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Empirical generalizations in search engine advertising

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by N Abou Nabout, M Lilienthal, Bernd SkieraBernd Skiera
This article compares prices per click and search engine advertising (SEA) effectiveness across six countries and 15 industries over four years. We find that prices per click are highest in the United States and United Kingdom, as well as in the financial and Internet services industries, but are lower in retail than in services industries. In highly competitive markets, increases in SEA expenditures may increase prices per click that do not necessarily lead to higher advertising effectiveness, here measured as a higher number of clicks. To analyze and compare advertising effectiveness across industries, we decompose the effect of increases in SEA expenditures on prices per click (price effect) and number of clicks (quantity effect). A cross-country, cross-industry study shows that 44 percent of the increase in SEA expenditures is associated with more clicks and 56 percent with higher prices. © 2014 New York University.

History

Journal

Journal of Retailing

Volume

90

Pagination

206-216

Location

United Kingdom

ISSN

0022-4359

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014 New York University

Issue

2

Publisher

Elsevier

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