Sunday, June 6, 2004

As Much as 29.5 Percent Click Fraud in GoogleÂ’s Pay-Per-Click Search Engine, Reports MarketingExperiments. com

As Much as 29.5 Percent Click Fraud in GoogleÂ’s Pay-Per-Click Search Engine, Reports MarketingExperiments. com

New research published in The Marketing Experiments Journal sheds light on growing click fraud problem.

Atlantic Beach, Fla. (PRWEB) August 1, 2005

Research recently published in MarketingExperiments. comÂ’s online publication, The Marketing Experiments Journal, reveals up to 29.5 percent of paid search traffic may be fraudulent.

“From our research, we found that it is unlikely an individual committing click fraud by clicking an ad over and over will go undetected by Google,” said Flint McGlaughlin, director of MEC labs. “But our research also shows that when more sophisticated systems and software are used, only a small percentage of the fraud is detected, with fraud increasing proportionate to the bid price.”

The click fraud research brief can be found at www. MarketingExperiments. com and outlines what click fraud is, how significant of a problem it is and how it can successfully be avoided.

The experiment was conducted in conjunction with Los Angeles-based Clicks2Customers. com and focused on three pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns running during a 10-day period in 2005. Duplicate clicks were determined by comparing IP addresses, language, browser settings, referring URL, time of click, operating system, browser plug-ins and country of origin.

“Our random sample of PPC campaigns uncovered as much as 29.5 percent PPC fraud and showed that Google was able to account for and credit only a tiny portion of those fraudulent charges,” McGlaughlin said. “Whether it is click fraud or the lesser known impression fraud, these fraudulent clicks can cause a lot of damage to advertisers because it drains their budgets. Companies should be aware of how big of a problem it really is and be equipped to more aptly detect it.”

MarketingExperiments. com is an online research laboratory that determines which online strategies and tactics really work in Internet marketing. Results of its experiments are published for free online in The Marketing Experiments Journal.

Those interested in finding out more about the pay-per-click fraud problem can visit: www. MarketingExperiments. com.

About MarketingExperiments. com

MarketingExperiments. Com (MEC) is an online marketing research laboratory dedicated to discovering “what really works” in Internet marketing. MEC engages in primary and secondary research and publishes results in The Marketing Experiments Journal. To conduct relevant, practical experiments, MEC partners with clients such as the New York Times, Reuters News Service LLC, and USA Health Care. MarketingExperiments. com is a member of the MEC Labs Group and a division of Digital Trust, Inc. For more information, please visit www. MarketingExperiments. com.

MarketingExperiments. com Media Contacts:

David Politis, Politis Communications, 801-523-3730(work)/801-556-8184(cell), or

Rachel Atkinson, Politis Communications, 801-523-3730,

# # #