Q1 2008 Click Fraud Down from Last Quarter, Up from Last Year
Click Forensics has released data showing a decline in click fraud rates in the first quarter of 2008. The overall industry number came in at 16.3%, which is down 16.6% quarter-over-quarter but up 14.8% year-over-year.
Search engine content networks saw a higher average click fraud rate at 27.8%, which is down 28.3% from last quarter but, again, up from last year by 21.9%.
Botnet click fraud traffic was up 8% year-over-year.
Search engines are addressing the click fraud problem head on. Yahoo recently announced the provision of Click Filter Reports, which show advertisers the number of discarded clicks in their PPC campaign. The Sunnyvale search engine also announced a partnership with Click Forensics to address their click fraud woes. Lycos has announced a similar deal with Click Forensics.
Microsoft Earnings Key Takeaways: Where’s the Search?

The biggest acquisition news yesterday wasn’t Microsoft-Yahoo but Arby’s-Wendy’s. In both cases, search marketers are asking, “Where’s the beef?”
Better yet, analysts on the Microsoft conference call should have asked, “Where’s the search?”
Microsoft search queries and page views are up year-over-year. By how much? No Wall St. analysts asked the question.
Microsoft reported $4.4 billion in net income for the quarter.
Microsoft’s online services business increased revenue 40 percent to $843 million, including $143 million from aQuantive, which added 96 new publishers this quarter to the Atlas Publisher Solutions, the ad management platform that competes with Google’s DoubleClick division.
Online advertising for Microsoft grew 39 percent. If aQuantive ad revenue ($47 million) is excluded, Microsoft was up 29 percent. Microsoft’s online audience is still growing. Live IDs increased to 18 percent to 448 million.
Microsoft remains focused on the online advertising market (doubling by 2010 to $80 billion).
Yahoo would accelerate growth but the core strategy won’t change: drive innovation and search, increase value to advertisers and publishers through innovation and scale and grow user engagement across MSN and Windows Live properties.
The weak U.S. dollar may be Microsoft’s best friend. While about half of Google’s revenue comes from the U.S., two-thirds of Microsoft’s revenue is derived from users abroad. In addition, about 15 percent of revenue is in high-growth emerging markets.
Microsoft’s strategy of reinvesting existing business, pursuing organic and acquisition growth opportunities makes the company a formidable competitor with or without Yahoo – except in search.
Forget Google’s 20% Jump, Baidu UP 78% In Month
The strength of Chinese search engine Baidu in the Asian market – beating Google in the valued China market – has been reflected in investor confidence it seems. While Google made back some of their recent drop in value, it is the 78% rise in Baidu over the past month that is truly impressive.
The Motley Fool asks “Do You Believe in Baidu?” And seem to present a good argument to do so.
“Baidu has been on the move in many ways, expanding outside its search engine stronghold with recent forays into instant messaging, consumer auctions, online games, and even a bold leap into the mature yet lucrative Japanese search engine market,” they report.
Nice to see another engine growing in a Google like manner, both financially and corporately.
Why I just joined Mixx
I just joined a new service called “Mixx” – sure it has a funny name but it allows you to vote on interesting stories as well as meet like minded people.I’m still new to it so I haven’t yet figured it all out – but you can add the categories and tags that interest you [...]
Google Testing Time Elements In Search Results
Seems Google is testing using time elements in their search results, according to results found by Cheezhead, though the first comment was from Danny Sullivan who thinks the results may be related to advanced search. Time elements could be an interesting filter when dealing with news or blog sites, but beyond that it promotes constantly [...]
Yahoo Podcasts Closing At End Of Month
Another Yahoo service is about to be killed off, according to the headline at the top of the Yahoo Podcast site. It states:Yahoo! apologizes deeply, but we will be closing down the Podcasts site on Oct. 31, 2007 The service had been available for about two years. More: continued here yahoo podcasts closing at end [...]
Search Headlines & Links: September 27, 2007
Want a snapshot of the day’s search marketing news? Here we’ve collected today’s top news stories posted to the Search Engine Watch Blog, along with search-related headlines from around the Web: Click to read the rest of this post… More: continued here search headlines links september 27 2007
Recent Comments