Investigating customer click through behaviour with integrated sponsored and nonsponsored results


Autoria(s): Jansen, Bernard J.; Spink, Amanda H.
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

This paper reports findings from a study investigating the effect of integrating sponsored and nonsponsored search engine links into a single web listing. The premise underlying this research is that web searchers are chiefly interested in relevant results. Given the reported negative bias that web searchers have concerning sponsored links, separate listings may be a disservice to web searchers as it might not direct them to relevant websites. Some web meta-search engines integrate sponsored and nonsponsored links into a single listing. Using a web search engine log of over 7 million interactions from hundreds of thousands of users from a major web meta-search engine, we analysed the click-through patterns for both sponsored and nonsponsored links. We also classified web queries as informational, navigational and transactional based on the expected type of content and analysed the click-through patterns of each classification. The findings show that for more than 35% of queries, there are no clicks on any result. More than 80% of web queries are informational in nature and approximately 10% are transactional, and 10% navigational. Sponsored links account for approximately 15% of all clicks. Integrating sponsored and nonsponsored links does not appear to increase the clicks on sponsored listings. We discuss how these research results could enhance future sponsored search platforms.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28890/

Publicador

Inderscience

Relação

DOI:10.1504/IJIMA.2009.021951

Jansen, Bernard J. & Spink, Amanda H. (2009) Investigating customer click through behaviour with integrated sponsored and nonsponsored results. International Journal of Internet Marketing and Advertising, 5(1/2), pp. 74-94.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #sponsored search #web search engines #sponsored results #sponsored links #non-sponsored links #internet advertising #online auctions #paid search #organic results #internet marketing #customer click-through #click-through behaviour
Tipo

Journal Article