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Conversions by Positioning

         

eWhisper

6:31 pm on Oct 13, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It's been mentioned around here many times that conversion rates are often higher at lower positions.

This ClickZ article [clickz.com] both confirms and denies those statistics.

The research confirmed that, for high-volume keywords, conversion rates generally fall as rank decreases. However, when looking at the bottom 80 percent of keywords based on click volume, conversion rates often converted at higher levels than the top ranked listings.

Robsp

7:20 pm on Oct 13, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Nice article and confirms most of our daily findings. A little more detail in the article would be nice :)

FromRocky

12:58 am on Oct 14, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It depends on your goal of investment whether you go for conversion rate, ROI or net earnings. Conversion rates or ROI may be higher at lower positions but net earnings will be higher at a higher position. For a low budget advertiser or who want to divert the investment, a lower position will be a good option.

Syzygy

10:19 am on Oct 14, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The headline to the article...

Higher paid search rank not always better...

...really sums it up, although the piece is somewhat vague overall. My own findings are that mid-to-lower keywords can perform as well as those in the top three slots.

Is this because well written ads negate the need for a higher cpc - people are intelligent enough to view the serp & ads and then make up their own mind what to click?

Or, do some people perceive that ads shown lower down the page are likely, somehow, to be more pertinant to their needs - in the same way that research in the past has shown that a reasonable percentage of people looking at serps can be somewhat untrusting of the top 2 results returned?

In answer to both questions: Yes - but not always.

More detailed research needs to be done otherwise everything, like my own comments here, are merely anecdotal.

Syzygy