Public awareness and attitudes towards search engine optimization
Dirk Lewandowski, Sebastian Schulthei{\ss}

TL;DR
This study surveys German internet users to assess their awareness and understanding of search engine optimization, revealing gaps in knowledge and perceptions that impact digital literacy and regulation.
Contribution
It provides empirical data on user awareness of SEO, highlighting misconceptions and differences in understanding across device types and SERP complexity.
Findings
43% believe rankings can improve without payment
79% aware of paid ads influencing results
8.9% know the term 'SEO'
Abstract
This research focuses on what users know about search engine optimization (SEO) and how well they can identify results that have potentially been influenced by SEO. We conducted an online survey with a sample representative of the German online population (N = 2,012). We found that 43% of users assume a better ranking can be achieved without paying money to Google. This is in stark contrast to the possibility of influence through paid advertisements, which 79% of internet users are aware of. However, only 29.2% know how ads differ from organic results. The term "search engine optimization" is known to 8.9% of users but 14.5% can correctly name at least one SEO tactic. Success in labelling results that can be influenced through SEO varies by search engine result page (SERP) complexity and devices: participants achieved higher success rates on SERPs with simple structures than on the more…
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Taxonomy
MethodsAttentive Walk-Aggregating Graph Neural Network
