How do you make money from the Google Adsense Program? What AdSense Tips can you share with us?
I have been asked this question so many times in the past few weeks that I thought I should write something on the topic. It seems increasingly bloggers want to try to cover their hosting and ISP costs with some revenue from their blog – and increasingly they’re doing it and are able to make a few (or quite a lot) dollars on the side. Many are turning to Google’s Adsense program.
Covering costs of my Digital Photography Blog is why I originally signed up with Google Adsense – blogging can get expensive when you have high levels of traffic and a lot of pages.
Whilst the agreement you sign with Google stresses that you are not allowed to give specific information about your earnings from the program I can say that I’m glad I’ve signed up because its well and truly covered my costs – and then some. In fact I think its quite feasible to expect that Adsense coupled with other strategies for making money from Blogging could quite easily generate a decent living. It takes time and hard work, but I think its very doable. (Update: Since writing this series I’ve revealed that I am now looking at making over a six figure income this year in 2005 from blogging).
So how do I make money from Google Adsense? Let me share some AdSense Tips that heve helped me.
This will be the first in a series of posts on this topic. Let me say up front I’m no expert – there are a lot of people out there making a lot more money than I am using Adsense – however most of them are not telling their secrets – well not for free anyway. I’ve got no secrets to hide and am willing to share what I’ve learnt since I signed up for the program 8 months ago. If you want a REAL expert’s opinion on Adsense I’d recommend buying Joel Comm’s What Google Never Told You About Making Money with Adsense E-Book. Joel earns $15,000 per month from Adsense and has some good things to share.
I know some bloggers are put off or offended by the idea of making money from
blogging so I’ll try not to let these posts dominate my blog – however if you
are not interested in the topic, simply skip over these posts.
I am going to assume a few things in this series to cut down the amount of
introductory comments I have to make. Here is what I am assuming:
Enough introductory comments – lets get stuck into the Adsense Tips for Bloggers!
The full series of AdSense Tips is Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7 and Part 8
Fiction:
I shouldn’t be held responsible if users post content on my site or network
that violates AdSense policies.Because of their AdSense revenue, the CarDekho team can focus their
efforts on providing useful and quality information on their website to
ensure a good user experience, rather than worrying about monetization.
Amit, co-founder, shares, “AdSense is a
must-have for all sites looking forward to a sustainable and profitable
business model. It may not be the primary source of income as you scale your
business model to earn from other sources. AdSense does add to considerable
amount of revenues generated without having to worry about hiring a sales
team to sell inventory...Had it not been for AdSense, CarDekho would not
have come this far without VC funding.”
Have a success story of your own? We’d love to here it. Fill out
this form to let us know how AdSense has
helped you and your business!
This message will include links to the relevant steps to remove your
holds, as well as a link to contact us. Please contact us only if your
account is still on hold after you've completed the steps. We’ll be happy to
help you remove it!
2) Verify that the cumulative total of your
unpaid finalized earnings has crossed the payments threshold.
Visit your payments page and view your monthly balance. If this total
exceeds
your country’s payments threshold, you are
eligible to be issued a payment later this month. Congratulations!
If you don't see finalized earnings from the previous month, either you
didn't accrue any earnings or you’ll have to wait a few days for them to
show up.
3) Verify that you have successfully set up
a payment method.
Our payment options vary by country. Using the new AdSense interface, view
the
payment methods that are available to you
by clicking on “edit payment method” located under “account settings.” If
Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) is available in your country, we highly
recommend it as the fastest and easiest option available. We’re always
trying to launch new forms of payment in different countries, so stay tuned
to the blog if you don’t see your preferred form of payment yet.
Lastly, in the unlikely event that you are experiencing a payment problem
that you can’t resolve, please view our
Known Issues page or search for your issue
on the
AdSense Help Forum. These are valuable
resources and often contain the answers to many of our most frequently
received questions.
Thanks again for all of your great feedback. We’ll let you know as we
continue to roll out new features. In the meantime, keep the comments coming
on the blog or in this
Forum discussion!
When you are an Adsense publisher, or even if you are just looking to make more money from your hobby website, one of the most important things you can do is experiment with sizes and placement.
Most of the time, publishers use a single template for all of their page/posts; however, this doesn’t always give the highest payouts. If you are using a CMS, that allows you to have different templates that will often allow you to experiment. If you are using WordPress, this feature was recently added. If you haven’t done any Adsense optimization recently, I’d suggest reading the Adsense Optimization Techniques post from the Adsense Blog. Using the techniques there, you can make changes that will quite often have a dramatic impact on your earnings. How dramatic? I’ll show you …
You can see that the earnings for any single page on one my websites is fairly consistent for most of the year. However, right after reading and implementing the changes from that Adsense post mentioned above, I changed the placement and size. You can see earnings showed a nice increase. More importantly, the earnings have remained at a higher level. Let me put it to you another way: for less than 15 minutes worth of work, I was able to nearly quadruple the amount of money that page generated in a month. So it might be something you want to try. Here’s my advice:
§ Look for pages with good or better traffic that aren’t generating much revenue
§ Put those pages into custom templates
§ Experiment with different ad placements, colors, and sizes
§ Try to let each experiment run for at least a week
§ Look at Adsense revenue–don’t be lured off track by high CTR or high eCPM
§ Once you have found the optimal format, try it on other pages and see if revenue increases
§ Lather, rinse, repeat
Google is making some significant changes to how it handles copyright
infringement complaints and piracy that will go into effect over the next
several months.
Google says it will act on reliable copyright takedown requests within 24 hours,
will prevent terms that are closely associated with piracy from appearing in its
Autocomplete feature, will improve its AdSense anti-piracy review, and will
experiment to make authorized preview content more readily available in search
results.
"There are more than 1 trillion unique URLs on the web and more than 35 hours of
video uploaded to YouTube every minute,"
says Google General Counsel Kent Walker. "It's some pretty fantastic
stuff - content that makes us think, laugh, and learn new things. Services we
couldn’t have imagined ten years ago - iTunes, Netflix, YouTube, and many others
- help us access this content and let traditional and emerging creators profit
from and share their work with the world."
"But along with this new wave of creators come some bad apples who use the
Internet to infringe copyright," adds Walker. "As the web has grown, we have
seen a growing number of issues relating to infringing content. We respond
expeditiously to requests to remove such content from our services, and have
been improving our procedures over time. But as the web grows, and the number of
requests grows with it, we are working to develop new ways to better address the
underlying problem."
Kyle Bylin at HypeBot has
a good explanation of how Google has been able to make money off of
"both sides of the content spectrum."
"Fans don't need to visit the Pirate Bay to find torrents," he writes. "They can
type the same terms in Google and likely get better results. With the rollout of
their Autocomplete function, it's been observed that Google actively educated
everyone looking for music and movies what torrents are. It's even been
demonstrated that sites hosting infringing content also feature AdSense ads...No
matter what an artist does, Google makes money of[f] their music."
On a somewhat related note, Viacom is set to appeal the infamous
copyright-infringement case against YouTube, according to
a report from the Wall Street Journal.
Over the next few weeks, the way in which around two million people and organizations make their living (or at least earn additional income) will change. Google announced this morning that it’s rolling out a new AdSense interface for publishers.
This should be quite an event. The launch starts today, and is meant to occur on a global scale, so it will soon be visible in 30 languages and 200 countries. Also, about a year’s worth of testing took place to ensure there’s little to fear in the way of glitches and bugs.
As for what sorts of features are on tap, a post on the Inside AdSense blog explained, “You can now run even more detailed performance reports by ad type, ad size, ad unit, targeting type, and bid type for total earnings and other metrics, over custom date ranges. You’ll also find graphs of your data on the new Performance reports tab.”
Furthermore, “All ad controls are now in one place, on the Allow and block ads tab. Here, you’ll be able to filter ads from specific advertisers, categories, and ad networks. In addition, you’ll notice that we’ve updated the ad review center to make it easier to review and manage ads that have been placement-targeted to your sites.”
And finally, “The new interface allows you to quickly see your earnings and payment information, find relevant features, and make changes to your account. It also brings relevant help and other resources, like videos and blog posts, right into the interface, so you can get the information you need without leaving your account.”
There are many, many circumstances in which computer-matched ads might not be a
good fit. Imagine if a site for entomologists somehow got stuck with ads for
Volkswagen Beetle parts, for example. Or if a site meant to showcase funny
pratfalls was paired with ads for vacations ("trips"). Fortunately, Google's
testing expanded category blocking with AdSense.
The category filtering beta used to offer sites' owners a way to turn down ads
from up to five categories. It was meant to be used in a rather broad fashion.
Now, a post on the
Inside AdSense blog has explained, "General category blocking will
allow you to block even more categories of ads from appearing on your site.
We're testing this feature with 170 more specific categories, including finance,
travel, job, and automotive. This feature will allow publishers to block up to
50 ad categories from among a broad range of 170 fine grained categories."
Also, as before, the feature will show publishers what sort of impact changes
would have on their earnings.
Note that not everyone will get to take advantage of the new options; they're
only available through the new AdSense interface, and for that matter, will only
work in combination with English-language ads.
Still, the feature shows a lot of promise, and Google plans to polish it and
increase its availability in time.
Google announced it has expanded its sensitive category blocking feature for
AdSense to Japanese, Chinese, Polish, and Portuguese. The goal is to expand it
worldwide eventually.
The feature is already available in English, French, German, Spanish, Italian,
Dutch, and Arabic (with testing being done for Russian).
With the feature, users can prevent ads from up to 11 categories from appearing
on their pages. "Ads in these categories will be blocked if they're in any of
the supported languages, regardless of how they've been targeted to your pages,"
says Google's Katrina Kurnit.
Setting category blocking can be done from the Ad Review Center in your AdSense
account. This can be found in the AdSense Setup tab.
"Once you click 'change,' you'll be able to view the full list of categories you
can block," says Kurnit. "In addition, to help you understand the impact of
applying these filters, we'll show you the percentage of revenue and ad
impressions you've been receiving from each category in the last 30 days."
Categories that can be blocked include: cosmetic procedures and
surgeries, dating, drugs and supplements, get rich quick, politics, religion,
ringtones and downloadables, sexual and reproductive health, sexually
suggestive, video games (casual or online), and weight loss.
Google has launched a new feature for its Mobile for AdSense apps, which lets
developers in the U.S. and Canada, who are participating in the beta program, to
monetize their iPad apps.
"The new iOS SDK supports ad serving in iPad apps using three of the most common
online ad formats, instantly making it easier for developers to grow their
businesses and for advertisers to expand their presence to the iPad,"
says Dan Waylonis, Software Engineer for Google's AdSense for Mobile
Applications. "Advertisers whose campaigns run on the Google Display Network and
include text or image ads in the above sizes can now show ads within iPad
applications – provided their campaigns are targeting mobile devices or
specifically the iPad."
Those who are participating in Google's AdSense for Mobile Apps beta will
automatically have access to the new feature in their latest iOS SDK build.
Those who are not participating can apply by signing up to become an AdSense
partner or logging into their existing account, and selecting AdSense for Mobile
Applications in the setup tab.
Release notes for the latest AdSense for Mobile Applications SDK release can be
found here.
Google is retiring the old version of
AdSense for Search and telling users to switch to the new version
powered by Google Custom Search, which has been offered for a while.
If you see "powered by Google" on the logo on the search results page, then
you're using the old one. In a post on Google's Inside AdSense blog, Katrina
Kurnit
writes:
AdSense for search with CSE gives you
more control over your search results without changing how you earn money
showing AdSense for search ads. For example, with the new version, you'll have
access to advanced features like
refinements
and
promotions.
Our team has developed a number of updates and improvements during the past few
months, and you can access more advanced features at
www.google.com/cse.
Your existing AdSense for search box
will continue to work normally for a few more months, and we'll be sure to
update you when we retire this version. To take advantage of the benefits
offered by the new version of AdSense for search and ensure you don't miss any
revenue during the transition, we encourage you to update your code now.
To upgrade go to AdSense setup and "AdSense for Search" then select the sites you want your users to be able to search across, customize the look and feel and update the code for your site. Google offers more info here.
Search Engine Land Editor-in-Chief Danny Sullivan
points out how poorly Google handles those gaming Google News, using
Google Trends as a starting point.
Do you find Google News to be too heavily polluted? Share
your thoughts.
He found a blatant example when the term "chocomize" became listed as "volcanic"
on Google Trends. When clicking for the results, he found several sites serving
Google ads that presumably only created posts about the term because it was
trending (as a way to get some easy traffic, and potentially ad clicks). In
fact, some examples came from sites that were clearly aimed at entirely
different niches, such as a horror movies site and a TV/Anime site. The biggest
problem from the user's perspective is that there was nothing immediately
indicating why the term was trending.
The real reason the term was trending was apparently because
CNN ran a story earlier in the day about a company called
Chocomize that makes custom candy bars (a pretty cool concept, I have
to say), but when looking at the Google News results, Sullivan had to really dig
to find that story.
"The pollution within Google News is ridiculous," Sullivan says. "This is Google,
where we’re supposed to have the gold standard of search quality. Instead, we
get 'news' sites that have been admitted — after meeting specific editorial
criteria — just jumping on the Google Trends bandwagon, outranking the actual
article causing the term 'chocomize' to be popular, polluting the news results
and along the way, earning Google some cash."
Earning Google some cash indeed. There is no doubt that this goes on all the
time, specifically with AdSense sites. Interestingly, in a story
grouped with Sullivan's on TechMeme, the Wall Street Journal
has some words from Eric Schmidt talking about Google's famous "one
trick pony". Schmidt is quoted as saying, "But if you've got a one-trick pony,
you want the one we have. We're in the ad business, and it's growing rapidly. We
picked the right trick." The piece goes on to talk about how that trick is going
to pay off greatly in the mobile space as well, as more and more people
gravitate to the Android operating system.
Schmidt has said in the past, as Sullivan reminds us, that the
Internet is a cesspool (referring to an excess of useless content).
So, to be fair, Schmidt doesn't come across as being very enthusiastic about the
sites that take advantage of Google Trends to game Google News. Still, there is
money to be made, and if sites meet the criteria of what it takes to get into
Google News, there's a fine line Google has to walk, regardless.
Can it all be so simple?
Sullivan says, “It shouldn’t be that hard for Google to police what shows up in
response to what it publishes on Google Trends. Spam sites ought to be nabbed.
AdSense sites ought to be shut down. News publishers abusing the very lucky
position they have of being in Google News, by routinely tapping into Google
Trends topics that aren’t relevant to their publications, should get the boot.”
While I greatly respect Sullivan, and value his analysis and opinions, I’m not
sure it’s as simple as that. We've all seen how the mainstream media sites turn
to blogs to get their stories (sometimes without giving credit or links), just
as the sites in question appear to have done with CNN. We
spoke with Sullivan about this not too long ago after he became a
victim of such a scenario.
It's hard to say that just because you use Google ads, you should be penalized.
That's not to say there isn't an issue, but while there may be plenty of
“garbage sites” there are some pretty highly respected publications that serve
ads by Google. The horror movie blog pointed to, does appear to generally offer
horror movie related news (while crediting sources), based on
a quick glance of its most recent content. But if the Chocomize
story on that blog doesn't credit its source, that
is a problem. Maybe this
is a “garbage” site, maybe it’s
not. From Google's standpoint, determining that can’t be easy in all cases.
Looking beyond the credit issue for a moment, when it comes to topic-spam, who’s
to say what a publication would find of interest to its audience? I’m not sure
that I agree that a blog mainly focused on horror movies, for example, should
not be able to blog about chocolate or another off-topic subject every now and
then. That’s up to the publication and whether they want to risk alienating
their own audience, if you ask me. Again, I’m not saying Sullivan is wrong about
this particular site’s practices. I’m just looking at the bigger picture.
Maybe Google could do more
to look at story sources, but that's got to be a difficult task across all
publications, and there would no doubt be plenty of room for debate between
publications about who broke a story first.
I'm not saying this is what happened either, but hypothetically, what if the
horror movies blog actually talked to the Chocomize people first and had the
story first, and CNN just happened to find it and find it newsworthy themselves,
and do their own piece. Now, that's an unlikely scenario in this particular
example, but it's not outside of the realm of possibility in other examples,
such as the one Sullivan experienced recently himself.
Regardless of that even, it's hard to say "you can't have content about this
topic because we posted it as a trending topic."
There is clearly a problem with Google Trends. Sullivan is right in that the
result doesn't help explain why the topic was trending. He's also right in that
the original source (CNN) should be more visible. However, cleaning up the
"pollution" might not be such an easy problem to conquer. It’s hard to say if
Google is allowing such pollution to go on so it can make more money or if the
problem is just too difficult for the search giant. It could be a combination of
the two.
·
Google Promotes AdSense In Your City Program
AdSense publishers who live near Boston, Chicago, or New York - or can travel to
one of those cities on short notice this summer - should consider filling out an
application and maybe packing a bag. Google's looking for people to participate
in what it calls the AdSense in Your City program.
A key note before we get much further: if you don't live near one of those
cities, but are interested in the initiative, Google still wants to hear from
you. Talia Brodecki, a product market manager, asked on the
Inside AdSense Blog that people leave comments suggesting what other
areas the company should take into account.
As for what's at stake, Brodecki wrote that the AdSense in Your City program
involves members of the AdSense team traveling "to hear directly from you, as
well as to share best practices, top optimization tips, and new products."
Get-togethers are small - think 60 people - and Google's method of determining
who's allowed to attend favors the first people to
request an invitation.
Recordings of the sessions are supposed to be made available online at some
point, however, so don't worry too much if you can't make a meeting or aren't
issued an invitation.
This program should just represent a welcome opportunity for AdSense publishers
to interact with Google representatives and become better-informed.
ogle has kept its AdSense revenue share numbers a secret for quite some time,
but has now decided to disclose them - or at least some of them. They've
revealed the percentages for AdSense for Content and AdSense for Search, but are
remaining mum on some of the other offerings. Still, content and search are the
two biggies.
Is Google's revenue split better or worse than you expected?
Let us know.
The company says this is an effort to increase transparency (though
the situation in Italy likely played a significant role), and is now
displaying the revenue shares right in the new AdSense interface, in the
'Account Information' section of the 'Account Settings' page (the numbers will
also be available soon in the existing interface).
"AdSense for content publishers, who make up the vast majority of our AdSense
publishers, earn a 68% revenue
share worldwide,"
says Neal Mohan VP, Product Management. "This means we pay 68% of the
revenue that we collect from advertisers for AdSense for content ads that appear
on your sites. The remaining portion that we keep reflects Google's costs for
our continued investment in AdSense — including the development of new
technologies, products and features that help maximize the earnings you generate
from these ads. It also reflects the costs we incur in building products and
features that enable our AdWords advertisers to serve ads on our AdSense partner
sites. Since launching AdSense for content in 2003, this revenue share has never
changed."
"We pay our AdSense for search partners a
51% revenue share,
worldwide, for the search ads that appear through their implementations," adds
Mohan. "As with AdSense for content, the proportion of revenue that we keep
reflects our costs, including the significant expense, research and development
involved in building and enhancing our core search and AdWords technologies. The
AdSense for search revenue share has remained the same since 2005, when we
increased it."
John Battelle
brought up some confusion around a 15% "serving" fee, known as an
"AFC Deduction", which he says was commonly used for negotiated contracts with
large publishers, but Google says it was never used for publishers who signed up
directly on the Google website. The company told him, "There is no 15% serving,
or any other, fee for those online publishers."
In fact, Arlene from Google's Inside AdSense team stepped into the comments on
the announcement to address this and other questions that had been coming up.
She said:
The 68% revenue share for AdSense for
content applies to all online publishers, and is not an average revenue share.
If you're showing AdSense for content ads on your pages, you're receiving 68% of
the amount advertisers pay for those ads. While the revenue share can vary for
some major online publishers with whom we negotiate individual contracts, these
amounts are not in any way averaged together. Also, there isn’t anything
additional taken off the top. You get 68 percent, period.
The transparency around revenue share could become more critical
if Facebook ends up offering its own AdSense-like product around
the Open Graph. This has been widely speculated upon, and if it ever
comes to fruition, it could become a real competitor to AdSense due to the
comprehensive targeting abilities that would come with it.
Do you think a Facebook ad network would make for a worthy competitor to AdSense? Comment
here.
Danny Sullivan
suggests that Google's transparency could lead to competitors
offering up better deals, but Google appears comfortable with its competition
thus far. "We believe our revenue share is very competitive, and the vast number
of advertisers who compete to appear on AdSense sites helps to ensure that
you’re earning the most from every ad impression," says Mohan.
At this point, Google is still not disclosing its revenue shares for AdSense for
mobile applications, feeds, or games. The reason for this the company gives, is
that these are still evolving, and they're still learning about the costs
associated with supporting them. Revenue shares may change in the future, but
they don't have any changes planned yet.
Does knowing the AdSense revenue
share percentages change the way you feel about the AdSense program?
Tell us what you think.
Facebook is
infiltrating sites all over the web. These sites are happy to add
Facebook's social plug-ins. What if Facebook launched an AdSense-like product -
a product that lets publishers stick relevant ads from Facebook on their sites
for a cut of the money? They would be HIGHLY, HIGHLY targeted because the more
sites that use plugins like Facebook's like button, the more users will share
their likes with Facebook, which goes to the profile, which is where Facebook
already draws its information from to serve its own ads today.
Should Google be worried? Share
your thoughts.
These ads are already pretty well targeted, when the user has enough information
in their profile. Social plugins like the like button will only facilitate the
population of such information in the profile.
Apparently Mashable founder Pete Cashmore has a similar view on this, as he
says in an article for CNN, "Google makes the vast majority of its
money from ads -- these ads typically match your search terms, or the content of
the Web page you're viewing. Google has certainly worked to personalize these
ads, but its knowledge of your friends and interests is more limited than
Facebook's. The data gleaned from thousands of Facebook Like buttons around the
web could make for an ad network that rivals Google's AdSense."
Ian Schafer at AdAge has also
contemplated such a scenario. "It seems to be an inevitability that
all of this intelligence will one day be applied to power a socially targeted ad
network as big (or bigger than) Google's AdSense," he says. "It would be a
network that would theoretically deliver even better results for advertisers,
resulting in higher CPMs/CPCs/CP-whatevers that can deliver higher payouts to
publishers, making a choice between the two platforms a not-too-difficult one
for those publishers."
The Like button is a game changer because all of a sudden you have the whole
world wide web of content to "like" not just what's within your immediate
network within Facebook and what you may have taken the time to add to your
profile two years ago. It keeps
user interests current and enables an infinite amount of interest indication
that advertisers would salivate for.
If Facebook were to launch an AdSense-like product, that doesn't necessarily
mean Google would completely lose out. I can certainly see a lot of sites going
forward with both. When pressed to make a choice between the two, however, it
could make things interesting for the industry at large.
Would you serve AdSense ads or
Facebook ads on your site if such a scenario were to come to fruition? Let
us know.
Google has rewritten its link unit matching system for AdSense. Link units in
AdSense ads display a list of topics that are relevant to the content of the
publisher's page. When a user clicks a topic, Google shows a page of related
ads. AdSense publishers can earn from valid user clicks on the ads on this
resulting page.
"Many publishers have found that link units offer monetization similar to that
of ad units and provide a more integrated user experience,"
says Jerry Krikheli, Engineering Manager for Link Units.

"The new system is much smarter: it not only uses more sophisticated topic
ranking algorithms but also continuously optimizes by learning which topics have
the most appeal to the visitors of your site," explains Krikheli. "The results
are overwhelmingly positive -- topic quality, user response rate to topics and
ads, and monetization metrics have all improved in significant, measurable
ways."
Google says link units are effective because they're targeted to the interests
of users. "Because users directly interact with the ad unit, they're more likely
to be interested in the ads they eventually see," the company says.
·
Google Takes Limit Off AdSense Category Filtering
Google has eliminated the limit to how many categories AdSense publishers can
filter from their sites. There are 11 categories, and users can filter as many
of them as they want.
"The category filtering feature allows you to prevent ads that fall into
specific categories like 'religion' and 'dating' from appearing on your pages,"
says Arlene Lee of Google's Inside AdSense team. "You can filter
categories by visiting your Ad Review Center, located under the AdSense Setup
tab. Click the ‘change’ link to view available categories to filter. Your
selections will be applied to ads in English, French, German, and Spanish, no
matter how they’ve been targeted to your site."
"We also recommend taking a look at the columns showing how much of your recent
revenue and ad impressions are generated by each of the categories," says Lee.
"This will give you an idea how applying these filters may affect your account."
Previously, users could only filter up to 8 of the 11 categories, which include
cosmetic procedures and surgery, dating, drugs and supplements, get rich quick,
politics, religion, ringtones and downloadables, sexual and reproductive health,
sexually suggestive, video games, and weight loss.
Google's doesn't guarantee that every related ad will be filtered, and
recommends that users who see undesired ads block the individual ad or
advertiser using the competitive ad filter or the blocking features in the Ad
Review Center.
Google has made some adjustments to how it uses referral URLs for contextual
matching of AdSense ads. Google has started expanding the use of query words in
referral URLs to a few hours.
Basically what this means is that Google is using user's search history to
determine what ads to show on sites using AdSense. If a user arrives at one
AdSense site via a search results page, and then goes to another AdSense site
within a few hours, they might see ads based on the referral data from the first
one.
The technical way that we're doing this is by associating the relevant query
words in the referral URL with the existing advertising cookie on the user's
browser,"
says AdSense Associate Product Manager Rebecca Illowsky. "After a
short period of time (a few hours) the query words are no longer used for the
purposes of matching ads. Of course, users can continue to opt out of our
advertising cookie at any time here."
"This allows us to deliver more relevant ads on a wider range of AdSense partner
sites that a user may browse over the course of a few hours," she adds. "Using
signals from the referral URL is just one part of our teams' continuing efforts
to deliver even better contextually matched ads on your website."
Some people claim to have already seen a rise in clickthrough rate since Google
made these changes. Commenting on Google's explanation, one reader says, "I saw
a rise in CTR and was wondering [if] something was cooking so I guess this was
it."
·
Google Lets AdSense Publishers Donate Earnings to Haiti Relief
Google has launched an AdSense feature that lets AdSense publishers
donate their
earnings to Haiti earthquake relief efforts.
"We're currently accepting donations from AdSense publishers with an unpaid
account balance through January 31, 2010,"
says Google's Elizabeth Ferdon. "To see what your unpaid account
balance is, please visit the 'Payment History' page within your account. Your
January earnings will post in the next few days, so feel free to refer to your
'Advanced Reports' page for an earnings estimate until those are finalized."
Publishers can donate either a portion or all of their unpaid balances as of the
end of January. "As you may expect, there are certain restrictions to donating,
and all our normal policies still apply -- so even if you're donating, please
don't ask others to click on your ads in order to increase your earnings," says
Ferdon.
Google will not process donation requests from publishers whose request to
donate more than their unpaid balance through January 31, or if they are subject
to tax-withholding, their account has been disabled for invalid activity or
other violations of terms and conditions, or if their accounts display the
messages: "please submit your tax information", "please enter your PIN", or
"please verify your phone number".
Google announced today that AdSense for Domains is now using optional keyword
hints more often. Keyword hints are provided by the user, who enters keywords
into a field to assist Google in the targeting of ads for potentially ambiguous
domains. Google's Randy Heath
explains:
These keywords are suggestions supplied
to Google by domain owners about the types of content users are looking for when
they arrive on an undeveloped domain. They are used to help our system determine
the best ads to place on these domains. For example, with the domain
www.rockstarsand.com, a publisher might suggest the keywords "bitumen" and
"mining" so that ads may appear from advertisers offering oil extraction
products.
Keyword hints remain optional. When
keyword hints are provided by the publisher, our ad-matching systems will use
them more often. As always, we aim to provide the most relevant ads for the
user, the best value for advertisers, and the best returns for publishers. This
means in some cases, keyword hints will be ignored when we have evidence that
other targeting approaches perform better.
Keyword hints have to adhere to Google's policy guidelines for AdSense for Domains. The company also recommends the following guidelines to maximize effectiveness:
- Limit your keywords to 3-5 phrases
- Ensure your keywords/phrases are separated by commas
- Ensure your hints are relevant to the domain
- Stick to one theme for potentially ambiguous domains.
Google says it is working on additional product improvements for AdSense for
Domains, and these will be announced in the coming months.
·
A Convenient Content Truth
Big businesses with huge pageviews fueled by Google have emerged in recent years that exist only because of a unique SEO / Adwords relationship with Google. Google gives them a huge presence in the long tail SERPS and they in turn give Google increased revenue by being a Google Adsense partner. Not just any Adsense partner, but a Google partner that turns Google search generated traffic into billions of Adwords clicks totaling tens of billions of dollars.
Demand Media, for instance, was created with this business model. Figure out what people are searching for, create somewhat unique content in bulk that matches the title tags and other keywords in the search terms, place Google ads all over this content and voila ... Demand Media's eHow.com articles rank on the first page of Google search result for hundreds of thousand of searches. By the way, Demand Media is reportedly going to generate $200 million in revenue this year and may be worth a billion dollars in large part because of these Google Adwords clicks.
It is a fascinating business model; A content assembly line creates content specifically for Google searches and Google then pays millions for Google ads clicked on that content. Unfortunately, it does raise questions about whether Google has a conflict of interest in being both the main supplier of traffic and revenue for these bulk article sites while also earning substantial revenue for itself? After all, if these articles didn't result high in Google searches this mass content production model wouldn't work.
I have followed the SEO industry for years and our WebProNews reporters have interviewed countless Google product managers on the subject of ranking well in Google. Google's mantra has been for publishers to make quality content for their users and not for its search engine. Google's position is that quality content will rise to the top of its SERPS.
However, Google seems to be sending content creators a mixed message. Demand Media is creating as many as 5,000 articles and videos each day for the purposes of ranking in Google. If Google's message is for publishers to create content for their readers, not just to rank in Google, then why is Demand Media's content ranking so well in Google?
The answer could be that for thousands of long tail searches, Demand Media's content is quality enough. The vast majority of Google searches on any given day include a search term that will get less than a hundred searches a day. What content farms such as Demand Media do is provide articles and videos that are optimized for these rarely searched terms. The content is often mediocre, but it is unique and it has a title tag and other keywords that match these targeted searches.
The problem as I see it is that while Google is highly ranking the content of these mass production publishers it also has a financial incentive to do so. Almost all content farms use Google Adwords for their revenue. So while Google on the one hand encourages publishers to make content for their readers and not just for search ranking, it is in partnership with sites that do just that.
This should make publishers wonder about their business models. Should they spend thousands paying reporters and editors to create quality content for their users or should they simply create a content farm that pays little for bulk quantities of articles and videos but gets lots of Google love?
I guess if you can make content for the purpose of ranking in searches ... but make it targeted, unique and not horrible, then you might find that Google well reward you quite well.
Is this the future of online publishing?
Google announced that it has made some messaging changes in the AdSense
interface. The changes concern users' earnings.
Google has added the words "Estimated" and "Finalized" next to "Earnings"
throughout users' accounts. The company says the move was made to be more
transparent. The changes in messaging do not reflect any changes to the way
finalized earnings are calculated. The company says they're simply intended to
give users a clearer idea of Google's estimations of earnings and what
is actually finalized.
"As you may have noticed in the past, the earnings on the Overview and Advanced
Reports pages may sometimes differ from the earnings listed on your Payment
History page,"
says Elizabeth Ferdon of Google's AdSense Payments Team. "This is
because earnings on your Overview and Advanced Reports pages reflect initial
estimations based on our records."
"We aren't able to provide finalized earnings on these pages because they still
need to be verified for accuracy, a process that takes place a few days after
the end of every month. The finalized sum is then posted on your Payment History
page by the 10th of the next month," adds Ferdon.
Google says it can't say how much amounts would differ for any specific
publisher, and that most publishers won't see a significant difference anyway.
Earlier this week, Google
introduced the ability to search for ads in the Ad Review Center. The
option is currently available to only a limited number of publishers who are
using the new AdSense interface (launched a few weeks ago). The company said,
however, it will be rolling it out more widely as they invite more publishers to
test the new interface.
AdSense is an important fixture in a lot of people's lives; it can represent
anything from spending money (hey, little splurges do the heart good) to what
pays the mortgage. And now, individuals have a chance to shape it more to their
liking, as a new Product Ideas for AdSense page has launched.
Try not to get your hopes up; as word spreads and more people contribute ideas,
the odds of any one suggestion making it in front of an important Googler will
decrease. Also, there's no guarantee that any of the recommendations will be
implemented.
Still, a post on the
Inside AdSense blog stated, "[W]e can guarantee that we'll take the
top ideas (as voted by you), and bring them to the AdSense Product Management
team for review. By submitting an idea, you agree that Google may use the idea
to develop and enhance Google's products and services."

So sign into the
Product Ideas for AdSense page with your Google account, make a
suggestion, or vote for an existing one that you like before the end of December
15th. Just about everything's fair game, from simple tweaks to entirely new
features.
Then just maybe, as a result of participating, you'll be able to upgrade
"spending money" to "mortgage payments" or "mortgage payments" to "retirement
package."
It has been discovered that Google is now showing AdSense ads inside Google
Earth. While it is not that surprising to see Google putting ads on another one
of its properties, it has raised a few eyebrows, given that Google Earth is a
desktop application.
Google actually states in its policy that it doesn't allow developers to use
AdSense ads in their desktop apps, but it appears that Google is bending the
rules for its own product. The company is certainly free to do so, given that it
owns the product, but some are beginning to wonder if this could lead to Google
changing that policy.
Currently
that section of Google's policy reads:
"Currently, we don't permit Google ads
or AdSense for search boxes to be distributed through software applications
including, but not limited to toolbars, browser extensions, and desktop
applications. In order to comply with AdSense program policies, please note that
Google AdSense code may only be implemented on web-based pages."
Blogger Amit Agarwal at Digital Inspiration appears to be the first to point out
the ads in Google Earth, and he
provides a couple of screenshots here. In one, you can see AdSense
ads when you search for a location or business, and the ads can be found in the
search results. In the other screenshot, you can see the ad in the window that
pops up when you click a placemark (the red pins on the maps).
The interesting part of this find is not so much that Google is placing ads in
Google Earth, but what it could mean if the company were to in fact change its
policy.
"If that policy changes, we could see more and more of Office 2010 Starter or
FeedDemon like applications that are completely free to the end-user but
supported by web advertising," says Agarwal.
Joseph Tartakoff at PaidContent
adds that "arch rival" Microsoft has already promised to introduce
the ad-supported version of Office to come pre-loaded on PCs.
It is possible that there is being too much read into Google's decision to
include AdSense ads in Google Earth. It does make for an interesting
conversation though. What do you think?
Update: Google
has now
announced that you can buy Promoted Videos directly in AdWords.
"AdWords advertiser with video content — from a small business looking to
promote a product, to a movie studio premiering a new trailer — can use Promoted
Videos to make sure their videos find a larger audience," says Jonathan Goldman,
YouTube Engineer. "This integration will provide a single destination for your
overall Google ad buy, and will give YouTube advertisers access to campaign
tools in AdWords."
Original Article: Google
has decided to start including promoted YouTube videos in AdSense. This means
that these videos are now an available ad unit that can be displayed on AdSense
publisher sites.
YouTube promoted videos include a thumbnail image with three lines of text, and
when clicked, they take the user to a video or a channel on YouTube, so it's not
like there will be full-sized YouTube videos in AdSense ad spots on publisher
sites.
"Extending Promoted Videos to AdSense sites will enable these content producers
to broaden their reach, while providing you with another way to earn from your
ad space,"
says Arlene Lee of Google's Inside AdSense team. "At this time, these
ads are only available in English to US publishers, but we're looking forward to
expanding to additional regions and languages in the future."
The promoted videos are contextually targeted to AdSense publisher pages, and publishers will earn from them on a cost-per-click basis. They are available in the following formats:
- 300x250 Medium Rectangle
- 336x280 Large Rectangle
- 728x90 Leaderboard
- 250x250 Square
- 200x200 Small Square
"Just like other ads, Promoted Videos compete in our standard ad auction, so
they'll help drive up competition among advertisers bidding to appear on your
pages," says Lee. "When a Promoted Video wins the ad auction, it'll be shown
alone in one of the eligible ad formats."
Videos of course have to meet
YouTube's advertising guidelines and
terms of use, as well as
community guidelines. Publishers can prevent promoted videos from
appearing on their sites by adding "youtube.com" to their competitive ad filter
list. This will block all YouTube content.
It should be noted that the addition of promoted YouTube videos to AdSense has
nothing to do with Google's video ads offering.
YouTube promoted videos could be a good way to increase AdSense clicks, because
the very nature of them draws the user's attention to watch a video, and at the
world's most popular online video site. Plus the videos should be relevant to
the content of the page. This could be a big money maker for AdSense publishers.
It should be big for people promoting their videos as well.
Google announced the beta testing of a new AdSense interface today. It is being tested with a small group of publishers. Google says the new interface was designed based on the top three requests from users:
1. Provide insights to help you make more informed decisions about you sites.
2. Offer you more control over the ads that appear on your sites.
3. Help you manage you account more efficiently
With the new interface, AdSense publishers can get more detailed performance reports that let them view daily stats in graphical formats. In addition, it provides metrics like amount you've earned from various ad, targeting, and bid types.
The interface includes some improvements to the Ad Review Center that will give
users more options to manage ads that appear on their sites, and offer what
Google says is a cleaner interface that will make it easier to find and review
them within the Ad Review Center.
"We've streamlined the AdSense interface to simplify common tasks, such as
making a change to several ad units simultaneously,"
says Google. "Additionally, to help you get the most out of AdSense,
we've added more relevant help on every page, a message inbox for tips from our
team, and alerts with important account related notices."
The limited beta testing is taking place in English, Spanish, French, German,
Italian, and Japanese. The test will be rolled out to thousands of publishers
over the coming weeks (they will be notified via email notification).
Google
launched AdSense for Feeds all the way back in 2005. Now the company
is integrating it right into its Blogger property.
"One of the things our publishers have always asked for are ways to make it even
easer to configure their blogs to work with FeedBurner and AdSense for Feeds,"
says Steve Olechowski on behalf of the AdSense for feeds and Blogger
teams. We're happy to announce that Blogger users, with just a few clicks, are
able to do both at the same time."
Users can can use AdSense for Feeds for Blogger the same way they set up AdSense
on their blogs. Just go to the Blogger Dashboard and select "monetize". This
gives the user options for configuring ads. If the user's blog is already
connected to FeedBurner, you can confirm that the proper feed is being
configured. AdSense for Feeds will pick the ad size automatically.
Users can view AdSense reports after setup to view feed revenue right from the
Blogger Dashboard. You can of course see the reports in your AdSense account as
well.
Google
launched AdSense for Feedburner last year. This came just after
Google closed down the Feedburner Ad Network.
Back in August, Google
gave AdSense publishers more control over what ads appear on their
sites by launching an upgrading the category fitlering feature and extending the
feature's beta to the US and the UK.
So in essence, if you don't want certain kinds of sites showing up in ads on
your site, you could block them. Google shows how the different ad categories
contribute to your income, so you can take that into consideration.
Today Google
announced that it will be providing users with more ad filtering
options. Soon, the option for 3 more filter categories will be added for a total
of 8 different categories. These will be coming in the next few weeks.
"To get started with category filtering, sign in to AdSense and visit the Ad
Review Center, located under the AdSense Setup tab," says Google's Arlene Lee.
"You can choose from the listed categories, which include religion, politics,
and dating, and your selections will be applied to ads in English no matter how
they're targeted."

"Please keep in mind that filtering ad categories may affect your AdSense
revenue -- we recommend first reviewing the percentages displayed in your
account to understand the amount of revenue you may be blocking," she reminds
users.
Google says its continuing to work on additional filtering capabilities as well,
but does not get into specifics. They are of course encouraging feedback.
Google has started adding "Ads by Google" to more of its ads around the web. The
reasoning for this is that a lot more advertisers are using Google's rich media
ad formats these days, and the fact that they come from Google may not seem so
obvious all the time.
"You'll soon notice a small 'i' (for 'information') icon overlay in the bottom
right-hand corner of these ads, which will expand when the user hovers over it,"
explains Dan Friedman from Google's Inside AdWords crew. "This was
specially designed for rich media ads. This new message will appear on your
AdWords rich media ads, and will show up on standard AdSense ad units."
Just as in the past, when users click "Ads by Google," they will be taken to a
page where they can learn about Google advertising. Google says tests have shown
that this doesn't affect ad performance.
Google also recently started adding YouTube promoted videos into the AdWords/AdSense
mix. In addition, they have introduced a new way for
local businesses to advertise, and
given advertisers more tracking options.
Unemployed bloggers are apparently at risk of losing their unemployment checks
(or at least having them drastically reduced) if they include ads on their blogs.
That is exactly what happened to a woman named Karin, from New York, according
to a
recent Forbes piece.
A graduate from the University of Virginia School of Law was laid off by a law
firm in New York, but was able to receive $405 a week in unemployment benefits
from the state. To make a little extra money to help pay the bills, she started
a blog and used Google AdSense. To make a long story short, her benefits were
cut to $300 a week. It had taken her 3 months to earn $100 with AdSense.
She was sent a form to fill out and send to her "employer," and when she called
the Department of Labor to get some answers about that, she was told that she
shouldn't have claimed the AdSense payment to begin with because it was
considered "residual," which would not make her ineligible for benefits. Fair
enough. Unfortunatley for Karin, it only got more complicated from there.
"The call prompted Karin to file another claim with the state and to attach a
letter stating she was running a blog and that the Google AdSense revenue it
generated was her only source of income," explains David K. Randall of
Forbes.com. "A few days later, she received a letter from the DOL informing her
that it had launched an investigation of her "business" to determine whether she
remained eligible for benefits."
"Karin called the DOL again and says this time she was told that the state
considered her self-employed, which would require her to claim earnings each
time she received an AdSense check," continues Randall. "She called back to get
another opinion, and Karin says this time she was informed by yet another state
official that she needed to declare that she was working every time that she
updated her blog."
Karin is apparently not getting benefits as long as the investigation is going
on, and she hasn't even made $250 from AdSense.
The situation would likely vary from state to state, but at least in New York,
unemployment and AdSense blogs seem to equal nothing but headaches for everybody
involved. Mike Masnick at TechDirt does a pretty good job of assessing the
situation. "It's really stunning how various labor departments are simply
ill-equipped to handle a modern labor force," he says.
Masnick
has his own horror story about out of state labor departments seeking
money for an employee that his company hasn't employed in years. They money
sought after is apparently for time that this person wasn't working there.
Google has announced a new feature for AdSense mobile publishers, which lets
them serve text and image ads on their sites, specifically optimized for
high-end smartphones like the iPhone, Android devices, and the Palm Pre.
With the launch of the feature, publishers can run larger AdSense ads on these
phones, whereas before, they could only serve smaller ads.
"High-end mobile phones, like iPhone, Android-powered devices and the Palm Pre,
continue to grow — Gartner estimates that global sales of smartphones will soar
by 27% in 2009, to 177 million units. Naturally, as a result more and more
people are browsing the web on the go,"
says Google software engineer Danielle VanDyke. "Because these
devices offer a browsing experience that is similar to desktop computers,
advertising on smartphones is a natural extension for any AdWords campaign."
Google says the addition of this feature will help "nurture the smartphone ecosystem," by encouraging users to create more mobile content.
To make the feature work, Google introduced a new JavaScript snippet that's
optimized for mobile "to reduce latency" on high-end mobile phones. The snippet
also allows publishers to select additional ad unit sizes from common AdSense
formats.
"However, if you're targeting all mobile devices, or if you're unable to make
changes to your website, you don't have to update your AdSense code in order to
enable larger AdSense ads to show on high-end devices,"
says VanDyke. "We'll automatically detect if the user is browsing
with a high-end phone, and instead of serving a smaller mobile WAP ad, we'll
return a larger ad optimized for high-end mobile devices."
The new feature certainly opens up new opportunities for AdSense publishers, who
have had some additional benefits announced recently. Just the other day Google
announced that it would
extend YouTube promoted videos to AdSense for example. Google also
recently announced
the addition of ad networks to the competition pool for AdSense.
Google has announced the
DoubleClick Ad Exchange, which it refers to as a real-time
marketplace for helping online publishers and ad networks/agencies buy and sell
display ad space. Prices in the marketplace are set in a real-time auction.
Google says it has three principles for its approach to display advertising:
1. Simplify the system for buying and selling display ads: For example,
our DoubleClick ad serving products help advertisers and publishers manage
campaigns and ad formats across thousands of websites and from thousands of
advertisers.
2. Deliver better performance that
advertisers and agencies can measure: We're building a host of new features
to help advertisers to run display ad campaigns across the Google Content
Network (comprising hundreds of thousands of AdSense partner sites) and on
YouTube. We're also developing better measurement and reporting technology so
they can figure out what's working and what's not.
3. Open up the ecosystem: We
want to democratize access to display advertising and make it accessible and
open, like search advertising. We recently launched the
Display Ad Builder
to help businesses easily set up and run display ad campaigns. 80% of
advertisers who use that product have never run a display ad campaign before.
AdWords advertisers can run ads with the same AdWords interface
through the exchange. Ad Exchange sites are considered part of the Google
Content Network. Ad Exchange placements will appear like any other Conent
Network Placement in AdWords reports. Users can still use the Placement
Performance Report to see where their ads have run, and which ones performed
best. Google does note, however, that Ad Exchange sites can choose to remain
anonymous, and in cases like that, the site will appear in your reports with an
anonymized label like "123456.anonymous.google." You have the power to exclude
these placements though.
Google says AdSense publishers will also benefit from more advertisers coming
through the exchange. The company recently announced
plans to give AdSense publishers a new way to generate revenue by
allowing multiple Google-certified ad networks to compete for display ad space
on their sites. This is related to the Ad Exchange announcement. The Google-certified
ad network capability is powered by the DoubleClick Ad Exchange.
"Certified ad networks are Ad Exchange participants who have gone through an
additional certification process in order to be able to bid for your ad space
through AdSense,"
Google says. "We call this feature 'yield management', because it
offers you the most revenue for each ad that shows on your site in real time,
regardless of whether it's Google or another certified party who can offer you
the highest bid."
Publishers using the Ad Exchange can use real-time data and bids to allocate ad
space that pays the most at any particular second. They get access to more
advertisers, Google manages billing and payments from networks, so publishers
get one monthly payment.
Ad networks and agencies get access to more publishers, more ad space, real-time
bidding, and a new API, which lets them integrate their own functionality and
systems when using the Ad Exchange.
Google's move is largely seen as its way of cutting into Yahoo's share of the
display advertising pie. This is one area where Yahoo has been quite successful,
as Google has dominated the text ad market.
Google has introduced what they call "Web Elements," which let users add their
favorite Google products to their website. The company spins it as a way for
AdSense publishers to "spice up their site" and help increase their revenue.
This was first
announced back at the Google Developer Conference.
"Web Elements let you easily add richness and interactivity to your site simply
by copying and pasting a snippet of code,"
explains Christine Tsai of the Google Web Elements Team. "Inspired by
the convenience of embeddable YouTube videos, each Web Element is built upon
existing Google products."
Users can remind visitors to their site of important dates by adding the Google
Calendar element. They can let visitors post comments with the Conversation
element. They can add a custom search element, a Google Maps element, a Google
News element, a presentations element, a spreadsheet element, or the interesting
YouTube News element, which shows news videos from YouTube.
Google has been all about some data portability lately,
introducing their Data Liberation Front. That was all about being
able to take your data in and out of Google Products. This is a different kind
of data portability. This lets you take data from Google products and take it
anywhere with you on the web.
Google shows some examples of sites that are already using Web Elements in
this blog post. To use them yourself, simply go to
google.com/webelements, choose your element, and copy/paste the code
into the source code of your own site. It's as simple as that.
All of the web elements are powered by Google's developer APIs, so they can all
be customized.
In August, Google announced that it was
upgrading its category filtering feature for AdSense, and extending
the feature into more countries (like the US and the UK). Today, Google
announced that they have added two additional improvements to the
Competitive Ad Filter.
These improvements would be faster filtering and increased filter size.
"In the past, the Competitive Ad Filter sometimes took up to several hours to
block URLs you'd entered,"
says Arlene Lee of Google's Inside AdSense Team. "Knowing you've
wanted a faster filtering system, we're excited to let you know that URLs added
to your Competitive Ad Filter are now usually blocked within 30 minutes. We hope
that this will help you quickly make changes to maintain a positive user
experience on your sites."
Users have complained that they have been running out of space in their
Competitive Ad filter, so Google has addressed this issue. Users can now add up
to 500 sites to their filter list. That is more than twice what was previously
allowed.
"As you add new sites, please continue to keep the possible revenue impact of
filtering in mind," says Lee. "You might also find it helpful to review our tips
for using your Competitive Ad Filter."
Google will remain open to feedback with regards to the Competitive Ad Filter,
so if you have further concerns, be sure to
voice them. Today's announcement shows that they do listen.