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Click-through rate

 
Investment Dictionary: Click Through Rates

The percent of individuals viewing a Web page who click on a specific banner ad appearing on the page.

Investopedia Says:
Overall click-through rates have declined substantially since the early days of electronic commerce on the Web.


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Marketing Dictionary: click-through rates
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Percentage of viewers of an Internet advertisement who click on the ad to access the advertiser's web site. Although most banner ads are charged based on the number of viewing impressions (cost-per-impression), some are charged at a cost-per-click. Click-through rates can be inflated by as much as 15% by programs set up to automatically access changes to a web site, including the appearance of new banner ads. Cost-per-click can be calculated by multiplying the cost per impression by the click-through rate. For example: Impression CPM of $20 per thousand times a click rate of 1% equals $2.00 per click. Click-through rates are declining over time. Advertisers can currently expect a rate of 1% or less. The web site publisher generally earns $0.12 to $0.16 per click-through.

Procter and Gamble led the fight for click-through compensation, arguing that new interactive media allow for greater accountability. In defense, sellers of banner ad space pointed out that consumers infrequently request additional information on low-involvement products. They also reminded advertisers that the quality of the advertiser's banner has a large impact on the number of click-throughs achieved.

Wikipedia: Click-through rate
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Click-through rate or CTR is a way of measuring the success of an online advertising campaign. A CTR is obtained by dividing the "number of users who clicked on an ad" on a web page by the "number of times the ad was delivered" (impressions). For example, if a banner ad was delivered 100 times (impressions delivered) and one person clicked on it (clicks recorded), then the resulting CTR would be 1 percent.

Banner ad click-through rates have fallen over time, currently averaging much less than 1 percent.[citation needed] In most cases, a 2% click-through rate would be considered very successful.[citation needed] By selecting an appropriate advertising site with high affinity (e.g. a movie magazine for a movie advertisement), the same banner can achieve a substantially higher CTR. Personalized ads, unusual formats, and more obtrusive ads typically have higher click-through rates than standard banner ads.[citation needed]

CTR is most commonly defined as "number of clicks" divided by "number of impressions" and generally not in terms of the "number of persons" who clicked divided by the "number of impressions".[citation needed] This is an important distinction. As a person clicks a single advertisement multiple times, the CTR increases using the latter definition, whereas the CTR doesn't change using the former definition.

See also

References

  • Sherman, Lee and John Deighton, (2001), "Banner advertising: Measuring effectiveness and optimizing placement," Journal of Interactive Marketing, Spring, Vol. 15, Iss. 2.
  • Ward A. Hanson and Kirthi Kalyanam, (2007), Internet Marketing and eCommerce, Chapter8, Traffic Building, Thomson College Pub, Mason, Ohio.

External links


Best of the Web: Click-through rate
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Investment Dictionary. Copyright ©2000, Investopedia.com - Owned and Operated by Investopedia Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Marketing Dictionary. Dictionary of Marketing Terms. Copyright © 2000 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Click-through rate" Read more