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Re: Your Google AdWords account has been disabled
Hey Better Networker -
If you use PPC marketing, specifically Google Adwords... you've just struck GOLD!
My friend Jim Yaghi, fellow BN instructor and a highly respected PPC expert (if not THE expert for the home business industry) e-mailed a document with me in private the other day regarding trends in PPC in 2010.
After reading it, I was SHOCKED at level of revealing detail he got into...
It is particularly useful (read: LIFE SAVER) if you're getting frustrated by Google's unpredictable, frantic slapping behavior and continuous new changes... and are not sure what to do, where to turn or who to trust.
I felt the report can help a lot of people so I asked for his permission to send it to you.
Anyhow, you can go LISTEN to the original report on my blog ... or just read it below
(oh, be sure to click on the big red "Listen" button at the top of the post)
Jerry
P.S. I am not into PPC myself... so just post whatever comment or question in the comment box after reading, and I'll get Jim to do a private call if we get enough questions to actually do a call.
*****************************************************************************
Here is the report Jim sent me in its entirety...
<<<Trends in Pay-Per-Click Marketing For 2010 >>>
It was October of 2006.
I was a little internet marketing newbie with my crappy bizop. And I thought I was a master seller held back by having no leads.
Adwords came to the rescue. With their simple interface and genius system…I quickly saw that a tiny investment could bring me prospects within minutes. I was amazed. I could sit at my computer right on the pulse of my ads. I could change a word here and there and see the impact without waiting.
I spent hours refreshing every few minutes to see the clicks and leads stack up.
Everything came together when I found a funded proposal I could send my traffic to. The landing page was generic, proven, and ready-made along with an entire sales funnel.
It’s not that easy any more.
In those days, I bid on network marketing company names only. I bid 20 cents and had very little competition. There was no quality score. Clicks came in double-digit click-thru-rates.
Not anymore.
I copied other people’s ads. I made them my own. They were cheesy, they were direct. People still clicked them.
Can you still do that now? I don’t think so.
Google Adwords is one of the most dynamic, constantly changing platforms ever created. For example, a quality score was added. It became difficult to keep Google happy. Advertising replicated pages and domains became impossible.
Then a few months ago Google doubled their stock price simply by moving their ads closer to the search results. Click-thru-rates shot up but landing page quality became more strict.
A couple of years ago, many companies filed complaints about the use of their trademarks in Google ads. And advertising on company names resulted in disapproved ads. Some marketers got around it by using misspellings, but Google got wise and smacked them too.
Then some months ago, trademarks were allowed in certain markets. And company name advertising was allowed again…with some restrictions.
Earlier this year, there was a sudden surge of company name advertising to replicated pages. Aside from the increase in competition and click-cost for those normally effective keywords, Google responded to the junk landing pages with their famous bitch slap.
Network marketers became frustrated with the changes. They tried everything to get around them without tackling the problem at its source. Some of them outright quit PPC marketing and tried their hands at free search and social media.
Then the FTC cracked down on affiliate marketers. Google quickly complied by suspending accounts that were in violation. Some pages were removed from their search results. And it was game over for many marketers.
With all these changes going on, how does a PPC advertiser survive today?
Surely there is a way. There are still plenty of people still going strong, generating leads, and making money from PPC.
Their secret?
Elimination of competition.
In 2010, you will need to adjust how you tackle pay-per-click marketing. Instead of fighting, biting, and scratching your competition off Google’s sponsored links to take their place…you’ll be advertising where less opponents are playing.
There are a few ways to do this. But let’s see what actions home business owners have been taking which are reducing their chances of success with PPC.
Adwords is not the best way to duplicate your efforts.
Due to the “leverage” model inherent to network marketing it is not in your best interest to replicate.
Affiliate marketers and people with business that do not rely on leverage are lucky in this regard. They do not require the success of their competitors to make money. You may have also noticed that super affiliates who generate all their income from their successful PPC campaigns GUARD closely their entire business from other marketers.
Many go so far as to hide their identity. In case someone should recognize them and copy their work. The most successful affiliate marketers are actually underground non-gurus.
Google competition has become extremely intense. That even network marketers need to keep their campaigns to themselves, secret from their downline and upline alike.
A simple solution more network marketing teams will take if they want to continue to get traffic from PPC is to start a united SINGLE effort to generate leads for their opportunity. An example is advertising co-ops.
In this way, they can organize their efforts and increase their chances of success with much larger advertising budgets without canibalising their own team-mates. There would be a convergence of a single landing URL for each large team or company.
Additionally, there have been many new marketers entering the Google AdSpace.
In the past, I would recommend that new PPC marketers learn Google Adwords only and focus all their efforts there. The sheer volume of easy traffic that was available made it the obvious choice to gain plenty of search volume and save time by focusing effort in one place only.
However, in 2010, advertisers facing difficulties will be abandoning Google and using some of the other available PPC engines.
On the one hand, I believe that this is a good idea because you simply avoid the problem of the ever-changing, ever-increasing strictness of Google rules. On the other hand, I would not recommend abandoning Google all together.
It will always be a very powerful source of traffic.
Having 10 other PPC engines in your marketing will increase your chances of long-term success. This way, you gain a lot of extra traffic that would not have been available to you through Google alone. You’ll also have less competition and cheaper clicks in other engines.
Most importantly, whether Google decides to kick you off or not, your business doesn’t stop overnight. Your advertising will not be interrupted by their changes. Leads will continue to flow from your other engines while you figure out how to adjust for new rules Google comes up with.
Despite these modifications in your marketing, you’ll still want to Google’s traffic. You can punch the problem of competition right in the throat by making the following change.
You might have experienced much higher minimum bid costs for keywords you used to get for only a few cents in the past. Instead of trying to modify your ads and landing pages, you will find it far easier to move onto other keywords.
There’re an infinite number of suitable keywords available that your target market are searching for. But few people are bothering with them.
We’re now seeing increased minimum bids in Network Marketing because as more networkers switch to online advertising, they are also sharing their successful keywords with their team.
As soon as you share profitable keywords with other people, regardless of whether you benefit from their efforts or not, you’re harming yourself. Others who bid on the same keywords are now required to bid higher, write better ads, and create VERY unique landing pages. You’re competition to them, and they too become competition to you.
This idea of sharing keywords is very similar to “poaching” prospects from one’s teammates. To a lesser degree, of course.
When a person searches for a particular keyword where you and several members of your team have active ads, that same searcher is in principle being prospected by all of you.
Because of this, it’s no longer enough to just make your landing page look and feel different. Nor is it enough to alter the wording of your ads to appear different from your team and other adwords competitors. Your entire offer has to be different.
Otherwise the searcher will become annoyed when they click multiple ads and discover the same thing being offered on each page. In the same way, they’d be annoyed if the top 10 results on a Google search all yield the exact same information for their search.
It ruins the searcher experience. And Google’s reputation as a “useful” search engine is affected.
This is why Google reacts by slapping and more recently banning people who advertise the same thing.
So your first reaction in light of this information should be to guard your keywords from others. Regardless of which team they belong to.
You should also think of other keywords less obvious to competition.
There are a number of creative ways to find new keywords. You will have to think outside the box and stop relying on popular keyword research tools. Keyword tools restrict your ideas to the same ones that others are using, since others use the same tools as you.
Better ways to come up with your keyword choices are to read literature, blogs, articles, books, and ebooks, as well as watch videos and find market vocabulary there. You’ll still be able to use keyword tools to expand on your ideas.
Sometimes these keywords are not going to be directly related to your offer. But some smart ad writing and landing page content will allow you to bridge the gap between what someone is searching for and their original problem.
Once you’ve eliminated competition by teaming up with your downline and making a united single effort, once you’ve added other PPC engines to your marketing efforts, and once you’ve thought outside the box and come up with new keywords…
Then you can build unique offers on your landing pages and optimize that content for best conversion and sales.
Remember, in 2010, the competition in Google PPC marketing is going to become even more intense. Google will continue to chop indiscriminately as many of the low-quality, similar offers from their results as they can. Only the best, most unique, and most legally compliant offers will survive.
********************************
I think Jim and another PPC expert Cherie Yvette is doing a webinar on this topic in a few days. Here's the page to pre-register for it.
Oh, and to keep the guys at FTC happy... that link above is an affiliate link Jim set up for me. You most likely WILL buy their stuff when make it available, because it's that good . Further, if you use that link above to get the free stuff and then buy from these guys, I get paid an affiliate commission for sending you in the first place. Full disclosure!
About the Author: Jerry Chen
Member Since: 10/10/2007
I'm a Distributor For:: Symmetry Corp.
Industry: Marketing and Advertising
Primary Web Site: http://bn.RealWorkAtHomeProfits.com/



Google is not the only source for traffic
Google recently closed down over 100,000 Adword accounts. Must be nice where you can turn down 100,000 customers.
We do not need Google there are other sources for traffic. We can look at other search engines like Yahoo and Bing. We can buy ad placements on other websites too.
Respectfully,
Chris Brown
http://prostarprofits.com
Those Were The Days...
Hey there Jerry,
I just hopped over to your sight and took a good look around!
Your SEO set up's lookin' good...Ray and Fernie are something else.
Thanks for all your input and value you ad to this community.
Your buddy,
Mitchell Dillman
Thanks for the article
Hi Jerry,
Thanks for posting this article. It is comforting to know that there are actions we can take to positively move our businesses forward and not be focused on fear and intimidation by Google.
I enjoy following your trainings and look forward to hearing more from you.
Ruth
PAY PER CLICK PPC Is In STEEP DECLINE
The internet is a fast moving target, so what worked yesterday does not assure you it will work tomorrow. I was one of first to qualify with Google Adwords when it started, and I enjoyed many years of success, but wow, have times changed.
Who hasn't seen their revenues drop in the last couple years? Adwords was gold for the small business owner, and Adsense was gold for high traffic site owners, but not any more, so don't be misled by all these so called internet guru's, the days of easy money are over as the competition has exploded with affiliate marketing, driving up PPC costs to insane levels compared to the good old days of .03 starting level. lol
It is now a full time job with top SEO skills to stay on top of Google, and this makes industry a hundred times more difficult, and as I stated, what worked yesterday no longer does, so if you are now an experienced online marketer, or even a seasoned online shopper, do you hit PPC ads any longer when you are searching for something online? I haven't hit a PPC ad in over a year, and for good reasons, natural search results are the key to cutting through all the crap out there, the fly by nights, hit and run, the only people hitting PPC ads now are those who are competing with you and Google loves it.
Success to all,
I think it is great we have
I think it is great we have other opportunities to market these days. We have other options with Social Media, Article Marketing, Forums, Video, etc...this makes it easier to not have to focus on PPC solely. Thanks for the great article,
Emmie
P.S. Check out my 2 free strategies for marketing
http://the7figurenetworker.com/cp/11500
As a newbie ...
internet marketer this was very helpful & clarified things a LOT! Thank you very much Jerry
Looking to the Future
I just fired up my crystal ball and it said advertising co-ops are going to heat up. A lot of marketers are part time and a co-op is very appealing to them.
I'm in a funded proposal system that has a great advertising co-op to get members and leads. I can get members and leads a hell of a lot cheaper than I can on my own using this service. The only downside is the leads come a bit slow which may put some people off.
Let a more experienced marketer do the PPC and such. A co-op is great for the people who still have day jobs.
John Griffith
Simplify
To me, this article is saying to come up with a USP (Unique Selling Proposition).
Find a niche (the riches are in the niches),
Create a unique offer for that niche,
Optimize your ads, site, and offer.
It looks like the replicated site's heyday is over and only the people who master the skills necessary will make it.
But let's be real, this has pretty much always been the case.
You make more money when you increase your skillset and value.
Thanks for the great article!
--Derek
http://drivetheline.com/