Pay-Per-Call Ads Convert Better
The new issue of Business Week notes that Pay-per-call ads are luring to the Web service-oriented businesses that don’t have Web sites and prefer calls over clicks to rack up sales.
Small-business customers like Appleton say it offers a better return on investment than pay-per-click advertising and suits the needs of businesses that often can’t close a sale via the Web only.
Most pay-per-call advertising services work like this: First, companies bid for placement on keyword searches. Then their ad is served to the user based on location, and the company is charged each time a user calls; the ad itself is placed for free.
When companies register with most providers, their site is assigned a unique phone number that appears in the ad, so that the company can track how many calls actually come through the pay-per-call advertising system. Businesses only pay when someone searching for their product or service picks up the phone and calls them.
Ingenio, a San Francisco-based local search advertising company with 110 employees and more than $100 million in annual revenue, is one that’s betting that the torrid growth rates of pay-per-click advertising can’t continue forever.
Barach thinks the advertiser’s return on investment more than makes up for the higher initial price of pay-per-call vs. pay-per-click. He says the average conversion rate on a pay-per-call ad is three to five times more successful than a pay-per-click ad in a field like legal services, and that rate grows to eight times for smaller purchases like flower shops.