I think we all agree that being listed near the top gives you a generally better click through. So what about being top of the second page? would that be better than bottom of the first.
Personally i think this might be the case. As i have seen people browse the top, and then immediatly skip to the next page.
Anyone had exp of this?
If you assume 10% click a top listing & 1% click a bottom listing, and 30% of users browse to page 2 of the SERPs, for every 100 searches:
Position 1-2: 10 clicks
Position: 6-8: 1 click
Position: 9-10: 10% of 30 = 3 clicks
For these (totally arbitrary) figures, then position 9-10 will do better (and have a cheaper CPC).
However, CTR's will depend on the keyword, ad copy, ad position, user, and organic results - it's pretty impossible to hazard a guess really.
So being the top of page 2, requires you be the top of page 1 - unless you are talking about the sidebar ads. In those cases, test your ROI - I've seen where the bottom of page 1 is better than page 2, and vice versa - depends on the viewing habits of your demographic.
Based soley on my own usage, being in the top two "paid" results hurts more than it helps, since I naturally skip over those.
Unfortunately, I think, that how the people who use this board search, is not revelant to most advertisements - not to sound arrogant, but we know too much.
I was in one of my clients offies the other day, and he wanted to see what ads I had running for his company. He did a search, missed his ad, as it was in the premium position, as you mentioned - and the ad needed to be pointed out to him. He said he wasn't sure that he liked his ads being there as he missed them when actively looking for them.
An hour later, he was looking for a product on the web, did a search, and automatically clicked on the top premium ad as it looked revelant. After it was pointed out to him that he just clicked the ad position he missed, he thought about it, and then did a quick unofficial office survey, and realized that many people in his office click on those top ads without thinking of them as ads.
CTR and ROI speak louder than our search habits.