From Google Ads to Facebook Ads, we've managed millions of PPC spend. Follow our strategies to help generate more conversions for your hotel.
Looking for more guests? Follow the strategies of a results-driven PPC management company with more than 19 years of experience helping hotels improve their paid advertising campaigns.
To target relevant audiences and grow brand awareness, our paid advertising managers can help your hotel leverage Facebook campaigns, Google ads, or even Bing paid ads.
We have experience with a wide variety of hotels (and other industries) including:
The act of creating and optimizing paid ads campaigns for hotels is known as hotel PPC management. That is an incredibly simple explanation though, so let's dive a little deeper.
To provide premium PPC ads management, a paid advertising firm for hotels should get to know you and your goals. You can use this information to determine the next steps, since paid advertising for a nearby hotel differs from paid advertising for an ecommerce-focused hotel.
For example, local hotels are often only interested in contact form submissions or phone calls. This can be accomplished through paid ads that generates traffic to an optimized landing page or sales funnel. If those digital assets don't yet exist, or need substantial improvement, we recommend you start with Google Local Service Ads or Facebook Lead Forms.
Alternatively, ecommerce-minded hotels tend to be interested in online sales. Using paid advertising, you can grow traffic to a page optimized for products or categories. In some cases, it might even make sense to include Google Shopping Campaigns in your strategy. We've even utilized sales funnels to help sell products, subscriptions, and services.
The next step in hotel PPC management is understanding the metrics that will be used to optimize and scale. For some hotels, that means looking to platforms like Google Analytics. However, there are other options out there too, like Wicked Reports, Triple Whale, or Northbeam.
To be successful with paid ads, your hotel should utilize multiple advertising strategies and marketing tools. For example, the best hotel PPC advertising packages will include strategies to:
We are a team of PPC advertising specialists with extensive knowledge in the latest PPC trends for hotels and other industries.
Here are some of our best tips to follow for keyword research, audience research, landing page / sales funnel optimization, conversion rate optimization, and ad creation.
Keyword research for hotels is mostly used for Google Ads and Bing Ads search network campaigns. After all, search ads only show up based on what your hotel targets on Google or Bing.
For example, a person searching for a hotel nearby might search "local hotel" on a search engine. Knowing to target that exact phrase wouldn't require in-depth keyword research.
What if, however, that exact match keyword wasn't producing enough search volume and the hotel wanted to increase their traffic and conversions? To solve the problem, keyword research would be required.
The next steps might involve the PPC advertising manager discussing with the hotel about what types of products / services they want to target more often and within what geographic areas. It might also require some broadening of the keyword targeting.
For instance, the PPC manager might discover high search volume for "nearby hotels" or even "hotel services." The first phrase is targeting a type of business or organization in the area. In the second phrase, a service is being targeted, which might result in a more lucrative conversion opportunity.
You can also benefit from keyword research when building out negative keyword lists. Negative keywords are used to stop your paid ads from showing in search queries that you know won't bring in guests.
For example, someone searching for "free services from hotels" or "how to advertise to hotels" isn't likely to convert with your hotel. Your paid advertising may appear if you use broad keyword targeting without negative keywords such as "free" or "advertise".
You can see that as you scale your ads and reduce wasted ad spend, the needs for keyword research become more complex.
When you hear audience research talked about for hotel PPC advertising campaigns, it is often within the scope of scaling social ads on Facebook and Instagram. There are options within Google Ads and Bing Ads for audience targeting as well though.
We'll review some audience research and targeting history within Facebook Ads.
Hotel paid ads managers used Facebook's custom audiences extensively in the past. After all, one of the most attractive features of the Facebook Ads platform was the data it collected on its users, which hotels lined up to exploit.
As time went on, data privacy and machine learning both had an impact on custom audiences.
When Apple released its iOS 14.5 update, they included a pop up message that allowed users to easily opt out of personalized ad tracking. This had a negative impact on Facebook's ability to track user behavior on mobile devices. In fact, it even affected the accuracy of ad attribution reporting.
Then came improvements to their machine learning algorithms, which greatly diminished the need for custom audiences and lookalike audiences for most ad companies for hotels. Their algorithm has become so good at understanding your ideal audience that you typically do more harm than good by choosing your own interest-based targeting.
While there will still be plenty of hotel paid advertising agencies relying on custom audiences, the trend is moving toward broad targeting. You can see it in every update within Facebook Ads Manager as they slowly remove interest-based targeting options, or push for "Advantage Detailed Targeting."
This blog article from Social Media Examiner does a good job of talking about recent changes to audience targeting, if you'd like a second opinion.
This isn't to say audience research and targeting is going away. There will always be targeting options that can be manipulated within hotel ad campaigns to squeeze a little extra performance.
The quality of your landing page will be a big factor in the success of your hotel paid advertising campaigns.
When we take on the management of a PPC advertising campaign for hotels, we start by looking over the landing pages to see if they follow best practices. Here are some of the factors we look for in this review:
There are so many factors that come into the design and development of a quality landing page. Here is a great blog article about what makes a results-driven landing page.
Please, don't spend money on paid advertising until you have a landing page that follows best practices! Ideally, you should never consider your landing page to be finished. Try running A/B testing every few months to continue refining your sales pitch.
As an alternative to a landing page, you might want to consider building out one or more sales funnels. We rely heavily on sales funnels for lead generation, email audience building, and even online purchases.
For example, we have a client that promotes an online fitness challenge that you could even join from your local area. While managing their digital marketing we built multiple sales funnels within Click Funnels. Here are some of the funnels we made:
There are many different types of funnels, so your hotel isn't limited to only these options. Just keep in mind these can be incredibly helpful for gauging interest in a product or service, building out an email subscriber base, and selling a product or service online.
Having a clear understanding of your conversion rate is critical to making informed advertising decisions. The average conversion rate is between 1-3%, but that varies greatly between industries, products, and services.
Let's run through a basic scenario to help illustrate the impact of conversion rates.
For most hotels, this return on ad spend wouldn't be acceptable. Sadly, we often see this type of ROAS when jumping into new client accounts.
To improve the situation, you hire a paid advertising firm to modify your campaign settings, ad creatives, and landing page experience.
Let's assume those improvements bring your conversion rate up from 1% to 2%. That means for every 100 visits to your website you now sell 2 products. This is twice the return on ad spend! You might be profitable now selling that product or service, if your margins are good.
Understanding your conversion rate, and knowing how to improve it, can be crucial to the management of your PPC advertising.
This is potentially one of the most important aspects of a Facebook Ads account, but it also applies to Google Display Ads.
When you run Facebook Ads or Instagram Ads for hotels, you are mostly targeting a cold audience that is more interested in quickly scrolling by advertisements in favor of seeing what their friends and family are up to online.
You should develop an understanding of how to capture someone's attention in a split second.
To do this, you need to build out good looking ad creatives that make someone stop for a second and say to themselves, "wait a second, what...?"
This doesn't happen by running the same ad creative over and over and over again. Even if it is a good ad, it will eventually become stale. You should change things up frequently, even if you are just targeting people nearby.
If you don't change out your ad creatives and test new ideas, you'll suffer from what is called "ad fatigue." This is the state in which your target audience has already seen your ad so many times that they instinctively scroll by it without ever interacting with your brand.
Don't be caught in this situation. You should understand when to pause an ad because it isn't performing as well as it once did. You should understand when to test new ideas, especially if you are emotionally attached to an ad that you spent a lot of time making.
Our PPC management service fees are determined by the amount of time you wish us to spend on your campaigns every month. Our PPC ads management plans start at the price listed below, however, we are open to discussing an increased budget if your ad spend or service requirements are higher.
There are numerous ways to run paid ads for your hotel. Let's discuss some of the most common paid advertising being run for hotels.
If you have a hotel, you can run local ads on almost any advertising platform. Depending on the nature of your local area hotel, you may find better success in one platform versus another. It is important to try out every available option to see which works best for your needs. Let's talk about a few local advertising choices.
From Google, you'll have two options.
As a first step, you can run traditional Google Adwords, possibly using their newer Performance Max campaign type. This is a very dynamic ad campaign type which utilizes multiple headlines, images, videos, and service locations to allow the Google algorithm to find the best combination of assets to bring you customers. We often use Performance Max campaigns for professional services companies, such as accountants, lawyers, dentists, and physicians.
The second option from Google, if you are in a qualifying business industry, is to check out their Local Service Ads. Using Local Service Ads, you get charged a flat fee for each lead the platform generates. Home service contractors, such as plumbers, electricians, roofers, and heating installers, frequently use Google Local Service Ads.
You can also use Facebook Ads to target people in your local area. This is a little more straightforward, since it just involves setting up a campaign that has ad sets with geographic restrictions. We often rely on localized Facebook Ads for all types of hotels.
Almost all online ads you see on social networks qualify as social media marketing.
The trick to social ads is keeping the ad creatives fresh. If you don't rotate out ad creatives every few weeks your campaign performance will slowly decrease. For higher spending ad campaigns, you might need to look at weekly ad creative changes.
One of the best things about social media ads is that you can target audiences who aren't yet aware of your product or service. It's quite the opposite when you run search advertising since you only get to show them when someone searches for what your hotel offers.
That benefit can also be a curse though, since conversion rates are often lower when people aren't closer in the revenue funnel of making an immediate purchase.
If you know people are searching online for the products or services you offer, you'll want to invest in search advertisements.
There are some people out there who refer to this as hotel Search Engine Marketing, or SEM for short. This is just a different way of explaining search ads, which are advertisements placed on the search results page of a search engine above the SEO placements.
If you've been running search ads on Google for a while and have been successful at it, we suggest considering copying the campaigns over to the Bing Ads platform. As of an October 2022 study from StatCounter, about 3.57% of online users rely on Bing for their primary search engine.
You'll find display ads on all kinds of message boards, chat rooms, game lounges, news websites (sometimes even local news stations), gossip websites, and more.
These are commonly used within the Google Ads and Bing Ads platforms.
To get started with display ads, you just need a set of ad creatives in different image sizes. It also helps to have a general idea of your target audience, but both ad platforms have their own algorithms that help you produce results from your ad spend.
Not everyone is going to convert during their first experience with your hotel website, landing page, or sales funnel.
It is almost always recommended to set up retargeting ads to help bring people back to your website after they've had time to think through different options.
You can run retargeting ads on any ad platform, too.
This type of search ad was popularized by Google Shopping Campaigns.
To get started with Google Shopping, you just need an ecommerce website, a product feed (CSV or TXT), a Google Merchant Center account, and a Google Ads account for your hotel.
With these tools in place, you'll be able to provide Google Ads an updated list of all your accurate product data, including the title, SKU, image, price, and availability. From there, they will be able to find the right types of search queries to display your products at the top of the search results page.
You can run video ads on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and other social networking websites.
If you are interested in running YouTube Ads, you'll just need to set up a video ads campaign in Google Ads.
To run video ads in Facebook or Instagram, you'll need a working Facebook Ads account.
Both ad platforms offer excellent conversion opportunities with video ads. We frequently use video ads to showcase product launches, custom services, personal introductions, and more!
If you have the budget to support ad creatives in video format, look to implement them into your paid advertising campaigns.