The finance, insurance, retail and travel industries spent the most on AdWords during 2011, according to research into Googleโs finances, although search engine optimisation experts say small- and medium-sized enterprises should think more about how they pay for Google ads.
Stewart Media CEO Jim Stewart told SmartCompany this morning many businesses pay too much for their advertising.
โTypically โฆ businesses simply pay too much for broad phrases, going for volume rather than quality,โ he says.
WordStream has published an insight into how Google made its AdWords revenue in 2011, with a top-10 list of industries and associated keyword phrases. At the top of the list is finance and insurance, at a massive $US4 billion, with keywords such as โcheap car insuranceโ and โcredit cardsโ.
The second-largest group was retailers and general merchandise at $US2.8 billion, with keywords including search terms for specific products, while travel and tourism came in third with $US2.4 billion with search examples such as โplane ticketsโ and โrental carsโ.
The entire list:
1.ย Finance & insurance – $US4 billion
2.ย Retailers and general merchandise – $US2.8 billion
3.ย Travel & tourism – $US2.4 billion
4.ย Jobs and education $US2.2 billion
5.ย Home & garden – $US2.1 billion
6.ย Computer & consumer electronics – $US2 billion
7.ย Vehicles – $US2 billion
8.ย Internet & telecommunications – $US1.7 billion
9.ย Business & industrial – $US1.6 billion
10.ย Occasions & gifts – $US1.2 billion
The 10 industries represented 60% of Googleโs revenue for 2011. Ads make up the bulk of Googleโs money, with just 4% coming from other products and services.
The company has published an infographic that displays some even more fascinating information, including that Amazon, eBay, Macyโs and Sears spent more than $US167 million on AdWords, while โZumba dance DVDโ was the most commonly used keyword, at $5.18 per click.
In the travel industry, Booking.com spent the most at $40.4 million, while โNew York Hotelsโ was the most expensive click at $US7.68.
The most expensive out of all the industries was โhigh speed internet dealsโ at $US26.74, followed by โfuneral flowers arrangementsโ at $US20.95, โcheap hybrid carsโ at $US15.57 and โcustom business cardsโ at $US13.83.
The results also show that amid problems in insurance and finance, the industries are aggressively searching for customers, and consumers are still searching for goods, despite low sentiment.
But Stewart says too many businesses are spending too much money on key phrases, rather than more specific terms that could result in higher sales.
โBusinesses often go for volume rather than quality, so theyโll go and buy the phrase โreal estateโ instead of โbrick two bedroomโ. Itโs more specific, will cost less, and all about going for long-tail phrases.โ
Stewart says this is especially important given the rise of mobile searches.
โWe just worked with a car dealership, and they sold five cars directly through AdWords. It cost them $4 per car. And they were able to do that by targeting a specific area.โ
WordStream says the list was compiled using the companyโs own database technology, along with the Google KeyWord tool.
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