Search Engine Optimization Value shown by the Numbers

The information in this article is mostly quoted from the Search engine Journal Article written by :

Danny Goodwin
February 28, 2021

https://www.searchenginejournal.com/seo/seo-statistics/

Showing up in the Organic Search Results is arguably the most valuable marketing channel. It is more valuable and has a better ROI for a business than any other Digital Marketing channel.

That’s why search engine optimization (SEO) is essential for every brand and business, especially home service businesses.

Your company needs SEO. Period.

Let me say that again…

Your company needs SEO; Small, Medium, or Large enterprise businesses NEED SEO.

Startups NEED SEO. Local businesses NEED SEO. Global brands NEED SEO.

Whenever people enter a query relevant to your website into a search engine, you want your result to be the one they click on.

That means your site needs to optimized be findable on search engines.

A click on your search result, or the lack thereof, can be the difference between a business thriving or dying.

If your website isn’t visible in the search results for the keywords you want to be found for, you can be sure that one of your competitors is!

Yet, for some ridiculous reason, it remains a struggle to justify the value of SEO – even though SEO has a 20+ year record of driving traffic, conversions, and revenue.

Why?

In part, the undeniable proof of SEO’s value is scattered across a handful of websites in various reports and studies.

Organic Traffic Statistics

53%: The percentage of all trackable website traffic that comes from organic search. (BrightEdge)

32%: The average organic click-through rate (CTR) the first Google desktop search result gets. (Advanced Web Ranking)

26.9%: The average organic CTR, the first Google mobile search result gets. (Advanced Web Ranking)

91.75%: The total worldwide search engine market share Google currently holds. (StatCounter, 2020)

2.75%: The total worldwide search engine market share Microsoft Bing currently holds. (StatCounter, 2020)

53%: The percentage of all trackable website traffic that comes from organic search. (BrightEdge)

32%: The average organic click-through rate (CTR) the first Google desktop search result gets. (Advanced Web Ranking)

26.9%: The average organic CTR, the first Google mobile search result gets. (Advanced Web Ranking)

91.75%: The total worldwide search engine market share Google currently holds. (StatCounter, 2020)

2.75%: The total worldwide search engine market share Microsoft Bing currently holds. (StatCounter, 2020)

7.2%: The percentage of decrease in Google’s U.S. net search ad revenues for 2020. (eMarketer)

>$5,000: The monthly amount the majority of businesses are spending on SEO. (Moz)

Local Search Statistics

Nearly 1 in 3 of all mobile searches are related to location. (Think with Google)

Nearly 2 in 3 of smartphone users are more likely to purchase from companies whose mobile sites or apps customize information to their location. (Think with Google)

76%: The percentage of people who search on their smartphones for something nearby and visit a business within a day. (28%of those searches for something nearby result in a purchase.) (Google)

About 45%: The percentage of global shoppers buy online and then pick up in-store. (Google/IPSOS)

More than 55%: The percentage of shoppers who say they used online video while actually shopping in a store. (Google/IPSOS)

90%: The percentage of consumers who used the internet to find a local business in the last year. (BrightLocal)

91%: The percentage of consumers who say that positive reviews make them more likely to use a business. (BrightLocal)

82%: The percentage of consumers who read online reviews for local businesses. (BrightLocal)

13 minutes and 45 seconds: The time an average consumer spends reading reviews before making a decision. (BrightLocal)

76%: The percentage of consumers who trust online reviews as much as recommendations from family and friends. (BrightLocal)

Users & Search Behavior Statistics

52.94% internet users worldwide operate mobile and tablet devices, while 47.06% use desktop. (StatCounter)

+1,000%: The percentage of search interest growth in “what to watch” queries since 2019. (Google)

65%: The percentage of people who use their phone in their I-want-to-buy moments. (Google)

39%: The percentage of purchasers who were influenced by a relevant search. (Google)

79%: The percentage of people who took a relevant action on their phone prior to making a purchase. (Google)

3: The average number of words a typical searcher uses in their search query. (Moz)

~8%: The percentage of search queries that are phrased as questions. (Moz)

18%: The percentage of queries on Google that result in the searcher changing their search terms without clicking any results. (Moz)

21%: The percentage of searches that lead to more than one click on Google’s results. (Moz)

8%: The percentage of Google queries result in pogo-sticking (i.e., the searcher clicks a result, then bounces back to the search results page and chooses a different result). (Moz)

9 days longer: The average number of days people take to make purchase decisions in 2019 compared with 2015. (Google)

Link Building Statistics

75%: The percentage of digital marketers who use content marketing specifically to generate links. (Aira)

1-9 links: The average number of links a content marketing campaign produces as reported by a majority of digital marketers. (Aira)

28%: The percentage of digital marketers who reported having created a campaign that generated no links at all. (Aira)

70%: The percentage of digital marketers who use Ahrefs as a tool for link building. (Aira)

51%: The percentage of digital marketers who use SEMrush as a tool for link building. (Aira)

34%: The percentage of digital marketers who would choose Domain Authority (Moz), If you could only choose one metric to measure authority and / or quality of a link. (Aira)

38%: The percentage of digital marketers who consider rankings as the primary KPI to measure the effectiveness of link building. (Aira)

53%: The percentage of digital marketers who consider guest posting as the most effective link building strategy. (SEMrush)

28%: The percentage of digital marketers who reported having created a campaign that generated no links at all. (Aira)

70%: The percentage of digital marketers who use Ahrefs as a tool for link building. (Aira)

51%: The percentage of digital marketers who use SEMrush as a tool for link building. (Aira)

34%: The percentage of digital marketers who would choose Domain Authority (Moz), If you could only choose one metric to measure authority and / or quality of a link. (Aira)

38%: The percentage of digital marketers who consider rankings as the primary KPI to measure the effectiveness of link building. (Aira)

53%: The percentage of digital marketers who consider guest posting as the most effective link building strategy. (SEMrush)

89%: The difference between Google’s total worldwide search engine market compared to Bing’s. (StatCounter)

Under 1 minute: The all-in time of the average Google search session (from the time of the initial query to the loading of the search results page and the selection of any results, plus any back button clicks to those SERPs and selection of new results.) (Moz)

66%: The percentage of distinct search queries that resulted in one or more clicks on Google’s results. (34% of searches get no clicks at all.) (Moz)

3.4%: The percentage of distinct search queries in Google that resulted in a click on a Google ad (paid). (Moz)

0.9%: The percentage of Google.com search results that get a click on Google Maps. (Moz)

~0.5%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to links in the Knowledge Graph. (Moz)

3%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to image blocks. (Moz)

~0.23%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to Twitter block results. (Moz)

1.8%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to YouTube. (Moz)

0.16%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to personalized Gmail/Google Mail results. (Moz)

0.55%: The percentage of clicks on Google search results that go to Google Shopping results. (Moz)

11.8%: The percentage of clicks from distinct Google searches that result in a click on a Google property, i.e., YouTube, Google Maps, Gmail, Google Books, the Google Play Store on mobile, etc. (Moz)

~25% of all searches are distributed across the top 1MM queries, with the top 10MM queries accounting for about 45% and the top 1BB queries accounting for close to 90%. (Moz)

25%: The percentage of all search volume that happens outside the top 100 million keywords. (Moz)

40.9%: The percentage of Google searches done on mobile devices that result in an organic click, 2% in a paid click, and 57.1% in no click at all. (Moz)

62.2%: The percentage of Google searches done on desktop devices that result in an organic click, 2.8% in a paid click, and 35% in no click. (Moz)

SEO vs. Other Marketing Channels
15%: The percentage of all trackable traffic that comes from paid search. (BrightEdge)

5%: The percentage of all trackable traffic that comes from paid social. (BrightEdge)

15%: The percentage of all trackable traffic that comes from all other sources. (BrightEdge)

27%: The% of the global online population using voice search on mobile. (Google)

~20: The number of times SEO has more traffic opportunity than PPC on both mobile and desktop. (Moz)