Search Engine Marketing (SEM)
Search Engine Marketing (SEM) is the practice of gaining visibility on search engine results pages through paid advertising, primarily paid search ads tied to keywords. It targets users at the moment they actively search for a solution, making it a high-intent channel.
In depth
SEM works by bidding on keywords in an auction where engines rank ads by bid and quality factors like relevance and landing-page experience, then show them above or beside organic results. Because searchers signal intent through their query, well-matched SEM campaigns often deliver the funnel's most ready-to-act traffic, though competition on commercial keywords can drive costs high. Tight keyword grouping, negative keywords, and message-match between ad and landing page are what keep quality scores up and costs down.
The common pitfall is winning expensive clicks but losing them on a generic landing page that ignores the specific query behind the visit. In a quiz-funnel workflow, each ad group can route to a tailored scorecard quiz that mirrors the searcher's problem, qualifies them, and captures contact data while intent is highest. The resulting lead scores reveal which keywords produce buyers, so you can shift budget toward profitable terms and treat SEM as a measurable pipeline source rather than a traffic expense.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between SEM and SEO?
SEM uses paid ads to appear on search results immediately, while SEO earns rankings organically over time without paying per click. Many teams run both, using SEM for fast, high-intent reach and SEO for durable, lower-cost traffic.
Is SEM the same as PPC?
They overlap heavily but are not identical. PPC is a pricing model used across many channels, while SEM specifically focuses on paid visibility within search engines, most of which is bought on a PPC basis.
Why is landing-page relevance important in SEM?
Search engines factor landing-page experience into quality scores, so a relevant page lowers your cost and lifts your ad position. Matching the page to the searcher's intent, such as with a tailored quiz, also raises conversion from high-intent clicks.