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Heady270

: How can CTR (Click-through rate) affect SEO & web site rank I heard lot of "CTR affects SEO and makes site's rank better". But i can't understand how! If some one click links of my pages from

@Heady270

Posted in: #Ctr #GoogleRanking #Ranking #Seo

I heard lot of "CTR affects SEO and makes site's rank better".
But i can't understand how!
If some one click links of my pages from my other pages or another site but the Search engine itself; How the search engine can find out that click actually happened?

So Does CTR actually makes website rank (Google or Alexa or etc) better?
If yes how they detect the click?!

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@Steve110

I have been into SEO for about 8 years and am good at SEO.

CTR really does affect Google ranking. Google in past has denied use of Google Analytical's data for ranking sites. But I am sure, it is using the data to rank websites.

How CTR affects ?

Case 01:

I am into PHP programming & Linux server administration too.
Whenever I search for PHP problems or Linux server problems in Google, google mostly throws stackexchange website in the first page for my result.

Sometime, other websites occupies the first 2 ~ 3 positions. I ignore sites which are ranked in #1 & #2 and i directly click on the #3r or #4th link which is one of the stack exchange website.

So in this case, Goolge engine understands that, I prefer the stack exchange website or I get better result my queries in stack exchange.

So, It improves the CTR for stack exchange and places SE sites in the top in few weeks. (It does not happen in a day or a week, it might take few months for Google to learn it).

Case 02

I search for "my PHP coding issue" in Google, assume I don't get any stack exchange website in the top, then rephrase my query as "my PHP coding issue stackexchange".

So, Google engine can learn in few months that, Stack exchange is having a good stuff, that's why many people want to go there. This also improves the CTR for SE sites.

Similar to this 2 cases, there are many cases, Which I am 100% sure, helps to rank better.

In the above scenario, Google analytic's data not required. But Google uses GA data to find the best sites & best pages for each query.

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@Rivera981

Better CTR and low bounce rate indicate useful content. The ratio of new users to returning user( new users vs repeated users) is also a strong indicator for web page quality.

Any good search has a goal to provide users most relevant result against queries. Higher engagement rate,better usability factor; these qualities improve relevancy and ultimately this improve presence in search: better rank, better clicked through rate.

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@Ann8826881

There is more than one way to think of Click Through Rates (CTR). I cannot comment about Alexa much, but I can comment about Google a bit more.

If you do a search on Google, and you click a link, that is a click-through. Google measures impressions, meaning how many links to your site are created for each query. They also measure how many queries where impressions to your site are made. Per query and for the amount of impressions for your site that the query generates, if someone clicks on a link to your site, then that is a click-through. Google uses the click through rate to measure the quality of the link they create and the popularity of your page. If you have an impression (link on Google) that performs well, then the metrics (click through rate and possibly others) can push your link higher in the search engine result page (SERP). The more click-through(s) you have, the higher in the SERP(s) your link can appear.

Now assuming that your site uses Google Analytics. You would install a web bug (javascript) on your site. Now assume another site uses GA and has a link to your site and that site is indexed by Google. If a user on that other site clicks a link and appears on your site, Google can extrapolate that the user clicked the link on that page to your site. It is not clear how much of this actually happens but it is possible. As well, web bugs can parse the document object model and see links on a page and measure click events. It is not clear if the Google web bug does this but it is possible.

Now think in terms of toolbar(s). Assuming that you have a Google toolbar installed, then Google can follow you around from site to site. Toolbar(s) have the ability to parse the document object model and become aware of links and whether a click event has occurred on that object (link). In this way, a click through rate can be determined for a link on that page. It is not clear how much of this actually happens but it is possible.

Back to Alexa for a minute. Alexy relies on web bugs (as described in the GA paragraph above) for site analysis if you are a participant and it's toolbar. It is clear that Alexa relies upon the toolbar more than any other mechanism. That is because of it's early successes in this area. Google had more success in deploying it's web bug more than it's toolbar. Alexa can track your visits from page to page and other metrics such as searches etc. I am assuming that the Alexa toolbar does parse the document object model and can measure clicks on links from one page to another. I also assume that Google can too. This is actually trivial to do. What is unclear is that while this is possible, do either get into the weeds of the document object model enough to actually care about click events from page to page? I am not sure.

Back to my first point to finish. Click through rate is applied how I specified, however, generally speaking from an SEO perspective, if refers to clicks on links from a search where your link has appeared. Sometimes you may hear someone refer to click through rate in regard to using a log analyzer. It may also be Alexa or other performance analysis. Often, you just have to read between the lines to know in what regard the term is being used.

Clear as mud?

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@Pope3001725

Search engines have no idea when a user clicks on links on other site or your site. They also have no idea what kind of traffic your site receives or where it comes from. This is just one of many myths and misconceptions about SEO. You can safely ignore it.

Alexa may know these things sometimes as they rely on spyware software installed onusers' computers to see what sites they visit. But they don't care about how someone gets to a website. They just care about number of daily visitors.

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