Performance marketing makes sense: it’s a low-risk, flexible advertising strategy where you only pay when a desired action occurs. Clicks are probably the most popular form of performance marketing, popularized by Google, Facebook, and other social media platforms. Today, affiliate links are more popular than ever, with an annual growth rate of more than 10% according to Forrester.
Despite their popularity, clicks might not be the best use of your performance marketing budget. Pay-per-call marketing, for example, generates qualified, inbound calls that are ready to convert. This form of performance marketing might be your answer to achieving a higher ROI than you see with clicks.
Learn more about Pay-per-call >
Both call-based leads and click-based leads can be effective for your business, depending on your campaign goals. If you want to drive traffic to your website and raise awareness for your brand among your target consumer, buying clicks to a landing page is a good idea for you.
However, if your goal is to book more appointments or increase sales for your most profitable services, then buying high-intent calls is the better choice.
This table compares click-based leads to call-based leads to help you decide which performance marketing strategy is right for you.
With pay-per-call affiliate marketing, you can rely on experts who specialize in generating phone calls in your industry. They earn the consumer’s attention and trust and will connect the consumer to you when they’re ready to convert. You only pay for the calls that meet your requirements.
Pay-per-call features:
Read more: How Pay-Per-Call Works >
Pay-per-call also provides a more complete consumer journey than clicks. With clicks, the burden of converting consumers into leads falls on you and your landing page. But with calls, consumers are typically ready to buy when they make the call.
1. Consumer needs a service
2. Consumer searches for the service online to research service providers or book an appointment
- OR -
Consumer sees a potential solution to the service they need while browsing online or through an advertisement offline
3. Consumer calls the phone number advertised
4. Consumer is met by an automated front-end menu that will direct their call
5. Consumer presses the key that best describes their situation
6. Consumer is connected to the service provider’s business where their questions are answered and they can schedule service
1. Consumer needs a service
2. Consumer searches for the service online to research service providers or book an appointment
- OR -
Consumer sees a potential solution to the service they need while browsing online or through an advertisement offline
3. Consumer clicks or visits the service provider’s website
Pay-per-call is a great way to get in front of consumers who are in the top or middle of the marketing funnel, so with a good pay-per-call campaign, your brand can talk to consumers that you might not reach otherwise.
Pay-per-call does not require a large upfront investment. You can set up your campaign with a test budget of a few calls per day, and you will only pay for the calls that meet your requirements.
When you work with a pay-per-call provider, you set the parameters for qualified calls including target consumer profile, geography, hours, and duration, and you determine how many calls you want in an hour or day. Your provider will be able to scale your campaign to meet your demand as necessary.
If you are new to pay-per-call, we recommend partnering with a trusted pay-per-call network with experience generating quality calls in your industry. Your network will be able to help you set up, monitor, and optimize your first pay-per-call campaign. They’ll also be able to help you navigate the regulatory landscape of pay-per-call and find the best publishers with consistent call volume in your vertical.
If you’re still on the fence about pay-per-call, we’ve created the ultimate guide that covers all the basics: