Archive for the 'AdSense' Category
Once you have done your keyword research and you
determine the keywords you want to target, integrating
keywords into
your content is probably the most important part of the entire Continue Reading »
Integrating Keywords into Web Content
Technorati Tags: web, money, search engines, man
Gurus boost Google Adsense income using secret tips and tools that few know
of. Occasionally, you do get to learn a trick or two when you join
their lists or private membership forums. It takes some exposure and
proper learning and application to know what really works and what
don’t work at all. Save yourself some time and find out for yourself
what are some killer tips that can boost Adsense income.
Boost Adsense Income Tip 1 – Keyword Research Continue Reading »
Boost Google Adsense Income Killer Tips
Technorati Tags: boost google adsense, google adsense, adsense income, adsense secret tips, keyword tool adsense, google, health, free, web, internet, blog, search engines, tips, game, man
Google’s AdSense is a superb revenue generating opportunity for small, medium and large web sites. Some webmasters are designing brand new sites specifically for serving AdSense text ads. (It’s against the AdSense rules to design a site purely for AdSense, so you’ll want to include a few affiliate links or sell your own product, too.) Here’s the background info: AdSense overview AdSense FAQ AdSense tech FAQ AdSense policies Sign up for AdSense. AdSense allows you to serve text-based Google AdWords on your web site and receive a share of the pay-per-click payment. AdSense ads are similar to the AdWords ads you see on the right-hand side at Google when you do a search there. AdSense is having a huge impact on the affiliate marketing industry. It’s often much easier to generate revenue from AdSense than from an affiliate program. Weak affiliate merchants will die faster than ever. If you’re a merchant running a lousy affiliate program, now’s the time to improve it FAST. adsense
AdSenseThe maximum limit anywhere on the google competitive ad filter setting page or on the filter guide. It is a welcome change.I found something rather interesting in google help pages:
Please note that Google does not commit that all ads for the websites that you add to your competitive ad filter list or ads containing objectionable content will be prevented from display on your site.
What’s up with that?
AdSenseSmart Pricing” is Google’s way of trying to keep its advertisers happy by lowering the cost of junk traffic. Unfortunately, they do this at your expense. Having poor advertisers on your site, will lead to you users clicking the adverts, then leaving the horrible site they land on almost instantly. When people do this, Google will think you’re sending out junky traffic, when actually it’s the advertiser’s site that is at fault. This will lead to the money you get per click, going down.
Fortunately, Google offer a “competitive ad filter”, which allows you to block certain advertisers from showing ads on your site. Login to your Google Adsense account and go to “Adsense Setup” and you’ll see a “Competitive Ad Filter” tab. Click this and you’ll be given a box of URLs to block.
Copy & paste this list into your competitive ad filter and this should help you keep a strong amount per click.
AdSense
For complete information on the AdSense-Deluxe plugin for WordPress blogs, please visit this post:
AdSense-Deluxe Home Page
AdSense-Deluxe is a WordPress plugin offering advanced options for managing the automatic insertion of Google AdSense or Yahoo Publisher Network (YPN) ads to your WordPress posts.
AdSenseHii…. Google has laaunched another limited beta of pay-per-action advertising–a model that allows advertisers to pay for a specific consumer activity, like signing up for a newsletter or making a purchase.
The cost-per-action ads will appear only on the AdSense publisher network. Partner publishers are allowed to choose whether they want CPA ads to appear on their sites. Over the next few weeks, Google will begin inviting publishers and advertisers to participate, a spokesman for the search giant said.
Google first began testing pay-per-action ads in June 2006. During that test, the CPA ads did not compete with regular AdSense ads. They were displayed on a different network, dubbed the Content Referral Network.
According to Greg Sterling, principal for Sterling Marketing Intelligence, CPA ads offer publishers a lower-volume, higher-cost option on their AdSense ads. “While there will likely be fewer “actions,” the revenue realized per event will probably be greater–and much greater in some cases,” he said. “Publishers have a great deal of choice in the program and will know exactly how much they’ll make on any given lead or action originating from their sites.”Sterling said that advertisers were very likely to embrace the program, too.“It will be interesting to see how both advertisers and publishers respond, and whether both sides embrace the program almost uniformly. I would imagine that advertisers would,” he said. “Google is offering PPA in new ad inventory that complements traditional AdSense, so publishers in the near term won’t lose any click revenue as they test the performance of the new program.”
Information from: publications.mediapost.com
AdSenseSome webmasters create sites tailored to lure searchers from Google and other engines onto their AdSense to make money from clicks. These “zombie” sites often contain nothing but a large amount of interconnected, automated content (e.g. a directory with content from the Open Directory Project). Possibly the most popular form of such “AdSense farms” are splogs (”spam blogs”), which are centered around known high-paying keywords. These and related approaches are considered to be search engine spam and can be reported to Google.
AdSensePreviously the minimum bid for a click on Google Adword / Adsense was $0.05.
For the publisher’s part, I have seen for a long time that the minimum revenue to get from a click was $0.03. So Google’s cut is probably $0.02 for a $0.05.
No minimum bid
What is more scandalous Google has introduced some new rules, no minimum bids. I have lately seen payments for clicks down in $0.01 and $0.02. read on..
Technorati Tags: google, adsense, adwords
AdSenseReferrals is a feature of AdSense that allows you to increase your revenue while increasing your users’ awareness of useful products and services. By adding a referral button to your site, you can direct users to products like AdSense and Firefox with Google Toolbar. When your referral connects a user to AdSense or Firefox, you can generate more earnings while helping new web publishers monetize their websites or improve their web browsing experience.
You can use step-by-step instructions to add a referral to your site in minutes.So What You Got?
Users who sign up for AdSense through your referral button will learn about a great product, and you’ll have a new way to generate revenue - $100 when each user you refer first earns $100.In addition, if you are a U.S. publisher, for Firefox with Google Toolbar referrals we will pay up to $1 per referral the first time a user installs Firefox.
Technorati Tags: adsense, referral, google
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