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5 ways to get PPC and SEO working together

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5 ways to get PPC and SEO working together

SEO and PPC are often at odds. Yet the things they “bicker over” are actually areas for improved workflow and channel optimization.

on June 29, 2022 at 8:00 am | Reading time: 7 minutes

Causes of friction between SEO and PPC often occur because we tend to use different sources of truth for each channel and build silos of communication between teams.

The main core areas of friction? Usually:

  • Reporting
  • Landing pages
  • Budget

Here are five ways you can get your PPC and SEO campaigns working together.

Tip 1: Collaborate on first-party data readiness

All digital marketing campaigns need to account for first-party data.

Understanding whether your brand is compliant requires input from both your SEO and PPC teams. 

If you rely heavily on remarketing campaigns (either because you’re in an expensive industry or the customer journey naturally takes multiple steps), you may find yourself increasingly reliant on native audiences.

While some of these audiences can be powerful, most of them underperform against audiences based on brand-tracked activity. 

Analytics audience segments can be a powerful way around fluctuating quality.

These audience segments still require consent and the new global site tag. Make sure your tag is updated to GA4. 

As you set up cookie consent, it’s important that the module follows cumulative layout shift (CLS) rules. As a general rule, modules on the bottom of the page tend to do better as they don’t distract from the user’s purchasing journey, and carry less CLS risk.

Make sure that first-party data collected is protected (either hashed and synced through tools, or immediately deleted once it’s been uploaded into ad accounts).

Collaborate with your SEO team’s content campaigns to ensure there are engaging hooks to create consensual conversations.  

A final note about analytics

One big drawback in the current roll-out of GA4 and conversion modeling is that advertisers need to choose between using analytics as their source of truth versus harnessing the power of enhanced conversions.

Enhanced conversions require using native Google conversion tracking. While enhanced conversion tracking will give you a better idea of what paid campaigns are doing, the numbers will always be off from what your SEO team reports.

In the interest of trust and data continuity, it may make sense to take the “hit” on PPC-reported numbers so long as the overall metrics point to positive ROAS.

Going with enhanced conversions means being ok that reports will be different and all parties need to be ok with that. 

Tip 2: Acknowledge and adapt based on domain structure choices

There are three ways to set up brand URLs:

  • One domain for everything (including international).
  • Subdomains for various initiatives.
  • Vanity domains and country domains.

Regardless of what path you take, PPC-specific pages need to be noindex/nofollow and allow for the adbot to access them so they can contribute to quality score. 

It’s rare that non-ecommerce brands will be served better by keeping everything on the same domain. That’s because there are strategic elements of a well SEO’d site that can run counter to PPC:

  • SEO doesn’t want duplicate content, and PPC benefits from testing templates.
  • SEO benefits from a robust navigation bar, while PPC does better with limited choices for user action.
  • SEO might need to redirect a page, which will cause the ad to get disapproved (three strikes in a 90-day period causes the ad account to get suspended).

These pitfalls are easily mitigated by having subdomains that can still benefit the main domain, without forcing creative or technical compromises between the SEO and PPC teams.

Additionally, a subdomain will allow you to keep the same analytics property and branding continuity.

If you are forced to use the same landing page for PPC and organic traffic, make sure that any redirects are communicated at least three to five days before it will happen. This will give the PPC team time to adjust the creative so you’re not wasting money sending traffic to a broken page until Google disapproves the ad.

Conveying inventory is also really important for both PPC and SEO.

If your product is constantly out of stock, it will eventually get penalized by the search engines. Make sure all campaigns are made aware of inventory issues so they can exclude products from paid campaigns, as well as apply the out-of-stock schema to the organic page.   

Tip 3: Bring transactional intent & CRO to all pages

SEO often gets unfairly pigeonholed as the “research” channel, while PPC is often accountable exclusively for transactions.

While there are some valid reasons to think about traffic in that way, there are lessons in building trust and enabling transactions each can learn from the other. 

For example, while it’s true that PPC pages lean towards less content, there still needs to be options to understand the product/service. This content (written or in video format) should be below the fold, keeping the path to conversion clear.

On a similar note, SEO requires rich and authoritative content to rank well. Yet if the path to conversion is buried (or not there at all), the traffic will be all fluff.

On first pass, you’d think this was a well-crafted page on the organic site. Yet this was actually a special PPC version of the page. 

Ironically, the SEO version of the page has clearer paths to conversion. If you’re going to take the time to make a PPC page, make sure it honors the rules of PPC.

This page gives the user enough context to know what they’re getting into as well as clear paths to conversion.

If the user wants more info, they can get it, but aren’t overwhelmed. They are also given the option to fill out a multi-step form that builds engagement with the brand.

The organic site is just as clean and easy to navigate as the paid variant. The CTAs are easy to identify and the path to conversion remains uninterrupted.

Tip 4: Use search query reports to inform campaigns

One of the best ways to get PPC and SEO working together is data sharing on search queries.

You’re already paying for the search data from the search terms report. Sharing that data, along with what’s converting and what’s not will help content teams know where to invest. 

Yet an easily missed opportunity is sharing the search terms from in-site search and search console.

Understanding what existing customers want and how they think will help prioritize keyword variants. 

Both channels should be sharing search term data so brands are able to get insights on the viability of content and auction prices.

Set up automatic report sharing on at least a quarterly basis so all digital channels are talking to each other.

Tip 5: Build in time to talk to each other

This may seem like a silly and trite suggestion, but the amount of good that can come from getting face time with your counterpart is immeasurable.

Whether it’s a 10-15 minute connect at the beginning of the week or a monthly collaboration session, taking the time to connect on the innovations and challenges in each domain will ensure the other can be prepared to mitigate or enhance.

If you’re an agency and your counterpart works for another agency, ask for joint meetings with the client or separately.

Showing your commitment to the brand’s success and collaborative attitude will go miles for client retention and ensure your great work isn’t accidentally countered. 

PPC and SEO don’t need to be at odds

Overcome the friction through collaboration and owning where one can mitigate weaknesses and amplify profit. 


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


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