Return On Investment
Acronym: ROI
In online marketing, Return On Investment refers to the concept that online advertising is an investment from which a marketing professional expects to, at some point, see a return; usually in the form of increased revenues, or additional Orders.
Example
A marketing professional is working for a site which sells specialty dog food.
Using Google Adwords and Yahoo! Search Marketing to set up campaigns for keywords related to dog food, our marketer bids:
Keyword | Amount |
---|---|
dog food | $1.50 |
dog chow | $1.75 |
dog food delivery | $1.99 |
Within a single day, they receive 100 clicks on each keyword, at a total cost of:
(1.50 + 1.75 + 1.99) x 100 = $524.00
For their 300 clicks, they receive 15 orders for a total of $900.00 in revenue. If their profit margin is 75%, then their total revenues are
$900.00 x 75% = $675.00
At $524.00 in marketing dollars and $675 in net revenues, their return on investment is
$675.00 - $524.00 = $151.00
Which, as a percentage of spend, is:
$151.00 ÷ $524.00 = 29%
Where Conversion Tracking solutions come into play is in determining which marketing dollars are wasted.
Conversion Tracking
With Conversion Tracking, we are able to determine the following additional information:
Keyword | Amount | Clicks | Total Cost | Orders | Order Totals | Net Profit | ROI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
dog food | $1.50 | 100 | $150.00 | 8 | $480 | $360 | $210 |
dog chow | $1.75 | 100 | $175.00 | 3 | $180 | $135 | -$40 |
dog food delivery | $1.99 | $199.00 | 4 | $240 | $180 | -$19 |
The only term which offers a positive Return on Investment is dog food. The other terms cost too much in our scenario and are not worth the marketing dollars.
The options for remedying this are:
- Eliminate the unprofitable keywords from the campaign
- Reduce the bid amount to a lower number to reduce the cost of the keywords
- Optimize the web site in order to increase the conversion rate of the unprofitable keywords