Forum Moderators: martinibuster
January's EPC so far looks even worse - a 15% drop from December. This is around a 50% drop from last summer's EPC.
The site in question is a search directory, covering nearly every topic imaginable, so it is not isolated to a single industry or a few advertisers dropping their PPC bids.
I rather doubt that advertisers across the board are dropping their bids en masse - so one could presume that Google is gradually reducing the payout over time.
Sadly, it appears that Adsense is headed towards irrelevancy - where the payout is so small the sites won't bother with putting the ads up.
I don't accept the notion that we should just be happy with what Google gives us. This is a business relationship, and as such the question should be raised. Why in many instances are the payouts apparently dropping?
1. Bids are dropping on average
2. There is a trend towards publishers removing their AdWords campaigns from content sites
3. Advertisers are evolving in their approach to AdSense, possibly running more broad but low-bid campaigns
4. It's a side-effect of the fine-tuning of Google's matching algorithm
5. Google is limiting the serving of ads which are either high-bid or are in areas subject to fraudulent clicks - maybe to protect advertisers, maybe just to keep the easy money to themselves
Personally I think #2 is definitely a factor of unknown magnitude, and there has been at least one major change with #4. FWIW, I haven't observed a drop in my subject area and AdSense is in no danger of becoming irrelevant to me.
The bottom line is of greater importance to me, and my revenues have been growing steadily since the weekend after Christmas. I'm on track to earn more this month from AdSense than ever before, even though traffic hasn't yet climbed back to peak summer levels.
One problem for a directory site (or any general-interest site) may be the lack of on-target backup or default ads for pages that can't be matched to keyword-targeted ads. Many of us have found, over time, that Google has done a pretty job of supplying broad-topic ads on such pages. In other words, if I have a site on baked goods and there are no Google ads for the keyphrase "french crumb crullers," Google will display an ad for doughnuts, breakfast pastries, or other baked goods on my French Crumb Crullers page. Since my audience is interested in baked goods, readers may well be tempted to buy those other products. (And why not? No aficionado of baked goods can live by French crumb crullers alone.)
"Theming" may not yet exist in the Google search index, but it does seem to exist with AdSense. In my opinion, the publishers who do best with AdSense are likely to be niche publishers whose sites are diversified within a "theme" context. Having some diversity of content will protect publishers from losing revenues if one advertiser (say, a French crumb crullers advertiser) pulls out or temporarily uses up its budget, while the theme will help Google display relevant backup or default ads when keyword-targeted ads aren't available.
All time high EPC: Middle October
Current EPC: About 32% lower than all time high
Noticeable Deterioration started: Beginning December / End November
Comments: No significant deterioration noted since then
I would guess Florida update hit me, not only in the number of surfers, but how the surfers are getting to the site. The ones that remain are looking for X, but it is those looking for Y and arriving to the Y pages that have the good EPC.
What I would normally get on X number of clicks now is getting 50-75% less $$ from the same number of clicks. It's very strange. Maybe the advertisers in my field aren't seeing a big enough payoff?
Our US$ earnings are growing a little, but we have lost a heap because the Australian dollar is now much stronger in US$ terms.
However, actual revenue is currently much higher than October, simply because the site is busier and I've put Adsense in more areas. To me, all that truly matters is the bottom line. Of course, I'd love to have my current clicks at October's rate, but regardless I'm still very satisfied with how AdSense has been performing.
Especially compared to my previous trials at various ad companies, who end up paying - quite literally - next to nothing.