Posts Tagged organic SERPS

8% of Internet Users Account for 85% of all Clicks

The unclicking 84% A Sethism!

Mark points us to this great set of stats.

Basically, all of the clicks for all the ads online come from only 16% of the surfers, and most of them come from just 4% of all internet users.

So, if you optimize your ads for clicks, it means you’re ignoring a huge population.

If your business is built around the kind of person who clicks, you win. If it isn’t, you either need to not buy ads online or buy ads optimized for attention and familiarity, not clicks.

Imagine that only left-handed people clicked on ads (it’s about the same percent). What are you going to do if you make a product for the right-handed portion of the population?

It’s okay to make an ad that isn’t easy to measure. If it works, that’s enough.

by Jack Loechner, Tuesday, October 13, 2009, 8:15 AM

The results of an update to the comScore highly publicized "Natural Born Clickers" research, conducted two years ago with Starcom USA and Tacoda, indicate that the number of people who click on display ads in a month has fallen from 32% of Internet users in July 2007 to only 16% in March 2009, with an even smaller core of people (representing 8% of the Internet user base) accounting for 85% of all clicks.

Presented by comScore chairman Gian Fulgoni and Kim McCarthy, manager, Research & Analytics at Starcom, at the iMedia Brand Summit in San Diego on September 14, 2009, the original research showed that 32% of Internet users clicked on at least one display ad during the month. These clickers were segmented into Heavy, Moderate and Light Clicking segments based on the group of users (heavy), middle 30% (moderate), and bottom 20% (light).

In 2007, comScore, Starcom and Tacoda found that Heavy clickers, representing 6% of U.S. Internet users, accounted for the top 50% of clicks, Moderate users, 10% of Internet users, accounted for 30% of the clicks, and Light clickers, 20% of users, accounted for 16% of the clicks. By March 2009, those numbers had dropped substantially:

  • 4% of Internet users are Heavy clickers
  • 4% of users are Moderate clickers
  • 8% are Light clickers

Heavy, Moderate, and Light Display Ad Clicker Analysis (Total US Home, Work and University Locations)

 

Share of All Internet Users

Share of All Click-Throughs

 

July ’07

March 09

July ’07

March ‘09

Total clickers

32%

16%

100%

100%

Heavy clickers

6

4

50

67

Moderate clickers

10

4

30

18

Light clickers

16

8

20

15

Non clickers

68

84

0

0

Source: comScore, September 2009

Linda Anderson, comScore VP of marketing solutions and author of the study, concludes that "…  marketers who attempt to optimize their advertising campaigns solely around the click are assigning no value to the 84% of Internet users who don’t click on an ad… "

The results underscore the notion that, for most display ad campaigns, the click-through is not the most appropriate metric for evaluating campaign performance. Rather, advertisers should consider evaluating campaigns based on their view-through impact, says the report.

Despite the precipitous decline in clicks, says the report,  comScore is advocating looking beyond the click because other comScore research has shown that online display ads generate significant lift in trademark search, online and offline sales, and brand-site visitation across all verticals, among those internet users who were exposed to the online ad campaigns – whether they clicked on the ad or not. These results, compiled in comScore’s influential "Whither the Click?" white paper, were reported in the June 2009 issue of the Journal of Advertising Research.

Display Ad Lift (Site Reach Weeks 1-4 After First Exposure)

Vertical

Control

Test

% Lift

Average all

4.5%

6.6%

46%

Automotive

0.9

1.9

114

Finance

1.3

2.3

86

CPG & restaurant

0.6

1.1

77

Retail & apparel

9.1

13.8

52

Media & entertainment

7.0

10.0

42

Electronics & software

5.8

7.2

25

Travel

4.8

5.8

21

Source: comScore, June 2009

John Lowell, Starcom USA SVP/Director, Research & Analytics, notes that "a click earns no revenue and creates no brand equity…  online advertising (is) certainly not to generate clicks… (but) to visit website, seek more information, purchase a product, become a lead, keep brand top of mind… "

For additional information, please visit the SMV Group here.

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