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klikkrate

Klikkrate, often translated as click rate, is a metric used in digital marketing to measure how often users click on a link, advertisement, or call-to-action relative to how often it is shown. It is commonly used to assess the effectiveness of banners, emails, search ads, and social media posts.

Calculation and scope: klikkrate = (number of clicks / number of impressions) × 100. Depending on context, the

Measurement and data sources: tracking relies on analytics tools, ad platforms, and email systems that record

Interpretation and limitations: a higher klikkrate indicates greater engagement with the link or ad, but it

Applications and context: klikkrate is used to optimize campaigns, perform A/B tests, and benchmark performance across

numerator
may
count
unique
clicks
or
total
clicks,
and
the
denominator
is
impressions
or
views.
In
many
cases,
klikkrate
is
essentially
the
same
as
the
click-through
rate
(CTR),
though
some
teams
distinguish
between
total
clicks
and
unique
clicks
or
between
different
attribution
approaches.
impressions
and
clicks.
Data
quality
depends
on
accurate
tagging,
tracking
pixels,
and
attribution
windows.
Differences
in
how
impressions
are
counted
across
channels
can
affect
comparability.
does
not
guarantee
downstream
actions
such
as
conversions
or
purchases.
Factors
influencing
it
include
placement,
creative
quality,
targeting,
frequency,
and
potential
fraudulent
activity
or
bots.
Seasonal
effects
and
differing
audience
baselines
can
also
affect
comparisons.
channels.
Example:
a
banner
with
50,000
impressions
and
1,250
clicks
has
a
klikkrate
of
2.5%.
It
is
most
informative
when
analyzed
alongside
conversion
metrics
and
cost
data.