Does an Organic Search Presence Help Paid Result Performance?A study from a couple of NYU Stern
professors has found that organic search engine results can play a
direct role in whether or not a paid listing is clicked. Basically, if
this research is any indication, if your business has both a paid
result and an organic result appear at the same time, you have a better
chance of your paid result getting clicked than if the organic result
had not appeared. Professors Anindya Ghose and Sha Yang have highlighted the following findings:
- On average, the impact of organic listings on paid
advertising is 3.5 times stronger than vice-versa, possibly because of
the tendency of consumers to trust organic listings more than paid ads.
- The positive association between paid and organic listings increases
advertisers’ profits by at least 6.15% when compared to profits in the
absence of either of them. The positive association is strongest when
advertiser-specific keywords are used and weakest when brand-specific
and generic keywords are used.
- Click-through rates, conversion rates and total revenues are higher
when both paid and organic listings are present simultaneously than
when paid search ads are absent.
- The combined click-through rates are 5.1% higher when paid and
organic listings are present simultaneously than when only the organic
listings are present.
- The combined conversion rate increases 11.7% when paid and organic
listings are present simultaneously than when organic listings alone
are present.
- Paid search advertising drives up to 54% of total revenue growth.
The
professors used "a unique panel dataset of consumer responses to
keyword ads on Google" to conduct their research. The complete findings
from the study are evidently available in a paper entitled "Analyzing the Relationship between Organic and Sponsored Search Advertising: Positive, Negative or Zero Interdependence?" It's 52 pages long.
"These findings have important implications for the incentives of
search engines to strategically modify the rankings of their organic
search listings in order to boost their revenues from paid search
advertisements," says Professor Ghose.
Ghose's point is an interesting one. Nobody's making any accusations
here, but would search engines tweak organic results specifically with
the goal of increasing the performance of paid results, and bringing in
more revenue?
by Chris Crun - www.webpronews.com
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