5 Bucks a Day

… an Internet Marketing strategy that works!

Internet Marketing ideas: What’s Your Creativity Quotient?

May 8th, 2007 · No Comments

I often write here and elsewhere how easy it is to earn money online. Inside 5 Bucks a Day I give a number of ways to do so, and many of my readers have successfully increased their income by following the tips there.

Some people have an easier time than others, though.

This might seem like a change of topic, but bear with me, it isn’t. For quite a while I’ve been a regular reader of Darren Rowse, the 6-figure blogger, otherwise known as Problogger.

In fact, I might say he inspired me to my current stage professionally. You might be able to check me on this, maybe not, but the 5 Bucks a Day strategy actually started with a comment I made on one of Problogger’s posts. I wrote a couple pages, submitted it there, and got some nice comments about the comments.

From there I came to the conclusion that people would like to learn more, and the rest is history.

Anyway, I’ve severely digressed here. The point is, I’ve been reading Darren’s blog for a long time. Some days are better than others, but today I read something there that hit home, and is tied in (finally) with my earlier comments.

Today’s post at Problogger is about the 9 Attitudes of Highly Creative People, and is actually part 2 of a series on creativity (part 1 was posted yesterday).

He talks about attitudes towards problems, challenges, hurdles in your life and business, and more. Very interesting.

What hit home was I could never figure why some just have such a darn hard time succeeding at Internet Marketing, while others take to it like a fish to water. I suspect Darren is on to something, and whether you consider yourself creative, or whether you don’t, you should read his ideas (along with the rest of the series).

For example, he explains why he feels that creativity can be a learned skill. Does that give you enough reason to check this out?

Have fun, but don’t forget to come back here. :-)

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Internet Marketing ideas: Google AdWords Keywords: How much is too much?

May 8th, 2007 · 1 Comment

When setting up AdWords campaigns, how many keywords do you target?

If you’ve been doing it for a while, you already know that you should have very targetted adgroups, with your keywords matching your ads and also matching your landing page.

So, in other words, if you have a widget campaign, you should have red widgets in one adgroup, blue widgets in another, and green widgets in yet another, and so on.

In the beginning I used to do things like dynamic keyword insertion, which asked Google to substitute the real keyword for the dynamic token, but I don’t do that much anymore. In using DKI you can’t for example, use misspelled keywords because Google doesn’t allow misspellings in the ads, and if you have a dynamic keyword insertion token, and the keyword is misspelled, the ad text or title is misspelled. That will get your ad disabled very quickly.

So how much is too much? I’ve read books where the author advises using hundreds, even thousands of long tail keyword phrases (3 or more words in the phrase). I’m not a fan of that either.

The reason is that Google has some unpublished limitations on the size of an account.

For sure, you can only have 25 campaigns. Some have been told you can only have 100 adgroups per campaign, but I’ve had campaigns with more than that, so that’s a flexible number. I’ve also been told no more than 2000 keywords per adgroup, but really, you should never approach that.

The big concern is, and again this is just what I’ve been told, there’s a limit of 50,000 keywords per account.

If you’re targeting several hundred keywords per adgroup, it won’t take long to fill up an account, will it?

I prefer to target usually a couple dozen keywords per adgroup. I prefer to have 2 word phrases, sometimes 3, and then variations for the plurals. Also variations for the keywords smooshed together (like greenwidgets, no spaces in between). Also sometimes variations with .com at the end, so greenwidgets.com and greenwidget.com.

Then I’ll add negative matches so that I won’t get killed by a lot of long tail phrases that I don’t want to pay for, like -picture, -free, -screen saver, that kind of thing.

Once I see profits coming out of the main keywords, then I might start adding more keywords to the mix, and deleting the ones that are getting a lot of impressions and few clicks, or no impressions, of lots of clicks and no sales.

Success with AdWords isn’t a one-step, set it and forget it process.

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