Google AdSense Reviews

AdSense: Get paid for Google text ads on your site

What is AdSense?

It's those little text ads that you see in Google, now appearing on your web pages and you get paid whenever your visitors click on the ads. Cost-per-click is the term. Google does all the work of matching your page content with the ads it dynamically serves up. All you do, once they've accepted your application, is paste in a few lines of code. They'll find the best ads for your pages, from their 100,000 AdWords advertisers.
You can block ads for as many as 200 URLs, so your major competitors wont appear on your site.
Small sites will find AdSense a real boon, from all the reports I'm seeing so far.

Integrating AdSense into your site to maximise your results

Learn from one of the greats how to monetize your site with AdSense.

Google AdSense could mean death to affiliate programs!

by Mike Banks Valentine

The popular search engine, Google has introduced a dramatic new contextual advertising service called Adsense. This new program could mean death to affiliate programs on those web sites that qualify for the Adsense program. Why would Google advertising affect affiliate programs? Because Google is making Adsense ads available to smaller content rich sites.

Adsense dramatically simplifies the process of choosing appropriate advertising for sections of sites. Since it's all automatic with Adsense, I'm through with searching for affiliate programs to fit my content. It just doesn't pay enough to justify the effort in most cases. While I won't dump existing producers, I'm dropping those affiliate programs that don't produce like hot potatoes.

I've moved house often over the last few years and in that process have struggled to keep affiliate programs abreast of the latest contact and banking information. Several honest affiliate program managers have emailed me after getting my affiliate checks returned from previous snail mail addresses.

Adsense will resolve this issue for me as I needn't keep the hundreds of affiliate programs up-to-date on my latest mailing address and/or banking information - only Google Adsense. I'm dropping smaller unproductive affiliate programs.

Allan Gardyne of Associate Programs penned an interesting and insightful article on Adsense this past week where he mentions this as an issue and predicts the death of smaller or weaker affiliate programs.

I agree.

http://www.AssociatePrograms.com/search/adsense.shtml

Google Adsense simply requires the host site to paste in a few lines of HTML code on their pages where they want those ads to appear. Once Google has spidered your content pages, they can assess what those pages are about. Adsense serves a series of ads that match and compliment your page topics automatically without site owner participation!

I've been impressed how Adsense has performed for me in just the last week. I've actually enjoyed looking at my own sites to see what ads are served to match my content. WebSite101 demonstrates very well how Adsense works. If you visit the HTML tutorial, you see Adsense ads for web page editing software or web hosting. If you visit my email tutorial, you'll see Adsense ads for email broadcasting software and targeted-email list broadcasting services. If you visit the Domain Name tutorial, you're served Adsense ads for Domain Registrars and web hosting. If you visit the Anti-Spam Tutorial, you get Adsense Ads for Spam Filtering Software.

http://www.website101.com/email_e-mail/
http://www.website101.com/HTML/
http://www.website101.com/Domain_Name
http://website101.com/SpamFilter/

You get the idea.

I like not having to mess with my own ad-serving software and twiddle with the rates and I absolutely LOVE not having to do any ad sales. I'm sold and wholeheartedly recommend Adsense to anyone with sufficient content to support it.

Between my 3 main sites,

http://WebSite101.com
http://SearchEngineOptimism.com
http://PrivacyNotes.com

I've got over 1000 pages of good solid content that I've built over the last 6 years. I've struggled in vain to get that content to pay by carefully choosing affiliate programs to fit neatly into dozens of topic areas. My two biggest producers have been software sales and health insurance referrals for small businesses. Those have been sporadic producers.

My biggest complaint is that I can't track what is producing clickthroughs. Google simply tells me clickthrough percentage, number of ad impressions per day and average earnings per clickthrough across all of my sites. That makes it very difficult to know where to concentrate my energy to produce additional revenue generating content. But it does seem to offer site owners incentive to maintain quality content and spread the ads across all content pages.

My privacy site runs a variety of HIPAA compliance ads, GLB compliance ads, and DoNotCall List Compliance ads. It seems the money in privacy is in charging large corporations to keep them within the letter of the law so they don't get sued for violations.

It is interesting to see my own site ads to know where the money is in PPC for each of the topic areas. Sometimes it's just not what you expect. I've got an article about Google's reverse phone lookup and how to get out of reverse phone lookup databases that is on the Privacy site and it sometimes shows ads about "low long distance rates". Clearly the keyphrase "Phone number" is triggering ads that are quite off target on this page.

While Adsense won't outperform my total affiliate income from the many programs spread across my sites, it WILL, if current trends continue, match my total affiliate income and therefore double advertising income!

The biggest benefit was the incentive to rebuild WebSite101, which got it's design in 1998. <embarrassed grin> I've needed to do that, but man is it tedious adapting all that content while maintaining page names and fitting it all back together with existing affiliate links and updating outdated stuff. Adsense gave me the incentive to do that by making my content finally pay for itself. It also gives me incentive to keep adding more relevant content.

I'm sold and wholeheartedly recommend Adsense to anyone with sufficient content to support it. While I won't dump existing affiliate program producers, I'm dropping those that don't produce clickthroughs and sales - fast - like hot potatoes.

Get Adsense if Google approves your site. You'll love it too.
http://google.com/adsense/

About the author:

Mike Banks Valentine
http://searchengineoptimism.com/SEO_Tutorial
http://WebSite101.com
http://PrivacyNotes.com

AdSense tool

A free AdSense Tool to show you what AdWords will be displayed until Google gets around to indexing (which can be a few hours or a few days).

More helpful articles about AdSense

Apply to join AdSense - free.

Google's AdSense pages: Overview | FAQ | Policies | Technical FAQ

Tips to Avoid AdWords Hassles - from ClickZ, July 10, 2003

How to boost your AdSense revenue - from Allan Gardyne, who reports that "Payouts of 30 cents or 50 cents per click – and more – are being achieved using AdSense." Allan also points out some negatives but overall endorses it strongly ... "the results have been startling – far better than I expected".

Google AdSense -- Advertising Revenue for the Rest of Us

Axandra says it "can help low-traffic sites quickly format their web pages to receive advertisements that match key words in the content of those individual pages."

SearchEngineWatch quotes a Google staffer saying "We built an online automated way for web sites to come to Google, sign-up and apply to be accepted into our network".

10 easy tips to help you achieve these keys and maximize revenue with AdSense

6 ways to find profitable keywords. From Allan Gardyne, so you know it's good.


 

If you use AdWords...

SitePoint suggests you'd save money by opening 2 AdWords accounts. Both use the same keywords, but bid lower for the new account - and do this: On the "Edit Campaign Settings" page UNCHECK the "search sites in the Google Network" box, and CHECK the the "content sites in the Google Network" box. Why? Because traffic through targeted searches is worth more than traffic from AdSense ads which are displayed to less targeted audiences.

Google Cash shows you step by step how, in your spare time and without a website, you can earn thousands every month with Google AdWords and these innovative concepts. Available nowhere else on the Net.

Just one simple Google campaign, that takes less than 30 minutes a week, earns the author $3,750 per month. And he'll show you exactly how he did it, and how you can too.

Top seller in the competitive Money & Employment section at Clickbank after one month.



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