| bio | website | twitter.com/ylluminate |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | 35 | |
| visits | member for | 9 months |
| seen | Nov 8 '12 at 20:24 | |
| stats | profile views | 5 |
|
Oct 15 |
awarded | Scholar |
|
Oct 15 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Oct 15 |
accepted | How to extract AdWords keywords from incoming traffic? |
|
Oct 15 |
comment |
How to extract AdWords keywords from incoming traffic? Thanks @Sevitz, you've helped clear this up with a concrete example from an actual click-through. |
|
Oct 9 |
asked | How to extract AdWords keywords from incoming traffic? |
|
Sep 8 |
comment |
Malicious & nonbeneficial IP address blocks (subnets) for AdWords blocking About 7-30% of monthly searches are bots scraping keywords and various other SEO/SEM applications. Most of these come from some very specific subnets in terms of specific nations, however a few of these nations are target audiences for this product. I would prefer to minimize the potential abuse that will ultimately cost money. These particular demographics are not worth that risk and therefore I would like to block what I possibly can while still offering some ads. |
|
Sep 8 |
asked | Malicious & nonbeneficial IP address blocks (subnets) for AdWords blocking |
|
Aug 20 |
comment |
What percentage of searches are abandoned on Google [and Bing]? There is a way to ascertain this information, but obviously since this issue was closed, there's no reason for me to explain how. It's certainly exceptionally relevant for this demographic, but oh well. How bizarre. |
|
Aug 18 |
asked | What percentage of searches are abandoned on Google [and Bing]? |
|
Aug 18 |
awarded | Student |
|
Aug 18 |
comment |
Approx 52% of Google SERP clicks goes to slots 1-10, but where do the other 48% go? I did find this simplification it seems of their study and it has the following statement: "On average, 66% of ad clicks occurred without an associated organic result on the first page." Of course this leads me back to the beginning: even though this behavior happens, how can we extrapolate out the figures of the other 48% of clicks? |
|
Aug 18 |
comment |
Approx 52% of Google SERP clicks goes to slots 1-10, but where do the other 48% go? Very interesting find, particularly on that last link. I am struggling to contextually place their findings into my own calculations. For example, what does the use of "incremental" mean exactly? I read that it means "visits to the advertiser’s site from the ad clicks are not replaced by organic clicks when the search ads are paused," however that explanation does not add much in the way of real meaning to the above question. It simply seems to mean that AdWords helps add clicks to organic placement; but how/where do you figure out entirely inorganic AdWords insertion? |
|
Aug 17 |
asked | Approx 52% of Google SERP clicks goes to slots 1-10, but where do the other 48% go? |