OK, we all know that user acquisition cost is how much money you spend in order to get 1 customer. But my question is how do you get to that number?
Let's assume a real case scenario:
Bob is in the industry that has 3 major competitors. The service they sell costs (on average) $15/month. Top keyword bids are $0.10 per click.
Bob has $100 to spend on targeted keyword advertising every month. He bids $0.10/click and receives 1,000 targeted clicks per month. Question is - how can you safely estimate what percentage of those visitors will sign-up for a service? Is it 1 (0.1%)? Is it 5 (0.5%)? Is it 10 (1%)? In other words, what I am trying to understand is how do people estimate their conversion on targeted traffic they buy on AdWords, etc? Will gaining 1 client take 250 targeted clicks? 500? 1000?
If you were to estimate revenue projections for 12-36 months ahead in your business plan, you would need that information as its critical to see what client growth is. So how do you get that conversion percentage? Do you just guess it?
Thanks for any insight. I asked this on the "other" forum, but no one seems to have any guesses.
Let's assume a real case scenario:
Bob is in the industry that has 3 major competitors. The service they sell costs (on average) $15/month. Top keyword bids are $0.10 per click.
Bob has $100 to spend on targeted keyword advertising every month. He bids $0.10/click and receives 1,000 targeted clicks per month. Question is - how can you safely estimate what percentage of those visitors will sign-up for a service? Is it 1 (0.1%)? Is it 5 (0.5%)? Is it 10 (1%)? In other words, what I am trying to understand is how do people estimate their conversion on targeted traffic they buy on AdWords, etc? Will gaining 1 client take 250 targeted clicks? 500? 1000?
If you were to estimate revenue projections for 12-36 months ahead in your business plan, you would need that information as its critical to see what client growth is. So how do you get that conversion percentage? Do you just guess it?
Thanks for any insight. I asked this on the "other" forum, but no one seems to have any guesses.