Publishing
Talk: 7 ways to use pay per click marketing to promote books
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Posted: 17 Nov 2018 11:25 AM PST
From Google Ads to Facebook,
Instagram and Twitter there are lots of options for paid advertising online.
So where do you start – and what works for books?
4 minutes to read
You can do a lot to promote books
online for free. So why would you pay for ads? Because they’re cost-effective
– and they work. Pay per click (PPC) marketing is the most common form of
advertising online. You only pay when someone clicks your ad, can limit your
spending and target your ads. So you can reach niche audiences for niche
books without spending a fortune.
But since books (especially ebooks)
are rarely high-priced, be careful when setting budgets that you’re not
spending more than sales are worth. However, direct sales aren’t always the
real prize. Even a few PPC clicks can boost a book’s Amazon sales ranking –
which will lead to higher visibility and increased organic sales. Think
long-term. Ads can also be used to grow social media followings and email
lists. But with so many options, where do you begin?
Search Marketing
PPC for search works because your
ads are shown to people who are actively looking for what you’re selling.
They ‘capture intent’ when people are ready to buy. They don’t care who you
are: only the search terms you use.
1) Google. Google is the biggest PPC platform. Google Ads are triggered by
the keywords you choose, plus the relevance of your ad, and the cost per
click is determined by a live auction: the more competitive the keyword, the
more expensive. Choose niche keywords for niche books: they’ll be cheaper and
more effective.
2) Amazon. You can also use PPC on the world’s largest search engine for
books. There are three options available: sponsored products, headline search
and product display. The first two appear in Amazon search results, targeted
by keyword. Product display ads appear directly on product pages. Does your
book have a strong competitor? Place an ad on their product page!
Social Ads
Social ads target people based on
who they are: demographics and interests. They work because of this
‘microtargeting’. You can reach a small number of people cheaply – but
they’ll be the right people. User intent is different here: people aren’t
necessarily in ‘buying’ mode – so you’ll have to work harder to engage them,
perhaps with a giveaway. Seasonal promotions also work well.
3) Facebook. Ads are more important than ever for visibility on Facebook.
You can use them to ‘boost’ an existing post to reach a wider audience; or
create an ad with a specific offer. Contests and giveaways work well, and can
be used to gather data.
Don’t let the Facebook-Cambridge
Analytica scandal put you off: you’re not trying to undermine Western
democracy – you’re just trying to sell some books! But do be careful how you
handle data, particularly since the EU’s GDPR came into force in May 2018. If
you collect email addresses in exchange for a download, or send people to a
specific web page that has the ‘Facebook pixel’ embedded (a bit of code that
tracks visits), you can use that data though only with explicit consent to
show ‘remarketing’ ads to those people.
Go further with custom audiences and
lookalike audiences. A custom audience can be built from a list of emails you
upload to Facebook (many of whom will have Facebook profiles); or a group of
people who have visited a specific page on your website (with the Facebook
pixel); or engaged with your Facebook content. A lookalike audience takes
this data and extrapolates it to similar, wider group of people, increasing
your target audience. Similar tools are available for most social ad
platforms.
4) Instagram. Facebook owns Instagram – so you just set these up in the same
ads manager and tick an extra box. ‘Learn More’ tends to work better than
‘Buy Now’ as a call to action, as it sounds less salesy. Aim to make your ads
feel like a natural part of your audience’s Instagram feed.
5) Twitter. The real-time nature of Twitter means you can reach people at
just the right moment for a date or even time-specific topical promotion.
Targeting works differently: you can reach people based on interests, but
also on which Twitter accounts they follow. Want to reach people who follow a
competitor? Target them with an ad!
6) LinkedIn. LinkedIn is an essential place to be if you publish business
books – but also books aimed at any professional group. It’s also good for
lead generation. It tends to be the more expensive option – but also has a
higher conversion rate. Options include sponsored content, text ads and
sponsored InMail (‘cost per send’ rather than ‘cost per click’).
7) YouTube. 18-34 year olds are the age group most influenced by YouTube –
so it’s a good place to be if you’re trying to reach young people, such as
students. Google owns YouTube, so if you’ve got to grips with Google Ads,
it’s the same ad platform. The trickier part is creating video ads in the
first place. But if you already have a book trailer, author interview or
other promotional video, don’t leave it on your own YouTube channel: use it
as a ‘skippable’ video ad.
Finally, measure everything you do,
from cost per click to click-through rate to conversion rate. Use that data
to refine, improve and optimize your next campaign. Use split-testing to
improve your ad copy. PPC marketing is a dynamic medium. Start small, think
long-term, and you’ll reap the rewards in awareness, audience growth – and
book sales.
Find out more about Jon’s
in-house training course on Pay Per Click
for Publishers.
This post first appeared on FutureBook
on 15 Oct 2018.
The post 7 ways to use
pay per click marketing to promote books appeared first on Publishing Talk.
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