Forum Moderators: martinibuster
I think it depends on the site. If you make the ads look too garish I think it looks like all you are there for is the money (and you may well be but making it too obvious could be like banners - people might be turned off.)
I've found that making it just a bit more noticeable helps. I have one site with an antique like color scheme and just making the border of the adsense ads a bit darker in the same brown tone color seems to work well. Another site of mine is quite colorful so ads can have livelier color schemes.
I think it makes a difference if you have good content. A good content site doesn't need to fool people into clicking so the ads can stand out a bit if it still fits the overall color scheme. Some people have had good luck with borderless ads imbedded in the text as it sort of fools people into clicking but that doesn't work for me at all even with a border. I think my readers were just annoyed at the ads being in the text and never came back to them. But with ads in a column on the left or right gets good results.
Basically you have to experiment on your own sites to find what words best for you.
This has had two unfortunate results (though note it's only been a few days):
- I've gotten ZERO valid clicks! This is in stark contrast to my assumptions... in which I believed that moving the panel from the left-side to the top AND removing the garish colors would dramatically improve CTR.
- In attempting to just scroll the page, I accidentally clicked in the 'box' area of the now-blended-in AdSense panel, and -- for the first time I can recall since putting AdSense on my site -- I've now accidentally generated a click-thru. Ack. I'm assuming / hoping that one click isn't enough to jeopardize my account standing :)
(interestingly enough, the ad that I clicked on led me to a consumer product that I'm now actually considering buying as a gift! How's that for serendipity?)
With that said, I must admit that the ads on this channel are -- so far -- pretty untargeted AND repetitive ("Find a widget" "Find a widget" "Get widgets" for instance, are three of the four ads typically displayed... with widgets only being a small part of what this area is about!)