[Estimated read time: 13 minutes]
Last month we discussed why organic CTR is kind of a big deal. I believe that click-through rate is tremendously valuable and that achieving above-average CTRs can lead to better rankings, particularly on long tail queries.
But even if you don't believe click-through rate can impact rankings, optimizing for a higher CTR still means you're optimizing toward the goal of attracting more clicks. More clicks means more traffic and higher conversion rates — because if you can make people more worked up about your product/solution, that carries through to conversions, leads, and sales.
All great, important things!
So what the heck — why isn't every SEO obsessed with raising organic click-through rates like myself and many other PPC marketers are?
Why isn't CTR optimization a bigger deal in organic search today?
For starters, it's ridiculously hard to tell what your organic CTR is for a keyword. Thanks, Google.
In the Search Analytics section of the Search Console, Google only gives you a sampling of 1,000 queries. Because you only have access to a sample of keywords, you can't arbitrarily find out a CTR for any individual keywords.
It's much easier to find our your CTR in paid search with AdWords. You can type in any word and find out what your CTR is for that word.
Another challenge preventing CTR from being a bigger deal today is Google Analytics, which hasn't provided keywords to us for years. You can figure out the number of impressions and clicks for your top 1,000 pages, but the limited query data (1 percent of total) is a killer. It might be easy to see your CTR data, but it's hard to know whether what you can see is good or not.
Also, many people just don't realize how much leverage there is in increasing CTR. Donkey headlines (bottom 10%) tend to do around 3x worse than average, whereas unicorn headlines (top 10%) tend to do around 2x better than average. By converting donkeys to unicorns, you might not realize that by boosting your CTR could increase clicks to your site by 5x.
And one final important point (and yet another reason to kill your donkeys!): low CTRs typically also lead to low conversion rates — this is true for both organic and paid search. You can easily test this out yourself by analyzing your own website data.
Introducing Larry's High CTR Pyramid Scheme
Let's look at a graph that shows the click-through rate by rank for my 1,000 keywords obtained through Google Search Console:
The blue curve shows the CTRs on average for any given spot for all keywords. But that's an average. An average includes all the top performers (unicorns) as well as the worst performers (donkeys).
There is considerable variance here.
- The top 10 percent (the unicorns) have CTRs that are more than double the average (~55 percent vs. ~27 percent in first position).
- The bottom 10 percent (the donkeys) have organic CTRs that are three times lower than average (~27 percent vs. ~8 percent in first position).
This is such a great opportunity. But it's hard to realize just how great your CTR can be.
You can increase clicks by as much as 5x or even 6x by identifying your crappiest keyword donkeys and making them into high CTR headline unicorns, rather than stupid "optimized" title tag formulas — like:
Main Keyword, Long-Tail Keyword Variation 1, Long-Tail Keyword Variation 2.
This is a title tag optimization formula from ancient times — we're talking B.H. (Before Hummingbird). This is no longer necessary because Google is now much better at inferring query intent.
Welcome to the new world. To help you adapt, I’ve developed a repeatable SEO workflow to turn your donkeys into unicorns.
Behold! It's Larry's High CTR Pyramid Scheme! Here's how it works.
Detecting your donkeys
This whole process starts by finding your underperforming content donkeys using another of my hacks — Larry's Donkey Detection Algorithm. Download all of your query data from the Search Console or Google Analytics. Next, graph CTR vs. Average Position for the queries you rank for organically and add a trend line, like this:
The red line here is your average click through rate.
You want to focus ONLY on the keywords at very bottom of your curve. You don't want to turn any of your unicorns into donkeys. You only want to turn your donkeys into unicorns!
Now you can sort by secondary metrics, such as conversion rates, if that's what you care most about. Which of those donkeys have the highest conversion rates? Focus on these first because when you're able to turn that page into a traffic unicorn, it will also convert more!
If you care most about engagement, then you can filter by that metric. If you can improve the CTR of this page, then you can be reasonably confident that more people will engage with your content.
Your content is a diamond in the rough — or a great book with a terrible cover. Now is the time to polish your diamond and help it become exceptional.
Warning: Don't go crazy reoptimizing your title
This is important. You shouldn't change the title tag over and over every week because this will cause problems in your quest for a magical cure to your donkey blues.
For one, Google will think your title is being dynamically populated. For another, you're just guessing, which is probably why you have this CTR issue.
Also, multiple changes will make it hard to get a good reading on why the CTR changed. Is it due to the title tag change or is it something else entirely (a SERP change, a competitor change, seasonality, etc.)? If you keep changing it, you won't have enough statistically significant data to make a data-driven decision.
Additionally, your ranking position could change, which would also further screw up things.
Bottom line: Don't just go and change titles willy-nilly.
We can make a unicorn — we have the technology!
To improve your organic click-through rate, you'll need to collect some data. You can do this by creating ads on Google AdWords for no more than $50.
You're going to create an ad pointing to the page you're reoptimizing using 10 different headlines. The reason you need 10 headlines is so you can discover your statistical unicorn, the headline with a CTR that stands above the rest in the top 10 percent.
Think of it like a lottery where the odds of winning are 1 in 10. Your odds of winning are much greater if you buy 10 lottery tickets instead of just one, right?
You can absolutely create more headlines; 10 is just the minimum. If you really want to do this well, writing 12, 13, or 14 headlines dramatically increases the odds that you'll find a unicorn.
Don't half-ass your new headlines
I can't stress this enough: You really have to try out different headlines. It can't be the same headline, just with insignificant little changes (e.g., commas in different places, different punctuation, upper case vs. lower case).
Pop quiz: How many headlines do you count here?
- 1. How to Write a Book Fast
- 2. How to Write a Book FAST
- 3. How to Write a Book…FAST
- 4. How To Write A Book...Fast!
- 5. How to write a book, fast.
Did you say 5?
WRONG!
No, the answer is 1.
These aren't different headlines. They're just different punctuations and capitalizations.
You have to REALLY change the headlines.
Write your headlines using different personas. Who is the person speaking to the reader? Is it the bearer of bad news? The hero? The villain? The comedian? The feel-good friend?
Also change emotional trigger in your headlines. You can use emotional drivers like amusement, surprise, happiness, hope, or excitement:
Other emotions include anger, disgust, affirmation, and fear. All four of these can become huge winners.
Vary your headlines. Get super creative!
What keywords should you choose?
Add the keywords that you were hoping to appear for when you created the content, along with keywords you're currently ranking for using query data from Google Analytics. Set those keywords to the broad match keyword match type.
Broad match is the default keyword match type and reaches the widest audience. It makes your ad eligible to appear whenever a user’s search query includes any word in your key phrase, in any order, and any synonyms.
For example, if you use broad match on "luxury car," your ad might be displayed if a user types "luxury cars," "fast cars," "luxury apartments," or even “expensive vehicles,” which doesn’t include any of the terms in your keyword. Broad match will, in a way, act like RankBrain does — testing your headlines against a diverse set of queries, including related terms.
It's a perfect keyword sample set.
10 awesome tips to help you write outstanding headlines
Ultimately, you want to think about three things when writing your ads: your target customer; the persona you want to use to speak to them; and what emotionally-charged words you can use to incite action.
Steve Rayson of BuzzSumo recently shared some great research on the five elements of viral headlines. Here's what your headlines need to have:
- Emotional Hook: This could be a certain emotional word or superlative — words like: amazing, unbelievable, shocking, disgusting, or inspiring.
- Content Type: This tells the reader exactly what your content is — is your content images, quotes, pictures, or facts?
- Topic: Think of this as your keyword — it could be something evergreen like "content marketing" or more news-oriented like a Google algorithm update or SERP test.
- Format: This sets the expectation of the format your content will be in, whether it's a listicle, quiz, ebook, or something else.
- Promise Element: The reader benefit — tell the reader why your content will solve a problem, make them smarter or better at something, or that it provides vital information they need to know.
Here are five additional tips:
- Choose your words wisely: Go either extremely positive (e.g., best, greatest, biggest) or negative (e.g., stop, avoid, don't) with your headline word choices.
- Be specific: Make it clear to the reader what your content is about.
- Be unique: Show some personality. Create content that nobody else is doing (or improve on what others have already done). Dare to be different from your competitors.
- Create a sense of urgency: What will the reader learn, lose, fail at, or miss out on it they don't click right now?
- Be useful: How does clicking on your content benefit the reader?
So let's go back to our earlier headline example, How to Write a Book Fast. Based on this advice, what are some new headlines you could test? How about:
- Write Your Book Fast: X Trusted Time-Saving Tips
- X Surprising Tricks Nobody Told You About Writing Books Fast
- How to Finish Writing Your Book 5x Faster
- Write Fast Right Now: What Published Authors Don’t Want You to Know
- X Ridiculously Easy Steps to Write Your Book Faster
- What’s the Secret of Writing Great Books Fast?
- X Inspiring Tips That Will Help You Write Your Book Faster
- This Unusual Book Writing Technique Will Make You Write Faster
- Your Book is Doomed: How I Write Way Faster Than You
Which one of these do you think would win our ad test? The answer may just surprise all of us.
How would you reoptimize this headline based on this advice? I'd love to see your ideas in the comments.
Where to run your ad
By now you may be saying, "Larry this is great, but I'm a little worried about how much this all will cost. Any suggestions to keep costs down?"
YES!
We're just targeting English speakers. So you can save money by taking advantage of countries with lower CPCs.
Rather than running ads in New York City, where CPCs would likely be very expensive, maybe you could set up your ads to appear only in Canada (which has 29 percent lower CPCs on average than the U.S.) or in Ireland (which has 40 percent lower CPCs on average).
Prepare your Unicorn Detector
Make sure to set your ads to rotate evenly. You want to ensure that all 10–14 of your ads have a chance to run.
Before analyzing your results, you'll want at least 200 impressions per ad. This is actually the number of impressions Google AdWords uses before ascertaining a quality score, but more is better.
Also, you should bid to a specific position (e.g., bid to position 3, 4, or 5) using flexible bid strategies. That way you don't have to compare CTRs where one ad had a CTR of 20% in position 1 but a 2% CTR in position 8.
Now you can analyze your results and see which headline had the best CTR. Pretty easy, huh?
Usually one of your 10 ads will be a unicorn. However, if all the CTRs turn out the same (e.g., 2% vs. 2.1%) throw them all out and try out more headlines.
Your goal is to find an outlier, a headline that generates 2x, 3x, or 4x higher CTR than the rest.
Did it work?
Now we've reached the end. We've identified the donkeys. We have a workflow for auditioning new possible headlines. And we've identified the winning headlines. Now what?
You just swap them out. Replace your donkey title with the winning unicorn headline from your PPC ad test, and put it live.
To determine whether you've succeeded, track the number of clicks to the page to ensure that your CTR has indeed increased.
This is a ridiculously easy, low-risk, high-return strategy with a high probability of success because the new headline is battl- tested and should do just as well organically.
Conclusion: Say no to low CTR
Guys, this is crazy. First of all, think about all the SEO tasks you have to do. None of that is easy. It's all manual work.
Just take link building as one example. You're hoping for other people to link to you to help you rank better. In the end it's very much a hit-or-miss approach to SEO because you have no control over whether you actually get the link (or if it will even help).
Also, link building is more of an art, and one that some people just don't have the skills to do properly. Plus, when done poorly, bad link building can kill your rankings.
Here, the workflow — my High CTR Pyramid Scheme — is all within your own control. This is more like on-page SEO, changing titles and text, but this is a more methodical, data-driven way of doing it.
Optimizing for CTR is very leveraged. You can 5x your CTR if you're successful in turning a donkey into a unicorn. There's even more bonus points because it should result in ever better rankings, which should result in even more clicks. And your conversion rates will improve.
I personally believe that CTR is calculated both at a query/page and at the domain level (like domain and page authority in link building). Since we can't have CTR data for every possible page/query, it makes sense to have something to fall back on. So by killing off your CTR donkeys, you're improving your domain CTR score, which should help rankings of all the other pages on your site.
There's a famous Abraham Lincoln quote: "Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe."
Well, if I had one hour to spend on SEO, I would spend that one hour finding and fixing my donkey headlines, turning them into unicorn headlines. Hour for hour, I'm convinced you have a really great return here.
Your odds of winning the organic CTR lottery are 1 in 10. So go buy 10 lottery tickets!
Are you optimizing for CTR? If not, why?
This was awesome, Larry.
I'm with you 100% -- CTR impacts rankings (even if it doesn't, it still makes sense to improve your organic CTR).
And it's high time someone came out with an actionable guide to optimize for organic CTR. And I'm glad it was you as it's clear you've done a ton of testing! Plus, as a PPC expert, you clearly know what gets peeps to click.
I'd write more about this awesome post but I need to go turn some donkeys into unicorns :)
thanks brian. i can't believe how little attention CTR optimization is given compared to the usual SEO tasks like link building, etc.
Worth read, very interesting especially the use of images with the metaphor to turn some donkeys into unicorns.
Hey Larry, I started reading this post with some of contradictions with your last post Does Organic CTR Impact SEO Rankings?
But now I can say that organic CTR do matters in case of search ranking. I like the idea of using Topic as a Keyword. As SEO is an ever-changing process but deliberately changing our SEO techniques mainly in case of Meta tags will lead to dilemma situation that in which sense this will affect our ranking.
In case of ad test, I think these are much better:
I have a question that whether bounce rate also impact our ranking in respect of CTR? I mean to say how much it affect ranking, Is this a case when CTR increases on the base of negative SEO and leads to increase in Bounce rate.
bounce rates matter. more on that soon.
Awesome article - thanks!
In my mind I definitely wasn't going to read the whole article when I opened it... "just the first paragraph" I thought... well I sat glued to my screen and read the whole thing. And now i'm off to make some unicorns.
aw thanks fred you made my day. the thing had like 2800 words lol.
Great ideas on how to improve CTR. The donkey/unicorn metaphor was definitely engaging enough to keep me reading through to the bottom. May I ask how long it takes you to write a piece of quality content like this?
2 weeks. only a day or so to write it up. much longer to do the click through rate research and figuring out if the strategy works or not. all of those graphs and stuff are original research - not just curating other people's research.
I was going to ask the exact same thing but was going to read all the comments first! Cynthia beat me to it!
Oh phew. I thought you were going to say something like four hours because you seem to churn content out like a machine! Glad to know you're still human.. albeit a superhuman :)
oh nuts. i meant to say synonyms, not syllables. sorry about that. good catch.
Great post Larry! I'm a content manager and SEO and I have to say that your copy is spot on!
Informative, to the point, and not too long. I love the blogs that trim the fat and get straight to the point and you've done that wonderfully here. Cheers!
haha thanks. i was worried given that this is a +2000 word post...
You're right, it was 2,000 words, but I guess the practicality of the writing made it seem a breeze to read.
I super trimmed the fat off for my colleagues and everyone else here:
Make Low Performing Pages Rank Higher With Title Optimization
1. Download query data from Search Console or Google Analytics
2. Graph CTR vs. Average Position for queries that rank organically
3. Single out the queries at the very bottom of the curve
4. Sort by desired secondary metrics like conversion rate or engagement
5. Create Google Ads with Different Headlines
a. Create at least 10 different ads for the same page using a different headline for each, the more the better
b. Write headlines using different personas and emotional drivers
c. Select keywords based on what you wanted to appear and what you rank for in Google Analytics and set them to broad match type in order to get sample data
d. Run your ad in cheaper locations, since you are only looking for CTR
e. Rotate ads evenly, and make sure you get at least 200 impressions per ad
f. Bid all ads to a specific position
6. Once you have the results of the test, you can see which headline performed the best and change that headline on the live page
Hey Kevin,
Can you elaborate more on step #3? I have created the graph but I'm unfamiliar with how to single out the data below the curve (Google didn't help) in order to identify what my donkeys are.
Hoping that you might be more likely to respond than Larry. Thanks!
Hi Larry,
Such an amazing efforts. i must say it worth reading every single word of it. There is no doubt making Donkey to unicorn is always be a challenge however this guide will definaltly help all folks to adress the issue.
thanks. i hope you are able to use the donkey detector and donkey to unicorn converter.
off course. I am certian about it :)
Hi Larry
Great advices. I want to be a unicorn. Choose my words wisely, be unique, be specific be useful, and createa sense of urgency, Those are the keys. I would add perhaps be creative
Congrats for the post
life is great when you are in unicorn land. good luck carlos.
Good Morning. I would like to congratulate you on this entertaining and very useful information about CTR article. I would like to know your opinion to stop the bounce rate of a web page. External links we place on our blog , would it be more interesting place that is open in a second browser tab ? Thank you
great question. my next post is actually on bounce rates. basically i don't think it matters if people navigate to other sites, so long as they don't navigate back to google.
muchas gracias, :)
Great Post Larry, I'm totally agree with you and your view about increase organic CTR. Your tips to write great headlines are really awesome and example of headline are more useful.Thanks a lot for sharing such kind of innovative information.
Hey Larry, that's an extremely hilarious and equally insightful guide. Thanks for entertaining us while teaching us good stuff! The point is whether one is running a PPC campaign or not, one should always work on one's donkeys so one day they become unicorns.
yes. i hope you have a stable full of baby unicorns.
LOL! I will keep you posted on that for sure. Thanks for the wonderful post once again :D
Hi Larry,
An interesting article. Often overlooked, but it makes a lot of sense that we should spend more time working on turning our Donkeys into Unicorns. With so many things that could be done (with regards to SEO), it's always a challenge to figure out where to spend the time and money to get the greatest ROI. Perhaps trying to find a few more Unicorns is a good start.
Thanks
yeah! with so many SEO tactics that no longer work: https://moz.com/blog/8-old-school-seo-practices-not-effective-whiteboard-friday we're going to have to come up with new ones! i hope you will use these donkey to unicorn conversion weapons in your toolbox.
Wow, can't wait to get to work applying this great actionable strategy. Quick thought though: in your 10-12 headline tests, I believe you should include your current headline (if you're optimizing an already existing page). That way you'll be sure not to replace a super unicorn with an average one!
David, that's a great idea. I love it. it will give you a relative sense for how much the new thing would do vs. the existing thing. thank you for this!!
Really good article Larry - thanks for your time and effort into putting it together.
I have a question: The page title is very important as an on page SEO factor so even if I were to find this unicorn headline, aren't I risking my first page rankings by making the page title change?
that is the point of the donkey detector. if you experiment on your crappiest keywords, there is very little to lose, and lots of up-side potentia.
Thanks Larry
Will be working on those donkeys soon for sure. Having children your post made me think of the song:
"Hey Lord,"
"I got Your green alligators and long-necked geese,
Some humpty backed camels and some chimpanzees.
Some cats and rats and elephants, but Lord, I'm so forlorn,
I just can't see no unicorns !"
... so time to work on getting others converted into unicorns!
Read more: Irish Rovers - The Unicorn Lyrics | MetroLyrics
amen
Hi Larry
Stop being a donkey is the idea, but it is not so easy. Anyway, trataermos retrying get our indices increase CTR following your advice
Thanks
Awesome Article! Larry
I am going to turn my donkeys into unicorns.Thank you
Good morning Larry,
This post resulted super interesting to read! Getting rid of the donkeys is a smart idea, but I've to recognize that sometimes it's a bit scary like: could I low my ranks? Just as you've explined it, it seems like "no, you can't", so I've decided I'll give it a try.
Thanks for such a good info.
that's right! the donkey to unicorn conversion process eliminates the risk of turning unicorns into donkeys!
Thank you for yet another amazing article! It's a great way of integrating paid and organic.
isn't it interesting? we're using google to defeat google. hahaaaa :-)
"Also, you should bid to a specific position (e.g., bid to position 3, 4, or 5) using flexible bid strategies."
Hey Larry, I'm trying to set this bad boy up, however I can't find any option to achieve what you are suggesting about bidding to a specific position. How is this actually done?
Thanks!
I had the same question. here might be the best way to set it up:
In UI, go to Shared Library>Bid Strategies. Add a new strategy and select "target search page location". You can't really bid on specific location. There are only two choices: 1. top of the first search results page; 2. anywhere on the first search results page. Obviously the first one has a better control of the position... however, I know that ranking #1 and #2 on top of the page, means massively different CTRs.
As a matter of fact, the biggest CTR difference is being #1 on top vs any other locations. IE. being #2 on bottom of the page is less drop off (if any) than being #1 on bottom of the page. Our analysis shows that the difference between CTRs for bottom page is less dramatic comparing to top of the page (there is a small tendency of lower position on the bottom of the page has higher CTR than higher position on the bottom page).
My suggestion is set a bid you are comfortable with (not using bid strategy) and let it run its own course. You will need more impressions when you do the analysis. When downloading your stats, download it day by day and add segment of "top vs other". A bit manual, but you will have more accurate CTR data corresponding to the actual position. Combine them all, then pivot it.
For each location on top of the page, and each location on bottom of the page, you can see which is the winning title. For an ideal outcome, this is the same title that consistently winning on all locations... but if not, I probably would choose the one that simulates more like you current organic ranking...
I'm going to experiment it and see how I go. Might need a few weeks to get proper results :)
I've finished the experiment and happy with the result. Even I didn't use flexi bidding strategy, most of the time ads are appearing on top of the page with little stats from bottom of the page which is great. I forgot to switch off the search partners, and they show different result of the winning copy. We are focusing on Google search, so I've ignored the partner search results (not a completely waste, it again showed us why we should opt out, as long as google doesn't let you optmise by network. The CTR is rubbish, at least that's the case in NZ)
Now looking for the next donkey(s) to turn into unicorns! Thanks Larry for the tip ;)
Hey Larry,
Great article, I agree completely that CTR doesn't get enough love. After reading your last post I went about setting up my own test however this one makes more sense.
A couple of quick questions:
Would you suggest this approach only with content such as blog posts etc or also commercially driven pages as well? We run a gift website and I'm sure one of the pages is suffering from lower than average CTR.
Also, once you've found your unicorn headline, would you rinse and repeat with description as well to see if you can milk even more of an increase?
Cheers,
Matt
Hi matt. thanks for reading.
1) YES. headline CTR optimization is probably even more valuable for commercial pages like shopping, and there's more upside since i've observed that often that organic shopping SERPS are very similar.
2) usually if you find a template that drives people to click like crazy, you can re-use the format for other products and services (changing out words here and there). in fact, i shared one such template in this article.
Good luck!
Edit
Hey Larry,
Thanks for the info. Another quick question if I could. Some of our commercial pages rank for 1000+ keywords. Obviously, you can't optimise for all. Would you take your approach and direct it towards the primary keyword or would you take the average click through for the entire page across all keywords?
Cheers
The issue I find here is optimizing pages to improve rankings while also improving CTR. I highly doubt I'd see any CTR differences being visible on a page ranking on page 6 of Google. It would be very tough to use a lot of these tactics on commercial pages keeping in mind brand guidelines and other restrictions as well. Could see some pretty upset emails coming from our clients if I tried to update a page to "9 Most Shocking Holiday Gifts that Will Make Any Mom Smile" or something like that...
This is great advice! But what I want to know is if its worth sacrificing your brand name at the end of a title to have a better headline?
depends how well known your brand is. you can include different headlines with and without brand in your unicorn tests. but keep in mind your brand appears in the URL, too.
Awesome article, Larry!
Like everyone else, I'm eager to start my headline tests. But, what about the body of the ad, or essentially what would be the meta description? You didn't mention this, so I'm wondering if you test the body copy portion of the ad also?
So ads currently have (a) headline - 25 characters. (b) description line one - 40 characters. and (c) description line two - fourty characters. now that there was that big ad-pocalypse where the right side ads are now gone, google concatenates your headline and description line one. so there's not much left to test.
Hi matt. thanks for reading.
1) YES. headline CTR optimization is probably even more valuable for commercial pages like shopping, and there's more upside since i've observed that often that organic shopping SERPS are very similar.
2) usually if you find a template that drives people to click like crazy, you can re-use the format for other products and services (changing out words here and there). in fact, i shared one such template in this article.
Good luck!
Hi Larry,
Your post is amazing and it's quite a big shock for me as I was tired of thinking of how to improve traffic (CTR), I read the whole article and seems you only mentioned headline (page title), how about the meta description then? Wouldn't it have some impact on CTR as well?
hi lawrence. meta descriptions definitely matter. but titles matter more - it's the strong hook that people will latch on-to. furthermore the search engine may or may not use your meta description in the search engine listing page. but of course i'm never going to say not to make compelling meta descriptions. it's just not as leveraged as a focus point for optimization.
Thank you very much for giving ideas on that how we would need to work for increasing the current CTR. As per as your headlines concern, I completely agree with your points that we would do various brainstorming before creating the title of your articles or blog posts. I personally suggest we would also need to get ideas from some of the specific tools like https://www.hubspot.com/blog-topic-generator. That is one of the good tools that helps great and once you create your little then you can check their snippet at https://www.seomofo.com/snippet-optimizer.html. That will show how it will look like on organic.searches.
I read the article thoroughly and i also liked it,but i want to know some more details that how we can improve the CTR of our site ?
Thanks
do you mean CTR of your homepage or the average CTR for all pages on your site?
2 weeks. only a day or so to write it up. much longer to do the click through rate research and figuring out if the strategy works or not. all of those graphs and stuff are original research - not just curating other people's research.
Thanks for this Larry. I started on this, to find the donkeys. I've got similar graph and I filtered down to lower positions (end of the curve). Some are with great CTR, so I will leave them; I want to focus on half a dozen of them with the lowest CTRs. When I search these queries myself, however, they were all ranking much higher than the position from google search console. I'm afraid that these are not donkeys but unicorns! Any idea why the positions are so different from what I see, and should I go ahead experimenting on these ones?
well, it could be that it's personalizing results for you because you visit your own website often. i have no evidence to believe that the CTRs reported by google in search console aren't accurate.
Thanks Larry :)
I've noticed the title sometimes gets cut off and sometimes displayed in full (even with 2 lines). I saw this on mobile. Any idea when google cuts it off? Is it something to do with how the title's written?
Yes, Keyword Research & analysis is an important step in SEO for your site traffic & ranking. thank @Larry Kim
Great post Larry! I'm a content manager and SEO and I have to say that your copy is spot on!
Informative, to the point, and not too long. I love the blogs that trim the fat and get straight to the point and you've done that wonderfully here. Cheers!
Hey Larry. Thanks for this great post.
Can you please provide more details, exact instructions on how you do this piece: "Download all of your query data from the Search Console or Google Analytics. Next, graph CTR vs. Average Position for the queries you rank for organically and add a trend line"
well it requires understanding of how to use excel. in google webmaster tools (search console) you can log into your website and go to the query report section. there you'll find search queries and their associated metrics: average position, clicks, impressions and CTR. just download all of that data and open it in microsoft excel. they will let you download 1000 data points. In Excel, highlight the "CTR" and "average position" columns and insert an X vs. Y plot, then right click on the chart area and choose "add trendline" (select an exponential trend line).
Thanks a bunch for your comment, Larry. Going to feature these instructions to my email community of 27K growth hackers.
P.S. If you are willing to add anything else, will be happy to update your instructions before they will be delivered to my subscribers.
Awesome Larry, I love the step-by-step here and moving SEOs to start thinking a little more like AdWords specialists do. Test, Measure, Implement -> Test, Measure, Implement.
I have seen a post somewhere that may speed up some of this process too by using Mturk.
By generating a list of search results and paying people on Mturk to click the result that stands out the most might be a great way to test and get early indicators as to what works/what doesnt.
You might also be able to test all of your suggested variations against each other and then pick the strongest to compete against your competitors.
I went on AdWords, created a new campaign and ad group. Put some real thought into creating ads for about 2 hours, and saved it all. Ready to go, right?
No. I went back later that day and AdWords said my campaign has no ad groups attached to it.
Just think how successful Google could be if they were competent! The mind boggles. (I hate dealing with nincompoops.)
Really a great post, thanks a lot!
Hi Larry..thank you very much really I like your post,keep in touch from INDONESIA.
Larry,
Thank you for this super actionable post! I was wondering how you test titles such as "Write Your Book Fast: X Trusted Time-Saving Tips" when it is 48 characters, and adwords only allows for 25 characters in the headline? Do you choose a snippet from each title and then test those in adwords campaigns, or is there something I am missing?
Thank you!
Ever since google blew away the right side ads, google now concatenates the 25 character headline with description line 1 which is 40 characters.
Thanks for the tip :D!
Hi Larry,
Thank you for yet another amazing article! It is really nice to get so much information in a single article.
thanks 7loops :)
Larry,
Love this article and the previous one you wrote about increasing the average CTR to help boost rankings. I've been trying to implement what you write and appreciate everything I've read from you so far.
I consider myself still new to the world of SEO and am trying to get better each day so I have a quick question for you. I did exactly as you said with creating the CTR vs. Average Position graph but when you said "Now you can sort by secondary metrics, such as conversion rates, if that's what you care most about. Which of those donkeys have the highest conversion rates?", how can I see the conversion rates for search queries?
Would love some help with this!
well it's not that easy. you'd have to pull a report in analytics looking at goal conversions and conversion rates by "landing page". i'll i'm saying is say you have 2 equally crappy donkeys and you needed to decide which page to work on first. if you wanted, you could then prioritize by the page with the higher conversion rate.
Nice article on CTR. I have always considered important enough to focus on whether it's a ranking factor or not. Logically Google should lower your impressions when CTR is low.
yeah right?? i'm so blown away when folks say CTR doesn't impact rank. i wrote about this topic last month here: https://moz.com/blog/does-organic-ctr-impact-seo-rankings-new-data but even if it does nothing, you can generate 5x clicks and double conversion rates.
Hey Larry,
Thank you for sharing. Can you explain your conclusions about the relationship between CTR and CVR? Since you used paid data, it would seem logical that if your keywords are converting, you are investing more and appearing higher on the SERP so CTR would be heavily impacted by average position.
Did you control for this in the analysis?
sure. this is a very complicated subject and keep in mind to keep the story readable i try to simplify stuff. but because you asked, there's some data here for background reading here: https://adwords.blogspot.com/2009/08/conversion-rat...
basically, there's no relationship between average position and conversion rate. However, there is a relationship between CTR and Conversion rates, as well as normalized CTR (i.e. quality score) and conversion rates.
I must admit....you lost me here. I see where you gathered the data on your organic keywords and rankings. I got the bit where you tested a bunch of ads and keywords in Google Adwords. I lost the bit where you applied the knowledge that you gained from the adwords tests, back into your organic titles and descriptions. Am I missing something?
the headline with the highest CTR in adwords is the winner. swap out old headline with new battle-proven headline.
Great article! Here's what confused me. You mentioned testing in different countries. Would this really be helpful for something like "plumber Boston" or "plastic surgeon San Diego" or anything else that is service / geo? I mean, how many people in whatever country would search and then click on those types of ads?
for local search you would have to target the correct geo. i was referring to non-local search where you get clicks from all over the world. thank you.
Lovely Article Larry!
thanks mohamed.
Super helpful!
The article caused a bit of confusion for me, though - when you were talking about broad matching:
Broad match is the default keyword match type and reaches the widest audience. It makes your ad eligible to appear whenever a user’s search query includes any word in your key phrase, in any order, and any syllables.
Can you elaborate?
Great post CTR!!! Thanks Larry.
thanks!!!
Piracy carries a big way and is 5 times higher with organic clickthrough rates.