’t be disadvantaged when it comes to their PPC rankings. This is good news for companies seeking a more holistic overview of calls originating from online advertising, not just PPC.

AdInsight Clarity does just that. You can quickly identify your best performing online campaigns and the areas of spend that are less productive. In our Call Volume report, you might find that more of your calls come from Google Organic search instead of Google PPC; if you don’t track all of your online advertising, it would be hard to make this discovery.

Our Call Log is able to provide you with individual call records of every call, including campaign and traffic source information, what search they used and whether the call resulted in a lead or a sale. Our keyword report allows you to find out which keywords generate phone calls to your business; we report on every keyword including long tail and misspellings.

There is a lot of value in having a full call tracking solution such as AdInsight. With our own call tracking software, you can:

  • Understand how your visitors interact with your website before, during and after picking up the phone
  • Accurately determine which of your online visitors subsequently call you
  • How your visitors found you in the first place and via which keywords.

Further information about AdInsight can be found at http://www.adinsight.com/.

Google Adwords Listings vs. Paid Google Maps Listings

Introduction:

Everybody who knows what they are doing in the internet game knows that they have to test everything possible to optimise the performance of online marketing efforts. You try everything from split testing webpage copy to PPC ad copy to testing different keywords, etc. Basically you test everything you possibly can to get the best possible results.

With this testing mindset engrained in my brain I thought it would be a great idea to test the difference between a normal Google Adwords listing vs. a Google Adwords map listing and the results were unexpected.

The company I was testing this on is a local business offering a fairly expensive B2C non consumable household product, so every lead is worth a few thousand pounds up. This company deals with 90% of its initial leads over the phone and a call tracking solution was essential in tracking the number of calls generated from each campaign.

call tracking

Visit our website for info on call tracking.

Initial Thoughts:

Before I started the test I though the map listing would bring in a few leads, far fewer than the rest of the PPC listings, which would be of a similar quality to the other PPC listings. However, I couldn’t have been more wrong.

The Facts and Results:

There were 7 ad groups running in the clients Google Adwords account generating 1097 clicks in total, of which 35 came from the Google Maps listing. Only one of the ad groups had a Google Maps listing enabled, so this low traffic could be expected. So in terms of clicks the Google Maps listing generated far fewer visitors, but this is where the call tracking data comes in.

Although the Google Maps listing only accounted for 3.19% of all the visitors from PPC, it generated 29.4% of all the phone calls through the website. The visitor to phone call conversion rate for the Google Maps listing was an astonishing 28.57% compared to the normal PPC listings, which was only 2.26%. It is amazing to see such a huge difference between the two, but the differences don’t stop there!

The average cost per click for the normal PPC listings was £0.79, but the average cost per click for the Google Maps listing was much less at £0.53 per click. That means that the Google Maps listing costs a whopping 32.9% less per click compared to a normal PPC listing and it has a visitor to phone call conversion rate which is 12.64 times higher than the normal PPC listings.

And if that wasn’t enough, it gets even better! AdInsight showed that on average the quality of each of the phone calls from the Google Maps listing was much higher than that of the normal PPC listing. In AdInsight the quality of the phone call can be loosely correlated to the length of the call. For this particular business there is a very strong correlation, but this is not the case for all businesses. So in this case a longer call correlates to a more interested caller and to a call where there is an exchange of details (the goal), whereas a shorter call usually correlates to an uninterested user, for whatever reason. For this client the average talk time for calls generated from the Google Maps listing was 156 seconds (just under 3 minutes), but the average talk time for calls generated from a normal PPC listing was a mere 68 seconds (just over a minute).

Conclusion:

Although Google Maps PPC listings generate far fewer impressions and click throughs, they yield a much higher conversion rate and deliver a much higher quality visitor compared to normal PPC listings. This same test would need to be conducted for several different businesses before it could be considered conclusive, but this case presents extremely compelling data. I feel that the fact that this business is local had a huge effect on the results and that a more national business would not be able to reproduce these results or even come close to them.