Although you didn't indicate the geo market this report is pulled from, for 15 days of activity, I'm unfortunately not seeing the volume of impressions let alone clicks on that would interest me enough to put energy (or dollars) towards it for my clients.
What would prove me wrong are if these minimal clicks had a much higher conversion (to lead) rate than the rest of the campaign's higher traffic generating terms.
I appreciate your thoughts. And again, there's a mixture of philosophy and functionality here that can make this conversation go on and on and on.
First, to answer your question, that dealer is in small market and typically receives about 1000 clicks a month from their search campaign and about 200 from their Haystack campaign. We have dealers in larger metros that receive 1000 or more clicks from the Haystack portion of their campaigns. There's definitely traffic out there.
Second, we're a full service agency. So we plan a dealer's budget from Internet to newspaper. Typically a dealer sets a budget and splits it up amongst the mediums they deem necessary. Our perspective is while small, those clicks and that investment (let's say $750 in that case) is more valuable than the half page print ad he's going to buy if we don't buy those clicks. Would you agree that those clicks are more valuable than a half page print ad?
Finally, we believe in what we call the lesson of the long tail. We took a client and looked at their search terms. 47% of their traffic came from three keywords. The other 53% came from 1215. If we didn't focus on small bits of traffic and grab them up in 1's and 3's, we'd miss 53% of the traffic.
In the end, your point is well taken - you wouldn't put the effort into building those campaigns and neither would we. The Haystack tool makes it that you put zero effort into that campaign and still get the traffic. As far as whether you'd put the money into that, I'd again go back to what's the alternative? You'll find that most dealers will sink that into print, mail or electronic and get a much lower ROI.