Forum Moderators: martinibuster
For example, a click on an ad for digital cameras on a web page about photography tips may be worth less than a click on the same ad appearing next to a review of digital cameras.
[edited by: markus007 at 8:08 pm (utc) on April 1, 2004]
C'mon guys, let's rise above this.
I ran an experiment today and ran my ads as 50% Adsense and 50% ad_sonar*. Under Google's new changes ad_sonar* earned approximately twice as much revenue for me as Adsense, whereas previously Adsense would clearly beat out ad_sonar*. That may not reflect on your stats, but for me and my site the answer is clear.
Yes - I have been experimenting with that myself. Since the changes to Adsense, **** is now returning approximately 75% more than Google.
It was nice while it lasted but if adsense thinks I'm going to take an 89% paycut while providing the same performance, and not get an exact explanation as to why, I'll just spend a month deleting the adsense code from my pages. I think I have enough data to jump to a conclusion when the difference will mean a few hundred lost dollars if things don't magically go back to normal this month. I'll come back when they convince me that they won't regard my traffic and effort with such low value, and when they're willing to stop hiding behind payout rates and all the other things that their publishers have every right to know up front.
[edited by: Jenstar at 6:40 am (utc) on April 5, 2004]