You know, there are so many aspects of ppc affiliate marketing that are incredibly simple, yet the average affiliate continues to mess them up. Let me give you an example, here’s how EASY it is to optimize your bid prices (once you have Google Conversion Tracking in place):
- First step is to know what your average commission per sale is, let’s say it’s $20 for this example.
- Now if you want to achieve a 100% ROI, you want to watch your Cost/Conv., that’s the last column you see in Google Adwords. The Cost/Conv., is how much it cost for each sale you make, this is the KEY METRIC you want to watch. If you want a 100% ROI and you get $20 per sale, then you want your Cost/Conv. to be $10.
- Now after you let you campaign run for a while, and get proper statistics, then you can adjust your keyword/adgroup bids higher or lower based on their Cost/Conv. If their Cost/Conv. > $10, lower the bid by some set amount, let say 10%, and lower it by 20% if Cost/Conv. > $15 (just an example). This will reduce the ad position and click costs of your poorly converting keywords. Now as your ad position drops, not only will your click costs drop considerably, but your conversion rate will go up, since you’ll have less “tire kickers” and more serious visitors coming to your site.
- On the other hand, if the Cost/Conv. is well below $10 then you can increase the bid by 10% or more, this will increase your traffic and profits. Your Cost/Conv. will increase a bit, but your profits will jump substantially, especially if that 10% increase takes you to the first three positions.

Sounds pretty simple huh? But do you know what’s really shocking? Most affiliates, especially newbie affiliates, fail to follow the simple steps above and as a result their campaigns fail. The mechanics of optimizing your bid prices is SIMPLE, but again, affiliate marketing is not about mechanics, it’s about thought process.
Here are some typical scenarios that many affiliates go through, tell me if any of them sound familiar:
- The trigger happy affiliate: This is the affiliate who adjusts his bids prices EVERYDAY. If he has a good day, he’ll shoot his bid prices up, if he has a slow day, he’ll slash his bid prices way down. The problem with this, other than the fact it’s a freakin’ full time job, with little time left to expand, is his/her decisions are based on statistically insignificant data. If you make a decisions on too little data it’s as bad (or worse) as making no decision at all. Affiliates who engage in this type of trigger happy approach often wonder why their sales and profits are stagnant and not moving up. Here’s a tip: You can’t make a decision on how well a keyword/adgroup converts after 30 clicks, you need at least 300-500.
- The scared affiliate: I see this all the time, an affiliate has one bad sales day and they PAUSE their campaign for several days!?! If you ask me this is about the stupidest thing an affiliate can do. Your sales will fluctuate (sometimes wildly) day by day, week by week, and month by month, depending on the market. If you have ONE slow sales day, it does not mean the next 3 days will be slow as well. You missing out on sales and profits, and even worse than that, you losing data you could use to make rational statistically relevant decisions. As long as you let one day’s stats scare you, then you won’t have the confidence to build a large profitable affiliate marketing business.
- The REALLY scared affiliate: A lot of times you’ll have to lose money in a market for a while before you go from losing money to making money. The REALLY scared affiliate will walk away from a campaign if it’s not profitable right off the bat, in stark fear that he or she is losing money everyday, even if their daily budget is set at $10/day!
Here’s the key: you ABSOLUTELY must be unemotional about the decisions you make when adjusting bid prices and optimizing your campaign. You have to understand that just like the stock market, your sales will fluctuate up and down, erratically and unpredictably. Sales can also be stronger one month compared to another.
In order to get an accurate gauge of how well a keyword/adgroup converts and what its actually Cost/Conv. is, you have to let the keyword/adgroup accumulate AT LEAST 300 to 500 clicks, before you decide to pause it completely, or bid it up or down.
If you let fear control you, and control your decision making, than you’ll NEVER become a super affiliate until you overcome that fear.
Fear is what keeps most affiliates from entering the big leagues with the super affiliates, in the same way fear keeps so many people enslaved to a job that they hate, when there’s ample opportunity to start their own business and quit their day job.
Until you learn to control your emotions in regards to money, money will ALWAYS control you.
Are you letting fear control YOU?
google conversion tracking increase roi ppc bidding techniques
Amit,
I loved your post and it reminds me of the same emotional control you need if you invest in the stock market.
The second to the last line of your post was especially true. Thanks for all the great content.
Greg
http://www.blueskybrothers.com
Thanks Amit for more great words of wisdom. Quoted you and linked to your article over at my forum to try to help more affiliates “get it.” Love the way you write!
Hi Greg and Linda,
Thanks I really appreciate your kind words, and glad you enjoy my blog
What an amazing post! I don’t think I’ve heard the mechanics of campaign management expressed in such simple and easy-to-follow terms.
I think the only thing to add, even though you touched on it, is that you need to be willing to run a new campaign at a break-even rate or even at a loss while you’re “buying data” to optimize your campaign.
Great work …
A year ago that was me, pausing a campaign when I didnt have a sale within like 10 clicks. Dumb. You really do need to make it a number game instead of an emotional, irrational rollcoaster of decisions. In some ways it reminds me of playing Texas Holdem, you need the nerves of steal to stomach the set backs, make sound decisions, and get out when you know you’ve lost. Of course luck is far less part of the equation in PPC…
You bring out some excellent points, no doubt at one time you had to personally deal with each scenario, as we all will have to. I am fairly new into the PPC side of internet marketing but I have had great success promoting a particular product in a very short period time.
This is only my first two weeks and I have made a total ad investment of about $415 and have returned $1700. I have not changed any settings on my campaign, it was making steady money for a few days roughly a 3.5-4.5% conversion rate. I will take your advice and continue to watch and let the campaign sit. Knowing that sales can and do flucuate. I have received around 205 clicks today on my campaign with no sales. You mention atleast having 300-500 click to accurately judge if a campaign is successful or not.
Just for knowledge purpose you may know, is it possible that a campaign and it’s keywords can be profitable for a handful of days and then go south and not be hot again?
Great Insights! Thanks!
Andrew Payne
Amit,
Wow I wish I would have found this blog a long time ago! I am going to read every one of your posts today. I’m only in April, so I have a ways to go.
I have one question about this post. I am assuming that you don’t use Adwords exclusively, so do you assume the same conversion with Yahoo and MSN, or do you track them seperately? I have read about third party tracking systems that track all three (and more) from one spot. Is there a reason why you don’t use that type of system?
Thanks now I have to continue reading
Andy