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Who in the SERP's gets the most clicks?

Which sites get clicked the most from the Google search results page?

         

must learn more

1:04 pm on Mar 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi,
Is there a way to find out which sites, from the ones that appear in the SERPS on Google, for a particular search phrase, get cliked the most?

Your answers will be greatly appriciated! Thanks!

Lorel

5:51 pm on Mar 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Yes, buy out Google.

Tearabite

6:12 pm on Mar 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Wouldn't it look something like this?

#1) 99% of the clicks
#2) .02%
#3) .001%
and so on?

arran

6:21 pm on Mar 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Maybe more like:

#1 (organic) - 35%
#2 (organic) - 15%
#3 (organic) - 7.5%
#4 (organic) - 5%
#5 (organic) - 2.5%
#6 (organic) - 2.5%
#7 (organic) - 2.5%
#8 (organic) - 2.5%
#9 (organic) - 5%
#10 (organic) - 10%

#1 (paid) - 6.5%
#2 (paid) - 3%
#3 (paid) - 2%
#4 (paid) - 1%

Although throw in some exceptionally relevant/well-written titles/summaries...

arran.

must learn more

8:11 am on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Thanks for your responses. So I can safely conclude that the page that is no.1 in the SERP's gets the most clicks, right?

percentages

8:24 am on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>So I can safely conclude that the page that is no.1 in the SERP's gets the most clicks, right?

Yes! You can!

arran's #'s are in the same ballpark as mine. It depends upon the search term and site. Some close sales better and cause people to cease searching.

arran's numbers for "paid search" are a few % higher than mine, but it all depends upon your market.

#1 definatley gets the most clicks, for me # 10 gets more clicks than the #1 sponsor, but it depends upon the market and competition.

In highly competitive markets the true SE results have a better chance of looking good, therefore the sponsored clicks will be lower.

must learn more

9:05 am on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Would it be wrong to think that the un-educated or in-experienced web surfer would not be able to diffrentiate between the paid and the organic results and so he might click on the paid result that appears right on the top of the search results with the light blue background (not sure of the background colour!)

So will the paid results with the light blue background get the most clicks?

percentages

9:11 am on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>So will the paid results with the light blue background get the most clicks?

Nope....never, try it out!.

Write the best Ad possible and see what happens!

If you get an 8% CTR in a competitive field you did great. Don't worry if you only got a 2% CTR though, that wouldn't be so bad!

idolw

2:11 pm on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



i have keywords with average monthly CTR over 30% in my adwords campaigns. that means that my ads are clicked every 3 impressions.
i bid on competitive keywords.

Pedent

2:57 pm on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Maybe more like:
#1 (organic) - 35%
#2 (organic) - 15%
#3 (organic) - 7.5%
#4 (organic) - 5%
#5 (organic) - 2.5%
#6 (organic) - 2.5%
#7 (organic) - 2.5%
#8 (organic) - 2.5%
#9 (organic) - 5%
#10 (organic) - 10%

This seems pretty plausible to me, but I think there's a bigger gap between numbers 3-4 and numbers 5-8.

I find it infuriating that going up from numbers 9-10 can mean less clicks, not more, but I guess that should just be an extra spur to push on to the top slots.

nedguy

3:34 pm on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Must Learn More - Would it be wrong to think that the un-educated or in-experienced web surfer would not be able to diffrentiate between the paid and the organic results and so he might click on the paid result that appears right on the top of the search results with the light blue background (not sure of the background colour!)

There was some research on this, reported by Associated Press just over a year ago (24 Jan 05) but based on surveys conducted in May-June 04...

Only 1 in 6 users of Internet search engines can tell the difference between unbiased search results and paid advertisements, a new survey finds...
Google Inc. marks such ads as "sponsored links," Yahoo Inc. terms them "sponsor results" and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN uses "sponsored sites." Such ads are placed to the right and on top of the regular search results, in some cases highlighted in a different color.
But only 38 percent of Web searchers even know of the distinction, and of those, not even half 47 percent say they can always tell which are paid.

Full story on MSNBC [msnbc.msn.com]

[edited by: tedster at 6:07 pm (utc) on Mar. 18, 2006]
[edit reason] shorten quote [/edit]

Haecceity

7:28 pm on Mar 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The figures people have been giving are just guesses -- and not very good ones at that.

I have the luxury of knowing what my stats have been for my main site (generally in #8 or #9 position for a one-word competitive search) and the stats for a site that generally comes up #1 or #2 for the same search. The guy doesn't know or doesn't care that his stats are accessible to anyone because they're not password protected. Presumably he's relying on obscurity as security, but I guessed the URL.

Anyway, for this one word search he gets 2 to 3 times as many visitors from Google as my site does. Overall, both of our sites have the same amount of traffic because I get more hits for a large variety of 2 and 3 word phrases.

What's more, one person in three who visits his site for this keyphrase takes one look at the index page and backs out in a hurry. It's not exactly amateurish, but it doesn't convey a sense of professionalism. I wish all the other sites above mine also left their stats exposed!

TechPad

2:19 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



A company conducted research using an eye scanner and graphically represented the results by color.

You can read about it here:

[enquiro.com...]

Great info for this question.

Eazygoin

2:30 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Intereting stuff TechPad :-)

Allwoing for 'laboratory' conditions, it makes full sense, and isn't founded on assumptions.

annej

5:05 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Just like people scan a web page some people scan the search results. Having a good title and good meta description can make the difference with scanners. So you can up your chances of getting clicked even if you are down in the middle of the page.

Of course there are still a lot of people who just click the #1 result. But with many top results having titles like "widgets buy widgets widgets are great" and a meta description that looks about the same there is a good chance searchers will look on down.

wheelie34

8:28 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



"widgets buy widgets widgets are great"

I watched my wife surfing the other day and noticed she went down to result 4, I asked why, she stated look at the words (she meant the title) it was similar to above but result 3 and 4 had proper meaning

bobmark

9:05 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think at this BD moment, everything is out the window - at least for some search terms.

On a several organic results for competitive terms I see 1, 2, sometimes 3 being unrelated (typically containing one of the terms but in a totally different context or with one key search term virtually ignored).

So, for example a search for CITYNAME WIDGETS (where the searcher is most interested in widgets in a particular city) puts several WIDGETS results from any city ahead of CITYNAME WIDGETS in the organic results. This can reach ridiculous levels if CITYNAME is on a diferent continent than the first several results.

And I am not talking about general widgets sites with widgets in all cities coming first. I mean highly specific widgets for one particular cityname coming 1,2.

My suspicion is the general distribtion suggested is probably about right IF #1 is sematically correct but lately on Google it often seems not.

Haecceity

9:40 pm on Mar 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



TechPad: Most interesting, and in the same ballpark that I suggested from my experience of "industrial espionage".

annej: I agree completely that being further down the results isn't necessarily a barrier. For one thing your title and snippet may be better crafted, as you suggested. And as I suggested your whole site may be better designed of more informative, meaning that you get more "secondary" traffic, after the surfer has tried sites above yours, and also you can get (as I've found) as much or even more traffic overall by being found on a greater variety of search terms. Still, movin' on up in the results is something that makes me happy.

annej

4:00 am on Mar 20, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



even more traffic overall by being found on a greater variety of search terms

This is such an important point. It's great to rank well on your sites top keywords but in truth we all get a huge number of people finding pages on our sites through thousands of specific key word phrases.

tedster

4:31 am on Mar 20, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Totally agree - it makes a strong impression when your site comes up on a wide variety of searches around its topical area. If you are into building a business long-term, this is a good place to be.