A Custom PHP Site Got 34% CTR – BuiltToWinWeb
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How a Custom PHP Site Hit a 34% Click-Through Rate

I’m Jacob Campbell, and this one is straight from Google Search Console, not a hypothetical. A custom PHP site I built reached an average CTR around 17.8% at an average position of 2.7, with a peak of 34% within its first week live. Click-through rate is where ranking turns into actual traffic, so here’s what drove those numbers and how to influence your own.

Key facts

  • 34% — Peak CTR
  • 17.8% — Average CTR
  • 2.7 — Average position
  • GSC — First-party data

Position is the biggest lever

CTR is dominated by where you rank — higher positions earn dramatically more clicks, and the top few results take the lion’s share. Independent studies like First Page Sage’s CTR-by-position report and Advanced Web Ranking show the steep drop-off below the top results. Reaching position 2.7 is what put a high CTR within reach in the first place.

The listing has to earn the click

Position gets you seen; your title and description earn the click. A specific, benefit-led title and a description that answers the query out-perform generic ones. Rich results from schema markup help too — Google’s data shows marked-up listings can lift CTR substantially.

Speed and freshness compound it

A fast, well-built site tends to hold and improve position, and a strong early CTR signals relevance. The 34% peak came from a clean build that ranked quickly and presented a compelling, specific listing — the click-through followed.

How to read your own CTR

In Search Console’s Performance report compare your CTR to the typical rate for your average position. Sitting well below the benchmark usually means a weak title or description — easy, high-leverage things to rewrite and test.

Sources & further reading

Related services

Frequently asked questions

Is a 34% click-through rate realistic?

As a peak at a high position, yes. This figure is first-party Google Search Console data from a custom PHP site averaging position 2.7 with a 17.8% average CTR.

What most affects CTR?

Ranking position first, then how compelling your title and description are. Rich results from schema markup also help.

How do I improve my CTR?

Rank higher, write specific benefit-led titles and descriptions, and add schema for rich results. Compare your CTR to the benchmark for your position in Search Console.

Where do I see my CTR?

In Google Search Console’s Performance report, which shows clicks, impressions, CTR and average position per query and page.

Does site speed affect CTR?

Indirectly — faster sites tend to rank and hold higher positions, and position is the largest driver of click-through rate.

Get a site built to rank — and get clicked

BuiltToWinWeb builds fast, schema-rich sites engineered for high positions and high CTR — for one flat fee.

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