- Joined
- Sep 3, 2014
- Messages
- 6,230
- Likes
- 13,100
- Degree
- 9
Source: https://searchengineland.com/49-of-all-google-searches-are-no-click-study-finds-318426
So this company Jumpshot unleashed some data that says 49% of Google searches result in no click, an increase of 12% from the first quarter of 2016. The data breaks down like this (rounded):
Now think about crap like their rich snippets, travel and hotel and flights widgets, all that stuff is part of what's causing zero clicks, which is essentially, if I had to put a number on it, a "half-click on a Google-owned site."
The point being that not only have Google eroded the SERP traffic distribution down to 42% organic, but they've managed to capture most of the leftover to their own properties, ads, or widgets. And they have such a monopoly on search right now that they could drive that much, much further and still not hurt their revenues. When your brand name is a common verb, there's not much you can do to destroy your traffic at this point.
So taking all I said above, Jumpshot says that 75.6 billion clicks were available in Q1 2016. In Q1 2019, that has dropped by nearly 20% to 61.5 billion clicks. But that's not because Google is getting less traffic...
Other tidbits (Q1 2016 to Q1 2019):
So this company Jumpshot unleashed some data that says 49% of Google searches result in no click, an increase of 12% from the first quarter of 2016. The data breaks down like this (rounded):
- 49% of searches have no clicks
- 42% result in an organic result click
- 9% result in a paid advertisement click
Now think about crap like their rich snippets, travel and hotel and flights widgets, all that stuff is part of what's causing zero clicks, which is essentially, if I had to put a number on it, a "half-click on a Google-owned site."
The point being that not only have Google eroded the SERP traffic distribution down to 42% organic, but they've managed to capture most of the leftover to their own properties, ads, or widgets. And they have such a monopoly on search right now that they could drive that much, much further and still not hurt their revenues. When your brand name is a common verb, there's not much you can do to destroy your traffic at this point.
So taking all I said above, Jumpshot says that 75.6 billion clicks were available in Q1 2016. In Q1 2019, that has dropped by nearly 20% to 61.5 billion clicks. But that's not because Google is getting less traffic...
Other tidbits (Q1 2016 to Q1 2019):
- Organic CTR is down by 13%
- SERP Ad CTR is up by 75%!!!!
- Mobile is the majority of zero-click traffic due to "aggressive SERP features"
- Google is becoming less of a search engine and more of a portal