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When to Use Google AdWords for Life Science Marketing

by Matthew Wygant on March 1, 2010

When to Use an AdWords CPM Campaign

1) If your product is both brand new and unlike anything that’s already on the market, an AdWords CPM (not CPC) campaign can help you establish initial market awareness. Remember at this initial stage that your goal is awareness, and try not to get hung up on click-throughs and conversions.

Later, you’ll probably want to migrate to a CPC campaign. As part of that process, you can dual-purpose your CPM campaign to compare the pulling power of different versions of your marketing message. At this second stage, you’ll want to pay close attention to clicks.

2) If your web site was constructed poorly (hard to index) or your page content was composed without advance consideration of keyword selection and placement, you may need to use a CPM campaign to buy your way onto your prospects’ computer screens until you can get it fixed.

When to Use an AdWords CPC Campaign

AdWords CPC campaigns have two key advantages over AdWords CPM campaigns. First, CPC campaigns deliver campaign-specific keyword performance data, which can be used to improve the performance of your keyword selection, bid settings, ad copy, landing page, and overall site. Second, they can deliver stronger ROI, because you pay only when someone clicks on your ad. Use the data from your initial CPM campaign to construct the best CPC campaign you can, then let the data inform refinements aimed at optimizing ROI (Medicinal chemists will recognize this intersection of art, science, and iteration.).

Use CPC campaigns when you already have some CPM data to work with, and you can reduce your conversion event to a small transaction. If your conversion event is to schedule a demo for a $450,000 core facility megasystem, you won’t get many conversions. If your conversion event is to get an e-mail address in exchange for a written comparative cost analysis of the three most popular ways to prepare samples for such megasystems, your CPC campaign will be much more productive.

Take It In Stages

Getting an AdWords campaign to deliver strong ROI is harder than it looks. Of course Google wants your AdWords campaign to succeed, but their tutorials and other documentation are fractured and fragmented, and a lot of the information presented doesn’t even relate to the current AdWords interface. Getting your offer, your landing page content, your ad copy, your keywords, your negative keywords, and your bids in productive sync takes creativity, testing, analysis, and revision. And if you start with a CPC campaign, the relatively low search volume for life science products can make it difficult to collect enough useful data on impressions, click-throughs, and conversions to get an optimized campaign up and running quickly, even if you throw a ton of money at it.  So don’t expect AdWords to start delivering cheap, qualified sales leads for your life science product on day one of your campaign.

Focus On Your Organic Search Results First

When you’re using any form  of advertising to communicate to life scientists, you’re already starting at a deficit. Many of our customers in the life sciences like to think they already know what’s good for them, and that they’re too smart to be influenced by any form of advertising, including AdWords. Skepticism and resistance begin the moment they see your ad. The experience is much different for them, and much better for you, if your product information comes up in Google’s organic search results as a result of their own search activity. Put your on-page and off-page SEO practices into play before turning your attention to AdWords.

For help with life science laboratory product marketing, contact Matthew Wygant by calling (408) 905-7630 or by sending e-mail to matthew@wygant.net.

How to Write Life Science Content Marketing Material

February 3, 2010
Thumbnail image for How to Write Life Science Content Marketing Material

If you’ve considered content marketing as a deliberate lead generation and development strategy, you’ve realized that someone, or some group of people, will have to create all the content to drive it. The copywriting required may sound like a lot of work, but when advertising fails to deliver, what are the alternatives? At two companies [...]

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Start and Expand Your E-Mail List with Content Marketing

December 24, 2009

Mailchimp has posted a hybrid advertising/content marketing/direct response technique for establishing your own e-mail newsletter subscriber list. The basic steps are: Create a pdf document composed of information of value to your audience. Include advertisements for your newsletter. Post the document as a free download on your web site. Use Adwords to drive traffic to [...]

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Email Newsletters Provide Actionable Sales Information

December 21, 2009

An email newsletter list is the classical permission marketing asset and the founding element of many content marketing programs. E-mail newsletters are just OK at generating new leads, but they’re terrific for determining the sales-readiness of subscribers and moving them closer to conversion. If you haven’t seen campaign analysis data from an e-mail newsletter mailing, [...]

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Follow the Federal Research Grant Money Using the RePORTER Database

December 13, 2009

If your target market includes federally funded research scientists, you will be pleased to find loads of useful information in the NIH’s RePORTER (Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tool Expenditures & Results) database. The RePORTER Query Interface Here’s what the RePORTER Query interface looks like: Example: Who Has Money For Your Target Application Say you’ve got [...]

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Book Review: Lead Generation for the Complex Sale (Brian J. Carroll)

December 10, 2009

Quick Summary Know your intended positioning. Define what an actual sales-ready lead is in your organization. Do not hand off undeveloped leads to Sales. Have a specific plan for generating inquiries and turning them into sales-ready leads. Use many coordinated marcom modes in your plan. Move cool leads back to earlier development stages instead of [...]

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AdWords Won’t Deliver All the Sales Leads You Need

December 2, 2009

Unless you’ve seriously sandbagged your forecast, an AdWords program will not deliver all the sales leads you’ll need to make it. Here’s why. Most Internet users do not click on ads at all. According to the comScore study released October 1, 2009, the percentage of users who click on display ads in a month has [...]

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Exhibitor’s Report from HUPO 2009 Meeting in Toronto

September 29, 2009

Heard from one exhibitor that the activity in the booth area is very poor. Any other reports?

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What is a Lead?

September 29, 2009

At what point are leads handed off to your sales force? If initial inquiries are forwarded directly to Sales for follow-up, then you’re tasking your sales force with all the qualification required to sort and select which leads are actually ready for direct sales activity. That’s fine, if you’ve deliberately hired a versatile sales force [...]

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