A recently conducted study reveals that it is very important to rank very high in Google’s search results. The average click-through rate of the top results is almost 40%. The cost per click as well as the amount of searches is also an influencing factor on the clicks. What is the implication of this to your efforts toward search engine optimization?
A recently
conducted study reveals that it is very important to rank very high in Google’s
search results. The average click-through rate of the top results is almost
40%. The cost per click as well as the amount of searches is also an
influencing factor on the clicks. What is the implication of this to your
efforts toward search engine optimization?
The Exact
Numbers
Based on the
study, the web pages that occupy the first position generates 36% CTR (Click
Through Rate). Second position’s CTR is 13%, third position up to the 10th
position gets 10%, 8%, 6%, 4%, 3.8%, 3% and 2% respectively. You can see that
the CTR for first position is higher than CTR of position 2-5 put together.
It may surprise
you to know that the 11th position generates slightly more clicks compared to
the 10th position. Perhaps, the reason may be traceable to the fact that
position 11 tops page two of Google results.
There is
relationship between CPC (Cost per Click) for AdWords and CTR
Based on the
information curled from the study, high CPC (Cost Per Click) on Google AdWords
generates lower click-through rate for organic results.
For a keyword
that has a high Click Per Cost, the first organic result generates not up to 20
percent of the clicks. On the other hand, for keywords that have low CPC, the
first result gets over 30 percent of the entire clicks.
The
click-through rate is also Influenced by the search volume
The study
further reveals that keywords with high number of searches generate higher
click-through rate for the first position – the rate is 32% for widely
sought-after keywords, while long tail keywords get 25%.
The overall
click-through rate for long tail keywords on page one of Google result is better
– 9% vs. 5% for popular keywords.
What is the
implication of this to your SEO efforts?
● More than they appear on the surface, popular keywords are quite
competitive.
If your optimization efforts are geared towards highly competitive
keywords, you are not likely to see much result until you make it to the first
5 results.
● Long tail keywords optimization is a sensible thing to do.
There are several benefits attributed to long tail keywords; compared to
popular keywords, long tail keywords are more targeted and the conversion rate
is much higher as well. You are likely to generate more visitors via your long
tail keywords; the exception is if you are ranking in the top 5 results for a
keyword that is popular. Another benefit is that ranking high for long tail
keywords is much easier since the competition is less.
For a larger part of the businesses,
it is quite easier to rank in page one for several long tail keywords
and this is more beneficial compared to generating high rankings for only a
couple of keywords that are popular.
Indeed, high
ranking is very important; it is still far more valuable to rank on page one
for a relevant keyword to your offerings than elsewhere.
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| About the author |
Jeff Matthews is a freelance writer who wrights about Internet marketing ideas To know about this subject and Jeff please visit http://www.aceinternetmarketing.net |
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