I run a niche content site. Right now it has 1,684 pages indexed in Google. Over the past 28 days, those pages collected 21,257 impressions and 100 clicks. That 0.47% overall CTR is bad, I know. But I wasn't interested in the average — I wanted to know if the words I chose for my URLs made any measurable difference.
So I tagged every single URL by its naming pattern and ran the numbers.
The result made me stop writing "guides" entirely.
The categories
I split all 1,684 URLs into groups based on the words in their slugs:
| URL Pattern | Pages | Impressions | Clicks | CTR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| *guide | 585 | 8,587 | 21 | 0.24% |
| *vs | 149 | 3,648 | 15 | 0.41% |
| *how-to | 114 | 861 | 6 | 0.70% |
| *best | 29 | 367 | 2 | 0.54% |
| *why | 39 | 365 | 4 | 1.10% |
| *safety | 17 | 368 | 6 | 1.63% |
| *comparison | 8 | 280 | 1 | 0.36% |
| *types | 12 | 464 | 0 | 0.00% |
| everything else | 677 | 5,595 | 45 | 0.80% |
Let that sink in. The word "guide" appears in 585 of my URLs — more than any other pattern. It also generates the lowest click-through rate of any format I tracked: 0.24%. That's roughly one click for every 400 impressions.
Meanwhile, the 17 pages with "safety" in the URL pulled a 1.63% CTR. Same site, same Google, same timeframe. Seven times the clicks per impression.
The "guide" problem is structural, not coincidental
You could argue that "guide" URLs target more competitive keywords. That's fair — so I checked. The average Google position for "guide" pages was 29.6. The average for "safety" pages was 15.3. So yes, safety pages rank higher on average.
But that doesn't explain the whole gap. Look at the "vs" pages: 149 URLs with an average position of 37.2 (worse than guide's 29.6), yet they still managed a 0.41% CTR — nearly double the guide rate, despite ranking lower.
Even more telling: the "types" format. Twelve pages, 464 impressions, zero clicks. Zero. These are pages like "types of jewelry clasps" and "types of quartz." All that traffic, and not a single person clicked through. The average position for these pages was 42.2 — bad but not that different from guide at 29.6.
When I look at what's actually happening at the page level, it gets worse. My single highest-impression page — 816 impressions over 28 days — is titled "jewelry design software guide (beginners to pro)." Position 53. Zero clicks. The second-highest, at 492 impressions, is "types of jewelry clasps: complete guide." Position 57. Also zero clicks.
These aren't buried on page 10. They're getting real impressions. People are seeing them. They just aren't clicking.
What actually works
The pages that do get clicks share a pattern I didn't expect. It's not about being comprehensive or authoritative. It's about specificity and urgency.
The top-performing page in my entire dataset by CTR got a 40.0% click-through rate on just 5 impressions: "ocean jasper complete guide Madagascar." That's oddly specific — it names a location. The second-highest CTR (28.6%) went to "blue lace agate obsession." Not "blue lace agate guide." "Obsession."
The "why" pattern was particularly interesting. Thirty-nine pages, mostly asking question-style queries like "why do some crystals glow under UV light" or "why does hematite break." These pulled 1.10% CTR — over four times the guide rate. They rank at an average position of 18.3, so they're not dominating. But people click them more.
Then there's the "safety" cluster. Pages like "can malachite get wet" and "crystals safe for kids." These answer a direct worry. The average CTR of 1.63% means that for every 62 impressions, someone clicks. For comparison, a guide page needs 409 impressions to get one click.
What I changed
After seeing this data, I made three adjustments to my content pipeline:
Stopped adding "guide" or "complete guide" to new URLs. This was hard. Every content brief I'd written for the past six months used "guide" in the slug. It felt like the professional, authoritative thing to do. The data says it's the worst thing I can do for CTR.
Prioritized question-based and comparison formats for new content. The "vs" and "why" patterns both outperformed the site average, and they rank worse on average — meaning they're pulling more clicks per impression despite having weaker positions. If I can improve their rankings, the click gains compound.
Started auditing the 585 "guide" pages for potential URL changes. I know changing URLs on an established site is risky. But 585 pages at 0.24% CTR means roughly 20 clicks I'm leaving on the table every month. If I can move even a quarter of them to better-performing formats without losing their position, that's meaningful.
The counterargument I keep hearing
Every time I share this data, someone says: "But guides are evergreen content. They target informational intent. The CTR is low because the intent is different."
I understand that logic. But here's the thing — my "why" pages are also informational intent. Same audience, same topic area. And they get 4.6x more clicks per impression.
The difference isn't intent. It's framing. "Guide" tells Google (and searchers) that your page is one of thousands. "Why does hematite break" tells them your page has a specific answer to a specific question. Same information, different packaging.
One more thing I noticed
Out of the 80 pages that received any clicks at all, only 12 had "guide" in the URL. The remaining 573 guide pages got nothing. That's a 2.1% hit rate for guides versus a 10.0% hit rate for everything else.
In other words, a non-guide page on my site is nearly five times more likely to get at least one click from Google in a given month.
The numbers that matter
- 585 guide URLs → 21 clicks (0.24% CTR)
- 17 safety URLs → 6 clicks (1.63% CTR)
- 39 "why" URLs → 4 clicks (1.10% CTR)
- 149 "vs" URLs → 15 clicks (0.41% CTR, at worse avg position than guides)
- 677 miscellaneous URLs → 45 clicks (0.80% CTR)
The word "guide" appears in 34.7% of my URLs but generates only 21% of my clicks. The word doesn't help — it hurts.
If you're building a content site, check your URL patterns against your actual CTR data. You might find that the word you thought made your content sound authoritative is the exact reason nobody clicks it.
What URL patterns are working (or failing) on your sites? I'm curious if this is specific to niche content or if it holds across different verticals.
Top comments (1)
Very interesting...
I'm curious how that correlates with guide as an in-line for the base url. Eg. my site is unitbuilds.com, how would that compare to unitguides.com (as an example). Could be a startup cheat code if it hits the same traffic filtering? Take TomsHardware for instance, they have a /guide section, but what about TomsGuide, would it get the same traffic as TomsHardware/Guides?