Tips for Determining Your SEM Budget

June 15th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Internet Marketing Budget, Search Marketing, SEM budget planning, SEM budget planning tips No Comments »

When the economy took a turn for the worse, companies learned quickly they had to tighten their purse strings. Budgets were slashed in an effort to just maintain some semblance of a profit margin. Many people found themselves defending their positions within a company in order to survive round after round of layoffs. When times are tough, penny pinching becomes a way of life.

Not to say that the economy has fully recovered, but there are signs that a recovery, albeit a slow one, is on its way. The State of Search Marketing Report 2011, produced by Econsultancy and SEMPO, projected that search engine marketing will spend an estimated $19 billion this year, a 16% increase from 2010. An increase is spending is a good sign. It means that companies are relinquishing more of their carefully counted dollars for marketing efforts, which means they’ve seen that consumers are spending more. This is not to say that companies are willingly writing blank checks for their search marketing teams, but it does mean you might have a bigger SEM budget to work with this year.

How do you go about planning your SEM budget?

Be Smart About It
You have to pick and choose your battles when it comes to search engine marketing. You have to realize that you may not be able to do everything you want to right away. It can be expensive to get a SEM campaign off the ground, and you can’t always afford to do it all at once. You have to decide what it more important. Do you want to up the frequency of your company newsletter to connect with customers, or do you want to allocate more of your budget to bidding on more competitive PPC keywords? Having a list of goals will help you decide where you should start and how much money you should dedicate to each effort.

Check out the competition
Understanding your competition and what they have done in terms of search marketing can give you an idea of what you need to do to catch up and overtake them. If they are dominating the search results, you know you’ll have to devote more time and energy to SEO in order to compete. If there is no clear leader in your niche, then a smaller amount of money in the right place is going to make a noticeable difference. Big brands tend to have the money and manpower and own highly competitive keywords, both in the organic search results and PPC advertising. But what keywords can you focus on that they’ve missed?

How much are you willing to spend?
SEO and SEM are two very different things. One of the key differences is that SEM involves PPC, a paid marketing tactic. Most SEO tactics (link building, social media marketing, article marketing, etc) don’t cost anything, but require a serious time commitment. What do you have more of and what are you willing to spend? PPC might cost you more, but can lead to faster results for as long as you’re running ads. SEO is a long term process that builds on itself over time. Which is more important to you? Which one is going to provide the best value for your budget? Only you can decide that.

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SEM Budget Planning Tips

November 4th, 2010 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Search Marketing, SEM budget planning, SEM budget planning tips No Comments »

There are a lot of people online and you know that it is crucial to tap some of them on the shoulder and let them know you are there. How can you do that with a limited marketing budget? What should your budget even be? Are you one of those people who have contacted several search marketing companies to help you only to get back widely different proposals? With so much differentiation in pricing how do you even set your budget correctly? As you look ahead to plan your search engine marketing budget for the next year, here are some helpful tips that might better help you allocate or re-allocate your SEM budget.


Explore Your Competition

What I mean by this is to conduct some research to see how much competition you have online. Let’s say you are a local business and you have many competitors with other brick & mortar locations. Don’t assume all those brick & mortar locations even know what they are doing online or if they are even online marketing their business. You might be pleasantly surprised to see there is not much going on in your specific space even with so much offline competition.

Pick And Choose Your Battles
You have to realize that you might not necessarily be able to tackle all the locations that are at your disposal right away. Perhaps you have a large list of emails and you want to start a scheduled newsletter or possibly you realize that the search space online does not have much going on and you want to go after search rankings. The reality is that unless you have all the resources required you are going to have to choose your search marketing battles wisely in the beginning stages of your search marketing campaign.

Start With Your Budget First

Maybe you already have a budget in mind and you are trying to structure a marketing campaign around that budget. You will want to conduct some research and figure out what will be the best bang for your buck. If you are more interested in long term sustainability, then SEO and Social Media marketing might be the way to go. If you are looking for quicker leads and business then pay per click advertising might be the answer.

Take the time to make sure you pick the right services that will work best for you and your budget because the last thing you want to do is wash your marketing budget down the drain from lack of industry knowledge.

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