The corporate world of pay per click search engine marketing is very exciting. One of the reasons it’s so exciting is the budgets are unreal. When you’re managing the kind of money I am, there’s always a reason to be excited (and on your toes). I often get the question, "Ian, how much money do you spend on Google AdWords and other large search engines?" Unfortunately, I can’t answer that question. However, today I’ve got the next best thing for you, information about what the top advertisers spent on Google in the month of June. But, before we get started, I want to thank my pal Robby for sending me the idea (and article) behind this post!
AdAge Reveals What Top Advertisers Spend On AdWords
Recently, AdAge published a very exciting post. This post reveals what top advertisers spent on AdWords In June. I highly recommend reading this article, it’s a great read. Following are some of my favorite takeaways:
- BP went crazy and ramped from minimal spend to $3.59 million in June. What really excites me about BP’s spend is the fact that it’s all about branding. Branding gets such a bad reputation in the world of online marketing, but I’m here to say that it’s the future. I’ll explain why a bit later!
- AT&T Mobility spent $8.08 million in June, coming in as Google’s number one spender.
- Apollo Group (the folks behind University of Phoenix) came in as number two with $6.67 million in spend. I was actually a bit surprised to see them that high on the list. I know a number of great people working at this company and can’t say enough good stuff about them!
- It was interesting to see Living Social on the list with $2.29 million in spend. I haven’t heard much about these guys, they seem to have come out of nowhere, definitely a company to keep an eye on.
- My prediction: Many newer companies are growing like crazy in this market such as Inflection. In the coming years, I expect many more startups and newer names on the list. Join one of those startups now and you could be a corporate PPC millionaire. (As a side note, you may wish to check out my article about PPC career paths where I talk about the startup option.)
- I do wonder about the accuracy of this list. There are some names I expected to see on the list which are not there. Nonetheless, the data for the companies listed does seem plausible based on my six years of corporate PPC experience. In any event, I think it’s useful in terms of being directional.
PPC Is Just Getting Started, Get Ready For Branding
One of my favorite parts of AdAge’s article: BP spent $3.59 million on AdWords in June. All of this spend was pure branding. In my opinion, PPC is all about direct advertising right now. Most savvy companies are making a positive margin on their PPC spend. This is a good thing and it’s what we get paid to do.
However, when you start looking at the statistics, online advertising is still a smaller percentage of most big company advertising budgets. As these budgets continue to shift online, margins for many advertisers will get thinner and thinner. (I’m talking in aggregate here, of course there will always be super profitable niches.) Online will become more about branding. It makes perfect sense to me: At least BP knows how many clicks they are getting on AdWords (a proactive activity) versus offline impressions (which is a passive activity).
Now, you could look at this in two ways. If you’re a direct advertiser with really high margins, you could see it as glass half empty and worry about evaporating margins. (I wouldn’t look at it this way. As long as you don’t sit still and remain savvy, you’ll find a way to continue to squeeze out margin. If you squeeze margin out of a difficult environment, you will be the rock star of your company.) If you’re a glass half full type of person, this creates a world of opportunity for continued success in the online marketing career path! More money spent online means more opportunity for all of us in the corporate PPC world. Moreover, it creates a world of opportunity for content publishers.
Image of Bags of Money © iStockPhoto – lisegagne
Alex Dumitru says
I think BP was about the Oil Spill to, as they tried to revamp their reputation which has been seriously damaged.
Ian says
Alex,
Thanks so much for the comment! Much appreciated, as always. Yeah, it’s a big exercise in reputation management. I think their approach on AdWords makes a lot of sense.
All the best,
Ian
Dan Lew says
Interesting about AT&T Mobility spending 8.8, mobile is huge and particularly with the latest in iphone and everything else, it sounds like they would of made a nice ROI from it!
Dino Vedo says
Wow BP really did spend a lot but they really needed to if they ever wanted to repair the damaged reputation they got.
Theres a local BP here in town, and now its Sunoco! just goes to show how they were losing money and apparently sold it off…. serves them right!
Ian says
Dan,
Thanks for the comment! Yeah, the new iPhone 4 really pushed their spend. I wonder what they spend on a “normal” month?
Best,
Ian
Ian says
Dino,
Thanks for the comment! That’s crazy that your local BP changed ownership. Totally makes sense, however. They really have a tough situation to deal with now and will need to continue some serious branding/reputation management!
All the best,
Ian
joe says
Hey Ian. Im really enjoying your blog. When you get some time how about an article on ways of breaking into PPC. That was how I found this blog as I am looking to get into this business but do not have a great deal of experience or a degree. I know I will get there eventually but some pointers or suggestions would be great.
thanks and keep up the good work
Ian says
Joe,
Thanks so much for visiting my blog and for the comment! I like your idea and will definitely add it to the queue, great suggestion and much appreciated. 🙂
All the best,
Ian