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OUT-OF-THE-ORDINARY IDEAS ON PPC ADMINISTRATION 
By: Kirt Christensen
You probably know Overture and Wordtracker as well as AdWord Accelerator which a great tool in PPC management for sorting out the real competition among keywords and bid prices and singling out the best-performing ads. But there are others that give you a different emphasis and have features of their own that make them unique and very much worth having. AdWord Analyzer is one (www.AdWordAnalyzer.com). Keywords Analyzer is another (www.KeywordsAnalyzer.com).
In your toolbox out in the garage you need a Philips and a flathead screwdriver, not just one or the other. The same is true of these major keyword tools. Each one has its use, and owning more is like having a bigger toolbox.
Don't stop discovery there. The initial string of keywords you get, long or not, is not complete. At one point AltaVista said that a whopping 20 percent of its total searches were completely unique. There is no knowing what a person will search for, but to help get a little better idea what they might be looking for here are some ideas:
Keep your keyword list filled with synonyms and similar subjects so you know you will be able to let people know that you have what they want.
You can try bidding on brand names, though you'll have to work through the copyright issues yourself. Google has had a score of its own legal headaches as a result of allowing AdWords users to bid on trademarked names. Nevertheless, names of companies, magazines, associations, famous people, and famous places may all relate to your product. For example, for "billiards" you might bid on the name of famous pool player Jeremy Jones. For drums you might bid on "Buddy Rich."
Misspellings are a big opportunity, because so many advertisers don't bid on them, and the clickthrough rate is often higher. For a Lord of the Rings promotion, "Tolkein" (misspelled) got twice the CTR of "Tolkien" (spelled correctly).
LexFN.com is an effective website used to enhance pay-per-click management. It is a complex thesaurus that utilizes internet technology to search out arrays of related ideas and synonyms and compile them into your keyword list. So you aren't just stuck with the common version of a word like WalMart but you will have variants like Wal-Mart and Wal Mart. "Expanded phrase matching" offered by Google will try, and often succeed, to duplicate this for you. Those click will most often cost you more than exact matching just the way folks type it in.
Article Source: http://www.uberarticles.com/articles
With over ten years of experience in Managing PPC, Kirt Christensen, will share his expertise in internet marketing, by outlining what tricks he has tried that work (and some that don't work). www.netbreakthroughs.com">www.netbreakthroughs.comunique content version of this article.
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