Commerce Sites Dominate Paid Search Advertising
Reston, VA, June 6, 2007--comScore, a leader in measuring the digital world, today released a study on the relationship between paid search marketing and retail e-commerce, based on the March 2007 comScore qSearch Marketer report.
In March, paid search activity in the
Top Sites Generating Search Engine Sponsored Link Exposures March 2007 Source: comScore qSearch, Share of Voice Report Sponsored Link Exposures (000) Share of Sponsored Link Exposures Total Internet 19,762,951 100.0% eBay.com 801,744 4.1% Smarter.com 365,766 1.9% Shopping.com 357,012 1.8% Bizrate.com 297,649 1.5% Amazon.com 284,328 1.4% Dealtime.com 283,574 1.4% Shopzilla.com 245,398 1.2% Target.com 202,482 1.0% Nextag.com 163,220 0.8% Shop.com 123,009 0.6%
“It’s clear that retail e-commerce sites are the most aggressive in using sponsored search to drive traffic to their sites,” commented James Lamberti, senior vice president of comScore Search Solutions. “The top ten sites generating sponsored links – all of which are retail or comparison shopping sites – account for about one out of every six sponsored links served to U.S. Internet users. Given that retail e-commerce is now a $100 billion a year industry, it’s not surprising that top online retailers are willing to bid for premium placement at the major search engines.”
Google Top Search Engine Referrer of Retail Site Traffic
comScore also studied the referral activity by the top search engines in directing click-thrus to retail sites. Google Web Search, which accounted for 57.3 percent of all click-thrus, directed 53.8 percent of the click-thrus to retail sites. Yahoo! Web Search directed 27.2 percent of click-thrus to retail sites, followed by MSN Web Search (10.4 percent), AOL Search (5.8 percent), and Ask.com (1.6 percent).
Search Engine Click-Thru Analysis March 2007 Source: comScore qSearch, Source of Traffic Report |
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Search Engine |
Share of Total Click-Thrus |
Share of Click-Thrus to Retail Sites |
Retail Referral Index* |
Total Internet |
100.0% |
100.0% |
100 |
Google Web Search |
57.3% |
53.8% |
94 |
Yahoo! Web Search |
26.1% |
27.2% |
104 |
MSN Web Search |
8.9% |
10.4% |
117 |
AOL Search |
4.8% |
5.8% |
120 |
Ask.com |
1.7% |
1.6% |
97 |
*Retail Referral Index = 100 x (share of click-thrus to retail sites/ share of total click-thrus)
Though accounting for a smaller share of total click-thrus than Google and Yahoo!, both MSN and AOL generated more than their fair share of click-thrus to retail sites. Specifically, MSN Web Search was 17 percent more likely than expected to direct searchers to retail sites, while AOL Search was 20 percent more likely.
Added Mr. Lamberti: “Search marketers need to understand the dynamics of their industry with respect to where their click-thrus originate, as certain search engines could have stronger performance relative to the overall search market.”