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Much of what little
strategy exists in search marketing is aimed towards the first click
from a results page (also called a SERP). The position, the messaging
and the landing page experience all assume that we’ve captured that all
important first click. But what about the subsequent clicks?. In the
search business, this is called pogo sticking, the bouncing back and
forth from the search page, clicking on a number of sites in sequence in
an effort to find what we’re looking for.
Desperately Seeking Pogo Stats We know pogo sticking exists, but when I tried to quantify how common it
was, I quickly ran into a lot of closed doors. I tried all the major
engines and was told that they don’t divulge that type of information;
even in aggregate form. I also tried the monitoring services (comScore,
Nielsen, Hitwise) but again came up empty. So, failing anything more quantitative, we had to turn to our own
limited data set. The stats below come from the combination of eye
tracking sessions, where we’ve been able to look for pogo sticking. I’m
not sure how accurate it is, but it’s the best we’ve got, so I present
it with a whackload of caveats. We saw pogo sticking occur in 49% of the sessions we looked at. We
suspect the occurrence of this type of behavior would be even higher in
real world settings. So at least one out of every two searches results
in a return visit to the results page. In our sessions, 21.5% of them
results in two clicks from the SERP, 10.4% in three clicks, 4.9% in four
clicks, and 5.5% in five clicks. The remainder (6.8%) clicked six times
or more. Google has the fewest pogo sticking sessions, with only 36.4% of them
resulting in a round trip to the SERP. MSN had the highest percentage,
with 59.4%. Even if you question the numbers (and you have every right
to do so) I believe it’s a pretty safe bet that pogo sticking is a
pretty common occurrence.
The Power of the Pogo Why is this important? Because a return visit looks significantly
different than the first visit. And if it happens at least half the
time, it’s a factor we’d do well to consider as we lay down our search
strategies.
We strongly recommend that all search strategies take into consideration
the mind set of your target customer, within the context of what else
appears on the page. This exercise can help you forecast the
receptiveness of your target to your position on the page, the messaging
you present, and the landing page experience you provide. Let’s walk through a typical scenario. Our target customer searches for
“hybrid SUV’s”. Because we’ve done our market segmentation homework, we
know our target is early in the buying cycle, and is looking for
alternatives for fuel efficient SUVs. They’re building their
consideration set.
Our eye tracking studies have shown there’s relatively little variance
in the scanning activity with most searchers at the beginning. They tend
to start at the top and work their way down, with a strong bias towards
the number one organic spot. Therefore, in this scenario, we have to
look at how enticing these top listings are. In walking through this on
a search engine, GM and Lexus had purchased the top sponsored spots,
where the majority of searchers start their scanning. The first organic
spot belongs to the site hybridcars.com, a comparison of available
hybrid SUVs. Given our target and their intent, it’s very likely that
this site will capture the majority of first clicks from the page.
Beyond the First Click If we’re playing in this real estate, we have to look beyond the first
click to what might happen on the second and subsequent clicks. Scan
patterns spread around more evenly on the page on return visits, without
the very strong upper left bias that tends to create the so-called
“Golden Triangle” (so called because we called it that). People tend to
fixate on where the last listing clicked, and then can head out in
multiple directions from there, either continuing down the listings,
skipping up to take another look at the top sponsored, or even a quick
glance across to the side sponsored ads. Where ever they choose, their
interactions will now be colored by what happened in that first click.
Our strategy now has to account for the influence of that likely first
click. We have to know how it will alter or reinforce the intent of our
user. We also need to know how sticky the landing page behind that first
click is. Is it the type of page that will hold them, and possibly send
them off in another direction, or is it a quick bounce back to the SERP
because it isn’t well aligned to our target’s intent? Does it reinforce
our brand, or our competitors? What appears above the fold, and what
appears below the fold? Again, we know from our eye tracking studies
that this is the critical divide of the page in terms of scanning
activity. When one realizes the impact of pogo sticking, it suddenly means that
our search strategy doesn’t play out in a vacuum. It’s intimately
dependent on what else appears on the results page, and the most likely
paths our target will take from that page. It increases the complexity
of our strategy exponentially. The only way to successfully navigate it
is to have a clear view of the intent of our target. Sure, it makes
search marketing more difficult, but it also makes it infinitely more
interesting! |