How To Measure Search Engine Marketing ROI

By: Charles Preston | Posted: 15th August 2005

How To Measure Search Engine Marketing ROI

Copyright © 2005 Charles Preston

Click Response

http://www.clickresponse.net/



According to the Search Engine Marketing Professional

Organization (SEMPO), advertisers spent $4 billion in 2004 on

search marketing programs and are expected to spend 39% more than

that this year.



Search engine marketing appears to be a great way to advertise

but is it right for you and your business? If you are not already

employing search engine marketing(SEM) for you business is there

a way to forecast the return should you decide to invest in it?

Is there a way to measure the results you are getting if you have

already invested in SEM?



The answer is mostly yes. By utilizing data discovered in

recently released research surveys and with the help of a few

free online tools you can put begin to take some of the guesswork

out of search engine marketing ROI.



By using Overture's free keyword suggestion tool

(inventory.overture.com) you can get an idea of how many times a

keyword is getting searched each month. Another free tool to use

is called Good Keywords and can be downloaded from

www.goodkeywords.com.



Let's say for instance that you are a mortgage broker in the

Denver Colorado area and you are interested in getting more leads

for your business. You have a website and are considering search

engine marketing to bring in some new leads. You get a quote from

a search engine marketing provider who can guarantee top 10

positions among the major search engines for 6 months for your

keywords for $1,500.00.



The question now becomes is it worth it to you to spend the

$1,500.00. To figure this out we need to look at some numbers.



Berrier & Associates estimate that 65% of all traffic generated

by a search in a search engine will go to the sites listed within

the first 10 results (first page) returned for that search. By

using Overture's keyword suggestion tool you discover that the

term "Denver mortgage broker" gets approximately 540 searches a

month.



Using this criteria a first page position for "Denver mortgage

broker" would bring you approximately 65% of 540 searches a month

= 350 visitors to your site each month. Having a compelling title

tag in your website's pages might even boost this visitor number

since the title tag is what appears as the clickable link in the

search results.



The formula we just used would then be applied to all the other

keywords you are targeting such as "mortgage Denver" which gets

approximately 2,600 searches a month or "mortgage company Denver"

with 466 searches a month. A first page placement for any of

those would yield similar results.



So let's say we just use the "Denver mortgage broker" key phrase

as our example with its estimated 350 visitors a month for a

first page position. You would now need to know what your website

conversion rate is. The website conversion rate is the ratio of

leads or sales you get per visitor amount. The average website

conversion rate is about 1-2% or 1-2 leads or sales for every 100

visitors according to Shop.org.



If your website conversion rate is average then you would expect

on average 2-3 good leads from your site each month for that one

first page listing. Then depending on your sales conversion rate

which is the number of sales per leads you get on average

multiplied by your average sale price you can begin to calculate

what your return might be.



So let's say as a mortgage broker you make roughly $2k on each

deal you broker and your sales conversion rate is 1 sale for

every 3 quality leads. In any given month then you could estimate

1 sale at $2k out of the 3 quality leads generated from your

website which came as a result of the 350 visitors you got from

being on the first page of Google, Yahoo or MSN for the term

"Denver mortgage broker".



You paid the search engine marketing company $1,500.00 dollars

for 6 months of first page listings. From one of those first page

listings you stand to gain $2k x 6 months = $12,000.00. That

sounds like a really good return for money invested.



In closing the methodology outlined in this article to calculate

search engine marketing ROI is by no means 100% accurate due to

several factors but it is a good way to get a "feel" for what you

might get back for your marketing dollars. Its also a way to get

business owners to start thinking about how to better track their

e-business.









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Charles Preston is an Austin based SEO with over 7 years of

industry experience. Charles is also the President of Click

Response an internet marketing company focused on teaching small

businesses how to get the most out of their internet marketing.

For a free consultation or more information please visit

http://www.clickresponse.net


About the Author
Charles Preston
Occupation:
http://www.clickresponse.net
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Tags: traffic, search engine marketing, major search engines, advertisers, professional organization, mortgage broker, free tool, marketing programs, keyword suggestion tool, guesswork, free keyword suggestion, free online tools, research surveys, sem