Google PPC
Advanced Control Options Now To Target Your Ads
To reach our potential customers in our PPC campaign we used to target our ads in specific geographic locations such as countries, regions, and cities. Now you can prefer to target or exclude your ads based on the user’s physical location or the location of interest.
This new feature can be used when your advertising goals specifically call for more granular controls, because the use of advanced location options will limit your ad exposure.
Targeting method: Target using physical location
If you run a jewelry store in Flora and you want to advertise only to people located near your store. With the existing location targeting in AdWords, you can only specify the location you wish to target, Flora. However, your ad might be shown not only to people in Flora, but also to people elsewhere in the US whose searches include one of your keywords along with the word “Flora”.
If a Flora-based user searching for “Pennsylvania amish jewelry” will not see your ad. This is the case even if your campaign includes that exact keyword.

Exclusion method: Exclude by physical location and search intent
If you want to target sell properties in Chicago and don’t want to advertise to people who are based in Florida or interested in Florida properties, you can go in for restrictive exclusion method by choosing “exclude by physical location and search intent,” as shown below. This makes your ad visible to people based in Florida or to those who include a Florida location in their search queries.

New default working of excluded locations:
If you happen to own a restaurant in Paris, you may want to advertise special deals only to people planning a visit to the city but not to those who live there. Previously, if you excluded Paris from location targeting in AdWords, your ads wouldn’t be shown to people in the city or to those searching for places in Paris. With the new default settings, your ads won’t be shown to people who are in the city, but people outside the city can see these ads if they specify “Paris” in their search queries.

Facebook PPC Verses Google PPC
Facebook is a social network that has had the success of breaking into the social networking sight and surpassing its competitors all the way to its present position at the top of the social media sphere providing its services to over 400 million users.
Facebook provides a PPC (Pay per Click) service that focuses on the various position markets that connect on the social network. The social site allows you to target your ads to only appear on certain profile pages.
Here is a view of the setup and the various demographics on Facebook:

These ads are non-invasive, similar to Google’s PPC, but Facebook allows you to add images and they also provide the user the chance to vote on whether or not they like the advertisement making the ads that much more responsible to their target audience.
Here’s a Facebook’s example of a PPC advertisement:

There are issues with Face book’s PPC; for example it is said that Facebook tends to have a very low CTR (Click Through Rate). Also, while Facebook may permit for more targeted niches, it is not a search engine and doesn’t have the volume that Google has. So, although Facebook gives you the capability to enhanced reach those buying your products or services, Google allows for a broader audience and a larger number of prospects.
However, Facebook ads are rapidly gaining in fame, and appear to be a very obliging tool for small to medium businesses attempting to increase traffic with PPC.
If you are trying to choose between the two, the only way to come to the right decision is to try them both and calculate the results over a defined period of time.
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