|
|
Google sued over 'click fraud' in Adwords
On June 24, 2005, a lawsuit was filed against Google for alleged click fraud on the Adwords pay-per-click program. The Plaintiff, Click Defense, claims Google failed to enact appropriate measures to guard against fraudulent clicks resulting in...
Guide to Pay Per Click Search Engines
Search Engines. What is a Pay Per Click Search Engine?
A pay per click search engine is designed for pay for performance advertising. That means that an advertiser pays the search engine owners only for traffic that is delivered to his web...
How do I drive traffic to a brand new website?
Copyright 2005 Richard Grady Every single day, more and more people upload brand new websites to the Internet. I don't have any figures but there must be hundreds of thousands of new pages being added daily (if not considerably more!) The one...
Optimize Your Pay Per Click Ads - 3 Quick Tips for Killer Results
Running a pay per click campaign can be a valuable, fast source of online sales – but it can also cost you a lot of money if you don't know what you’re doing. Many pay per click newbies sign up with a ppc search engine and end up spending lots of...
The Adwords and Adsense Road to Big Profits
Do you use Adsense to monetize any of your websites?
Do you use Adwords to buy in visitors to any of your websites?
Have you considered combining the two and sending Adwords
traffic to your site featuring Adsense Ads? There are...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Cost Of Click Fraud
One of the biggest threats to the continued growth of Search
Advertising is the increasing plague of click fraud. Although
there are varying forms of click fraud, most people define it as
any click generated, and paid for, where the intent is to drain
the advertiser's budget. Advertisers know some clicks are more
qualified than others, and not every visitor from their PPC
campaigns will convert to a customer. But, they have a right to
expect that the traffic they are paying for is coming from
people at least marginally interested in their products or
services.
What Motivates Click Fraud?
Why does click fraud exist? What motivates people to deceive the
system by sending PPC advertisers bogus traffic? The short
answer (as usual) is money.
Many Pay Per Click Advertising networks are partially, (or in
some cases totally), dependent on affiliate sites to generate
traffic for their advertisers. These networks syndicate their
customer's ads so they will appear on the sites of their
affiliates. Every time someone clicks on an ad the PPC Network
and the affiliate site share the revenue. The more clicks the
affiliate site generates, the more money it makes. While the
vast majority of affiliates are legitimate trustworthy sites,
others are in the business of exploiting loopholes in the system
to line their pockets with real money by generating fake clicks.
Often times the weapon of choice used by these rogue sites to
cheat the system is a software script that automatically clicks
on PPC ads.
Another variation of click fraud uses a more personal touch to
steal advertiser's money. In the hyper-competitive world of Pay
Per Click Advertising the battle for premium positioning at an
affordable cost can cause companies to use less than ethical
techniques to gain an edge. Companies can drive up their
competitor's marketing costs by clicking on their Pay Per Click
ads. If their competitor's marketing costs get too high they may
lower the bids on their keywords, or stop bidding on the word
altogether. Either way, the cost for the word goes down, giving
the fraudulent company an opportunity to increase their ranking
on the page at a lower cost.
The Search Engine's Response To Click Fraud.
All the Pay Per Click Search engines have systems in place to
detect click fraud, and screen questionable clicks. One example
of how they do this is by keying in on the IP address where the
click originated from. If they see too many clicks coming form
the same IP in a short period of time they will often screen the
traffic.
The
Search Engines are in a unique position when it comes to
Click Fraud. On the one hand they benefit from it. The amount of
revenue attributed to Click Fraud varies depending on who you
ask, but everyone agrees that if illegitimate clicks were
completely eliminated, all the major Search Engines would suffer
a significant hit to their revenues and stock prices. However,
the Search Engines also realize that the long term health of the
industry depends on establishing trust with their advertiser
base. Going forward we can expect to see Search Engines deploy
increasingly sophisticated methods to eliminate fraud, and
corresponding responses from the dark side of the Search
Advertising industry.
Decreasing The Amount Of Click Fraud For Your Campaigns.
While it's impossible to completely eliminate fraudulent
traffic, there are some things you can do to increase the
percentage of good traffic from your investment in Pay per Click
Advertising.
As a rule of thumb, the more a Pay Per Click Ad network depends
on affiliates for its traffic, the more susceptible it will be
to fraud. The reason why the overall traffic quality is better
on Google, Yahoo and Lycos is that each of these sites has their
own branded destination where consumers go to search. If you
advertise on these sites you know where your ads will appear
(although even these bigger sites use affiliates to varying
degrees). Once you venture into the second tier Pay Per Click
networks however you'll find that almost all of their traffic is
generated through partner sites. Companies like Kanoodle,
Enhance etc...don't own sites where people go to search the web.
Nearly all their traffic is generated through their affiliates
which makes it more difficult to control fraud.
Conclusion:
Unfortunately, click fraud is a necessary evil of Pay Per Click
Advertising, at least for now. However, as with most aspects of
PPC Advertising everything eventually boils down to conversions
and profits. If your campaigns are generating enough quality
traffic to meet your conversion metrics you should continue to
invest in the campaign, even if some of the clicks are fake. If
your traffic is riddled with too many automated clicks it will
eventually become obvious in your conversion numbers, and you
should stop the campaign and put your money into pay Per Click
networks that control more of their own traffic.
About the author:
Visit http://thefreesite.co.nr and read more Free Tips on
Adsense,Link Popularity,Search Engine Submission and
Optimization,Affiliates and Other freebies
|
|
|
|
|
|