Forum Moderators: martinibuster
What I don't understand is why they would be doing this. They are losing money, I am losing money, and anybody that clicks on the ads is not going to convert to a business objective.
That said, the mistargetted ads are really annoying to me and I'm sure the visitors to my site.
Don't know about a contractual issue being valid, but imho a confidence issue is equally as important. If any kind of a noteworthy competitor turns up with something that looks half-way promising and a good sales pitch there will be a lot of publishers ripe and ready to take a plunge.
The less there is to lose the easier it is to go philandering, that's just human nature.
Added:
That just applies to "normal" publishers. The ones that are cranking out garbage pages just to run AdSense wouldn't necessarily be affected, they could easily just crank out loads more garbage pages for another program that comes along.
As for performance, the agreement makes no mention of relevancy. Where do you read that?
The FAQ is not part of the agreement, but it says "Google does not guarantee that we'll always have relevant ads to display".
I think you are legless. :)
Google does not guarantee that we'll always have relevant ads to display. If we don't have relevant ads for a given page, or if we haven't yet crawled your site, we may display public service ads
As for performance, the agreement makes no mention of relevancy. Where do you read that?IMO there does not need to be an agreement. For as long as I have been in the program I have been receiving targeted ads (or PSA's). In some legales that creates a contract based on prior performance.
Just wait it out. My company has many channels covering our sites grouped by topic. I have noticed that a group of similar topic sites fall at the same time while other topics remain unchanged. It is usually caused by one or two advertisers running out of money (usually temporarily). One channel dropped by 70% just two days ago. I am sure it will return.
One way to avoid a total plunge in earnings is to spread out topics on your sites, or make a backup site(s) with a different topic but close to your field.
One way to avoid a total plunge in earnings is to spread out topics on your sitesIt's not just about the earnings, though. It's also about the ability to define the content on my site. It didn't use to be a problem because the ads would match the content on my site, or be closely related. The only URL's I would filter previously were direct competitors of the clients paying to be on the site; those that you could call too relevant. Most people seem to agree that a little bit of off-topicicity is good thing for ctr, and I too agree. But when they mess up the location (Lake Tahoe does not equal Toronto, New England, or Florida) they're just wasting space and bandwidth, while making me look bad.
Perhaps we could use europeforvisitors idea for helper keywords. Even if just for location.