As the title indicates, the primary purpose of the study was to look at the differences in CTRs between the two major U.S. search engines, industry-leader Google and the Microsoft-owned Bing, and how they can help quantify return on investment (ROI) from SEO campaigns.
Slingshot decided to address its research by looking to answer a series of questions pertaining to observed CTR curves for organic U.S. results on both search engines and how they compare to each other, among other things related to user behavior.
Since the company sees organic CTR on search engines as one of the best metrics for measuring user engagement, and since Google and Bing are host to approximately 95% of all search engine inquiries, this study was meant to provide a perspective on just how valuable a page one ranking can be on either site.
Some of the hard data presented in the white paper includes:
- Google SERPs showed an observed CTR of 18.2 percent for number one rankings and 10.05 percent for number two rankings.
- Bing SERPs showed an observed CTR of 9.66 percent for number one rankings and 5.51 percent for number two rankings.
- The total average CTR for first page organic search results on Google is 52.32 percent.
- The total average CTR for first page organic search results on Bing is 26.32 percent.
- Each month, about 117 million searches in Bing are for the term "google." (Hint: that's not a great sign of user loyalty.)
The evidence clearly shows that users are far more trusting of Google's search results, especially on page one, than they are of what Bing has to offer. According to the report, after studying user behavior based on CTRs, Slingshot wants to "emphasize the importance of ranking in the top ten positions in Google SERPs."
To read the full report, click the above link or just go here.