You may have read some of the SEO books suggested by Brian Harish a while back. But perhaps an
overlooked area for books is PPC.
After all, what more could you learn
about paid media from a book when all the knowledge you need is online?
The issue with that is your webpages
can 404 without you knowing or you might forget to bookmark them.
A book stays with you.
But the downside is books can become
outdated pretty quickly. And unless a revised edition is published, you’re
stuck with pages of knowledge from the past.
There’s also the problem that the
majority of PPC-specific books are self-published.
That’s why you need an array of books
to cover all bases and touch on the fundamentals which also make you think
outside the box a little.
So this is my list of 12
“alternative” PPC books you should have on your shelf.
(Note: This
list will include both physical copies and eBook’s.)
Books for PPC
Beginners
If you’re on the lookout for
literature targeted at beginners, or you want a refresher, these books are for
you.
Paid Search Boxset by Click Consult
Why have one eBook when you can have
10?
Click Consult’s Paid Search box set
contains a variety of eBook’s to help you future-proof your campaigns and
analyses your progress.
The set also
has guides on Google Data Studio, Amazon Advertising,
and Microsoft Ads, as well as a display ads cheat sheet.
The Complete Guide to Facebook Advertising by Brian Meert
With more than 1.5 billion active
users every day, Facebook has a large pool of potential customers. That’s why
the advertising platform is so good.
But advertising on a social media
network is different from a search network.
Guides like “The Complete Guide to
Facebook Advertising” by Brian Meert can help if the learning curve is a little
steeper.
Meert gives step-by-step advice and
tips on how to create the perfect Facebook ad.
The Art of the Click: How to Harness the Power of
Direct-Response Copywriting and Make More Sales by Glenn Fisher
This book isn’t strictly about PPC
but the art of copywriting and sales plays into online advertising.
“The Art of the Click”, says Glenn
Fisher, lies in the power of direct-response copywriting. He gives some
“industry secrets” on how to get better at copywriting and ultimately get more
clicks.
This is perhaps geared more toward
landing pages, but that’s all part of the sales funnel – and PPC professionals
play a vital role in that.
The Copy Book by D&AD
Originally published in 1995 but
updated for a modern audience, the D&AD’s “The Copy Book” showcases the art
of ad copy.
There’s a reason it was a
best-seller. “The Copy Book” features industry greats like David Abbott,
Barbara Notes, and Dan Wisden amongst many others.
While this is geared more toward
print, the advice from “The Copy Book” is easily transferrable into paid media.
It’s a must-have for any PPC professional.
BookBub Ads Expert: A Marketing Guide to Author Discovery by
David Gaughran
David Gaughran is a writer and his
tally of Air Miles would make Carmen Sandiego blush.
In his book, “BookBub Ads Expert: A
Marketing Guide to Author Discovery,” Gaughran takes a look at the niche market
of online advertising for books.
You might not be writing ads for
books but there’s plenty of transferable information for any industry as
Gaughran runs through how to make passive users into paying customers with the
right images, optimized targeting, and enhanced bid strategies.
Books for
Intermediate Users
At an intermediate level, you know
the basics well but you’re not an “expert” (whatever that means anyway). That
means there’s still room to grow and bolster your expertise.
And some literature can help you get
there. The following books will add to what you already know and build on it.
By David Ogilvy on Advertising Ogilvy
In the world of advertising, David
Ogilvy is a legend. Although he passed away in 1999, and advertising has
changed a lot since then, his words of wisdom still ring true today.
“Ogilvy on Advertising” contains over
200 pages of insight for anyone who needs it, from beginner to veteran – and
the intermediates in between.
The purpose of the book is to learn
how to gain more success with the ads you write.
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Says in the blurb, Ogilvy was “brutally frank and
witheringly opinionated,” so keep that in mind.
Anti-Sell: Marketing, Lead Generation & Networking Tips for
Freelancers Who Hate Sales Paperback by Steve Morgan
This is possibly one of the most
unorthodox books in the list but it’ll speak to a lot of freelancers out there.
“Anti-Sell” looks at sales from an unfavorable perspective.
In fact, the author Steve Morgan uses
the word hate.
So why is a book about hating sales
on the list?
Because freelancers still have to
work and “Anti-Sell” gives helpful advice on how to increase sales, lead
generation, and marketing.
What I like about “Anti-Sell” is the
fact it has case studies from freelancers to bolster the points made. It’s a
book of realism for the millions of freelancers out there.
Read Me: 10 Lessons for Writing Great Copy Paperback by Roger
Horberry and Gyles Lingwood
As soon as I read the blurb for “Read
Me,” I had to buy it.
At just under 200 pages, Gyles
Lingwood’s book gives 10 lessons on ways to write top quality copy.
Again, not a PPC book in itself but
knowing how to write good copy is a great additional skill for a PPC
professional and it goes hand-in-hand with writing paid ads in terms of:
·
Brevity
·
Promoting a brand
message
·
Solving a
customer’s problem
·
Conveying ideas in
a powerful way
How Brands Grow: What Marketers Don’t Know by Byron Sharp
To be at your best in PPC, you’ve got
to know how the industry works.
“How Brands Grow: What Marketers
Don’t Know” gives “evidence-based” information about how brands really grow, as
well as insights into marketing and advertising as disciplines.
This book is about demystifying
preconceived notions and getting to the heart of what actually works.
Books for Advanced
Users
The following books take PPC into the
technical realm.
AI is a major player in paid
advertising with its versatility and automative capabilities.
That’s why the next three books are
worth your time if you’re looking to take your PPC skills to the next level.
Digital Marketing in an AI World: Futureproofing Your PPC Agency
by Frederick Vallaeys
One fundamental text on the subject
of PPC and AI is “Digital Marketing in an AI World: Futureproofing Your PPC
Agency.”
Frederick Valleys’ of Optmyzr gives his expert opinion on how to stay
ahead as AI and machine learning become more ingrained in paid online
advertising.
The book details what AI can and
can’t do in PPC, what you can learn to boost your skill set, and where an
agency can place itself in the future.
It’s relatively short at 155 pages,
but there’s enough information to cover the essentials.
Paid Attention: Innovative Advertising for a Digital World by
Faris Yakob
The key to a good PPC ad is grabbing
and maintaining attention.
“Paid Attention: Innovative
Advertising for a Digital World” by Faris Yakob gives real-world examples of
campaigns that used behavioral marketing to grab eyes and turn that attention
into sales.
It’s another general advertising book
but the ideas from this book could work wonders for boosted lead gen and sales
metrics.
The Choice Factory: 25 behavioral biases that influence what we
buy by Richard Shotton
The final book in my list is also
related to behavior but from a more esoteric perspective. The Choice Factory
looks at how our decisions are influenced by learned behavior.
From there, Richard Shotton looks at
how those behavioral biases can be used in terms of marketing.
It might sound manipulative but you
won’t need a tinfoil hat to read this. It’s an interesting read about the
unconscious ways we act with research and analysis.
PC Is More Than
Just Writing Ads
There’s a divide between organic and
paid search and that there doesn’t need to be.
PPC isn’t like it was back when flashing
banner ads populated your CRT screen. It now uses sophisticated technology and
careful planning based on user data.
But none of this happens in a vacuum.
And certainly not on an individual basis.
That’s why the aforementioned list of
books can help widen the scope of what PPC means to the community, from
beginner to advanced level.
And because some of the books are
more generalized, they can be read by other digital marketing professionals and
form a link where there wasn’t one before.
So get reading!
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