Someone i know presented me with this query, what do you think about this? imp click ctr "page name" 7 7 100.0% USD209.85 USD1.47 7 clicks and only $1.47?! Normally the guy gets paid about .50 pc for this page. Could it be because the ctr is so high that google has not paid the guy for the clicks thinking they are invalid? What do you guys think? :::Notting::: EDIT: Sorry mods i posted this in the wrong section. My bad!
IMHO with 7 clicks/impresions, you can't do statisticaly nothing, you need at least 40 clicks to have average ppc, and also 100% of click rate is not only unusual, for sure its wrong, or only with ads with no content. Greatest reasonable click ratio will be, at MAXIMUM, 10%-15% (more than 10% for sure the site will be marked for human revision.)
What? How do you know how many clicks this guys has had? He may have had the page running for 12 months, seen hundreds of click on it and know that the page should be paid at a higher ppc than that. this sentence is grammatically wrong so i dont really know what youre trying to say. But in response to what i think your trying to say: 1. 100% CTR is pretty unusual 2. Why is it wrong 3. Only ads/no content? (arent they the same!) - nope this page that the guy has is very high quality and still has a very high CTR how do you define reasonable - just because you don't have a high ctr on your pages doesn't mean you can generalise to this guys pages. You sound well informed on these matters. Can you source this? or did you just whip that figure out of the air. Totally not happy with your ill thought out and in parts ill informed post. BTW your post didnt even make an attempt to answer the main point addressed in the post. :::Jamie:::
There are several factors that could cause this and with this few of clicks it is hard to say what it would be. It could be as simple as they served him lower paying ads or the advertisers in that particular keyword had bid lower for that day. So many things could be the issue. I would wait and get some more info from say a day or two and then see.