Recent figures for % clicks on organic search results vs. paid results
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CEO at Econsultancy
01 November 2004 10:06am
Does anyone know of recent research which gives insight into the %, and nature, of clicks that go to organic search results versus paid search results?
The search engines themselves are, perhaps understandably, not keen to share these statistics.
According to our own primary research last year (Online Marketing Benchmarks) the split was roughly 80:20 in favour of organic, or natural, or editorial, search results i.e. the free ones.
According to Danny Sullivan, and figures coming out of the Search Engine Strategies events, this figure seems still be around the 70:30 or 80:20 mark.
According to recent Panlogic research (soon to be published at http://www.panlogic.co.uk/digital-marketing/press/pressassets.htm) which we have seen, which looks specifically at how the 23-34 age group uses the internet, "More than 90% know which results on a Google search have been paid for and fewer than 15% select those results."
Wherever you look the message certainly still seems to be that by far the greater volume of clicks come from natural rankings - assuming you can get them.
Online marketing manager at ASDA
01 November 2004 11:06am
You also need to add to this the conversion rate of this traffic - are people who click on paid-for listings looking to buy rather than research? I for one will browse through pages of free listings if I'm looking for info or undertaking research, but will rarely look at sponsored listings untill I'm about to buy.
Obviously this will always depend on your particular industrry/product and illustrates why working out yor ROI is so important.
On 10:06:44 1 November 2004 Ashley wrote:
>Does anyone know of recent research which gives insight
>into the %, and nature, of clicks that go to organic
>search results versus paid search results?
>
>The search engines themselves are, perhaps understandably,
>not keen to share these statistics.
>
>According to our own primary research last year
>((http://www.e-consultancy.com/publications/marketing_benc-
>hmarks/) Online Marketing Benchmarks) the split was
>roughly 80:20 in favour of organic, or natural, or
>editorial, search results i.e. the free ones.
>
>According to Danny Sullivan, and figures coming out of the
>Search Engine Strategies events, this figure seems still
>be around the 70:30 or 80:20 mark.
>
>According to recent Panlogic research (soon to be
>published at (http://www.panlogic.co.uk/digital-
>marketing/press/pressassets.htm)
>http://www.panlogic.co.uk/digital-
>marketing/press/pressassets.htm) which we have seen, which
>looks specifically at how the 23-34 age group uses the
>internet, "More than 90% know which results on a
>Google search have been paid for and fewer than 15% select
>those results."
>
>Wherever you look the message certainly still seems to be
>that by far the greater volume of clicks come from natural
>rankings - assuming you can get them.
E-marketing Trainer : Consultant : Author at Marketing Insights Limited
01 November 2004 13:52pm
Below some US research which suggests similar, but slightly more emphasis on Paid - possibly because these were for retail products.
Of course it also varies quite a lot according to the presentation of results in the different engines - you would expect it to be higher in favour of PPC in Yahoo! than Google.
This is how I summarised it:
"Users tend to choose the natural search results in preference to the paid search listings according to an iProspect sample. Figures for selection of natural search were 60.8% for Yahoo! and 72.3% for Google. This figure increases for experienced users. This suggests that companies who concentrate on paid listings only are limiting their visibility.
Links to research:
http://www.davechaffey.com/Internet-Marketing/C8-Communications/E-tools/Search-marketing/Search-behaviour-research
-- at --
02 November 2004 10:00am
This is a very relevant area but my main question is still: all else equal, how do the conversion rates compare for Organic v Paid clicks?
For instance If I search for a ’Fuji s5000 camera’, am I more likely to buy off a paid click than an Organic click?
and/or how does the conversion compare on more generic terms like ’digital camera’..again all else being equal.
there are costs with PPC and there are inherent costs with Organic SEO. I wonder how the ROI compares for different traffic?
feedback appreciated
Cheers
Jon Bovard
CEO at Econsultancy
03 November 2004 09:33am
Hi Jon
I guess things rarely are that ’equal’ as it will depend on business, target market and so on. In particular, I think it will depend on how well you already rank in natural search as to what you might need to invest in PPC. Also I am increasingly wary of conversion rates because they exclude all sorts of other, potentially irrelevant, ’noise’ - for example, we must get at least 500 unique visitors a day referred from organic search results which are completely irrelevant and therefore will not convert. Should those be counted or filtered out of our conversion rates for SEO?
That said, I can tell you what we are experiencing ourselves, bearing in mind we are a large content-rich well-ranked site with lots of inbound links (though we’d like more!) and we have quite a niche B2B market:
The reality for us in weighing up the SEO vs. PPC ROI argument is that for us to get a positive ROI from PPC we have to be targeted in our search phrases (to get low cost clicks and high resulting conversions) and this just doesn’t deliver any significant volume of business. Organic rankings, on the other hand, deliver the volume.
We did an experiment recently where we broadened the phrases that we were bidding on (e.g. from 'e-mail marketing vendor reviews' to just 'e-mail marketing') which usually also necessitated sending the clicks to less targeted pages on our site. This resulted in much higher traffic, much higher costs, and no noticeable increase in conversion rates so we've reverted to the more targeted approach. If we sold advertising on the site we might be able to justify the costs of buying traffic (to re-sell the page impressions) in this way, but as we don't, we can't.
For our 2005 budgeting we’re still actually spending more on PPC than SEO in absolute terms but this is only because of the media costs of PPC and, to be honest, if we dropped it completely it wouldn’t make a huge difference either way (and I’m tempted). Relatively speaking we’re increasing our SEO investment much more in 2005. But you never know when those algorithms might get changed and it is certainly a concern for us to be reliant on good organic rankings.
Ashley
On 10:00:56 2 November 2004 jbovard wrote:
CEO at Panlogic Ltd
03 November 2004 12:30pm
Ashley
We found this research to be invaluable ttp://www.enquiro.com/research.asp.
Kind regards
William
On 10:06:44 1 November 2004 Ashley wrote:
CEO at Panlogic Ltd
03 November 2004 12:35pm
Ashley
This is US biased but a great source of insite into user behaviour. Particularly insightful is the suggestion that experienced users use Google as a sub-browser ie not left clicking but rather right-clicking and using the "open new window" function from the search result page.
http://www.enquiro.com/research.asp
Best
William
On 10:06:44 1 November 2004 Ashley wrote: