About eight percent of Internet users account for 85 percent of all clicks on Web ads, comScore reports. Just as significantly, just four percent of clickers account for 67 percent of all click through activity.
Predictably, there will be two major ways to look at the findings. The first is that online display ads "don't work." The second is that value is not captured by simple click through statistics.
The number of people who click on display ads in a month has fell from 32 percent of Internet users in July 2007 to16 percent in March 2009.
When first studied two years ago, about 3 percent of Internet users clicked on at least one display ad during the month. These clickers were segmented into heavy, moderate and light clicking segments.
In 2007 comScore, Starcom and Tacoda found that heavy clickers, representing six percent of U.S. Internet users, accounted for the top 50 percent of clicks. Moderate users, representing about 10 percent of Internet users, accounted for 30 percent of the clicks.
Light clickers, representing 20 percent of users, accounted for 16 percent of the clicks. By March 2009, those numbers had dropped substantially.
About four percent of Internet users in the most-recent survey would be considered "heavy" clickers. About four percent are moderate clickers. Some eight percent are light clickers.
The issue is what to make of the value of the 84 percent of Internet viewers who do not actually click on ads.
The results, comScore says, 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.
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.
“A click means nothing, earns no revenue and creates no brand equity," says John Lowell, Starcom USA SVP. “You want people to visit your website, seek more information, purchase a product, become a lead, keep your brand top of mind, learn something new, feel differently."
Regardless of whether the consumer clicked on an ad or not, the key is to determine how that ad unit influenced them to think, feel or do something they wouldn’t have done otherwise,” says Lowell.
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
4% of Users Account for 67% of Display Click Throughs
Labels:
online advertising,
social media
Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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