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Wednesday, September 08, 2010 |
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Optimzing Google Adsense - Part 1

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Optimzing Google Adsense - Part 1
Web publishers are discovering that Google Adsense is a great way to generate
revenue from their content rich sites. Google Adsense provides a simple
sign up process and a simple system that generates cut-and-paste code that
will display ads on the site that are matched to the site's content. With
15 minutes of effort and a brief wait for approval, a webmaster will be
set to receive about half of his potential revenue stream from Adsense.
The other half of the revenue takes a little thinking and work.
AD
LAYOUT The shape of the ad will have a great affect on clickthrough
rate. If you choose to use a format that is very familiar and easily
ignored, like a traditional banner ad shape (468 by 60 pixels), your
performance will be poor. If you choose a newer format like a tower (120
wide by 600 tall) you will see better performance. www.CFNewbie.com
utilizes this format. You will also see higher clickthrough rates as the
overall size of the ad grows. If your site allows it, go with the biggest
and newest shapes that Adsense offers.
COLOR The color of your
Adsense ads can affect the way users respond. You can be subtle and blend
into the rest of the page and may draw people to links as they appear to
offer more information rather than standing out screaming come buy
something. The subtle approach can be accomplished by selecting the
standard Google Adsense color scheme closest to your site's scheme or you
can match exactly using the custom pallet.
You may want to attract
attention to your Adsense ads. You can do this by selecting or creating
color schemes that stand out. You will also want to use the mulitple color
scheme feature by selecting several color schemes by holding down your
control (Ctrl) key and clicking up to four choices. The varying color
schemes may get more notice than a constant color
scheme.
POSITION The position of your Google Adsense ad can have
affect on how well the ad performs. Avoid blindspots and consider how a
visitor exits a page. The most likely blindspot to avoid is the
traditional spot for banner ads. Visitors will likely ignore a banner
shaped ad at the top or bottom of your page. They will likely ignore a
tower placed at the top of the right or left column if the content extends
beyond the length of the ad. In the case of content rich pages, it would
be wise to test placing non-banner shaped ads at the end of the page where
the reader is done with a page and ready to exit. ChristianMusician.com
uses this technique effectively at the end of articles, offering the
reader more articles and relavent ads. It's always a good idea to give
your visitors a path through your site that is relavent and valuable to
both you and them.
CHANNELS Google recently added channels to
Adsense. A channel is just an extra bit of code that lets you track
revenue from a channel such as a site, a page, or some other
characteristic you may want to track.
Prior to the introduction of
channels, a webmaster would place Adsense code on various sites and pages
and would only see an aggregate result of clickthrough and revenues. With
channels, you can set a channel for various sites or various pages or
various ad types. By your using your channels you can determine what ads
are working in which location. On FlashCFM.com an Adsense banner ad
performed very well in some pages and a large Amazon ad performed poorly
so a large Adsense replaced the Amazon ad.
USE THE SCIENTIFIC
METHOD The Scientific Method can be summarized as Plan, Do, Check,
Act. By planning out your attack by designing and implementing your ads,
you accomplish the Plan Do portion of the cycle. By using Adsense
Channels, you can check to see how your plan worked. You will no doubt see
ways to Act or adjust your approach after checking your results. You may
end up modifying your site or modifying your strategies on attracting
traffic. No matter what the case, you will need to do a little work but
the results are worth it.
| About the author |
| Tom Barr,
MBA, is a long time ColdFusion developer and perpetual student of web
advertising. He maintains web community sites including CFNewbie.com and
FlashCFM.com and blogs on web revenue generation in CPC Blog on his site
AspiringGeek.com. |
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