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Can I approach Adsense Advertisers Directly?

Anything in TOS or other evidence to say this is restricted?

         

Born_User

3:45 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am getting lots of traffic in one particular area, and I am noticing that there are a group of adsense advertisers that appear more often than others for certain pages.

I would like to contact these advertisers directly and pitch my own PPC plan to them... lots less than Google would charge them for adsense. I would include text links to their site, and capture the passthrough data and bill them monthly.

Now here's the rub: If I were adsense, I would immediately BAN any adsense publisher who undercut me by going directly to the advertiser that I originally supplied them with.

Maybe I'm just being lazy and not examining the TOS well enough. But, I want to throw this out there as a topic to hear what others have to say about it.

europeforvisitors

3:54 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)



From the Adsense Terms and Conditions:

Communications Solely With Google. You agree to direct to Google, and not to any advertiser, any communication regarding any Ad(s) displayed in connection with Your Site(s)."

I suppose you could argue that "any Ad(s)" refers only to existing AdSense ads, and not to future non-AdSense ads, but I doubt if Google would accept that interpretation. :-)

jomaxx

3:57 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The TOS isn't exactly the Bible. Google can stop sponsoring your site for any reason they choose.

Born_User

3:58 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



If this works, I'd say goodbye to adsense anyway. Not worried about being banned, really. More worried about being sued. I have legal resources at my disposal, but who wants to tangle with Google? Not me.

Plus, once I was no longer an adsense publisher, I could approach any advertiser I wanted. I wouldn't be bound by the TOS anymore. Right?

Sanenet

4:05 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

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Communications Solely With Google. You agree to direct to Google, and not to any advertiser, any communication regarding any Ad(s) displayed in connection with Your Site(s)."

This is more "if you don't like an ad, don't go running to the client, tell us", not "don't speak to the advertiser".

I can't think of a single reason why you couldn't contact the advertiser directly and suggest that the did a special ad campaign on your site.

alika

4:08 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

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We've had advertisers coming directly to us and buying advertisements on our site, instead of a middle man like Google.

richmondsteve

4:09 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think the section EFV quoted just implies that if you have a problem with ads shown on your site you're not going to harrass the advertiser about it since Google controls what shows where.

Also, I have pre-existing affiliate relationships with advertisers who are now showing ads on my sites through AdSense. I don't consider it a conflict of interest. And there are other merchants with affiliate programs whose ads are showing on my sites that I don't have an affiliate relationship with, but would consider pursuing. Based on my interpretation of the AdSense docs, I can approach merchants for any relationship I want. I haven't done so to date because the time required by both the merchant and I to implement something well would be prohibitive and more risky for the merchant. YMMV.

jomaxx

4:21 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Q1: What if it doesn't work and you have to say goodbye to AdSense revenue anyway?

Q2: If you're going to charge these advertisers "lots less" than they pay Google, what's the point of doing this?

Born_User

4:28 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Q1: What if it doesn't work and you have to say goodbye to AdSense revenue anyway?

I am thankful for my adsense revenue... but I am not particularly impressed. I haven't decided anything yet, but like anything else, it may be worth the risk.

Q2: If you're going to charge these advertisers "lots less" than they pay Google, what's the point of doing this?

First, Predictablility is a good reason. I can accurately predict my traffic (relative to accurately NOT predicting Adsense revenue, regardless of traffic.]

Also, if it works, I can manage my own growth potential.

Next... I don't have to "conform" to adsense rules. I only have to follow the arrangements I have with the advertisers

Those are only a few reasons. I could brainstorm more.

Sanenet

4:34 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Hey, if you think your site is big enough to stand on it's own 2 legs and make its own way in the world - knock yourself out mate.

Just make sure you have a plan B (just in case!)

jabberwookie

5:28 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google won't sue you before an IPO

alika

5:47 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Q2: If you're going to charge these advertisers "lots less" than they pay Google, what's the point of doing this?

Remember that through Adsense, you are only getting a % of total amount the advertiser -- the exact amount of which has been speculated and disclosed in the IPO papers. Even if you offer a lesser CPC rate than what they would have paid in Adwords, you won't share the 50% or whatever the Adsense cut is with G, so you can potentially make more money from that one advertiser.

For example:
At $0.50/click for 100 clicks, advertiser pays $50 to Adwords. With G's 50% cut, your takehome pay is only $25.

If you contract with the advertiser directly and offer them a discout - say $0.35/click. For the same number of clicks, your take home -- which is 100% yours -- is $35.

Still more money.

Of course, it will work if you have a number of advertisers in your sector; where the loss of one or 5 advertising on your site directly will not be felt as there are 30 more or so advertisers waiting in the wings to be seen in your site through Adsense.

Of course, it takes time to contact them directly. Plus, you need to have an idea whether your traffic really converts well for them.

jomaxx

6:11 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Yes, obviously I understand that Google takes a cut. But if you are going to discount the advertiser cost significantly, why not just let Google handle the whole thing? I know from personal experience that tracking, reporting, invoicing and collections can become a huge burden.

P.S. Sorry, Born User, but I do not understand your arguments about "predictibility" and "growth potential". IMO things will be significantly LESS predictable once you are selling advertising directly.

richmondsteve

6:13 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



alika wrote:
Plus, you need to have an idea whether your traffic really converts well for them.

And more importantly, *the advertiser* needs to believe that if you're approaching them with a PPC, CPM or flat sponsorship proposition. If a publisher is trying to attract advertisers who are savvy enough and have the funds to participate in PPC through AdWords, then they probably should expect the advertiser is going to request statistics (possibly via their own system or 3rd party), details about fraud detection, procedures to mitigate the risk that they'll be sent junk and bogus traffic and traffic that doesn't convert, etc. The infrustructure and processes to establish and maintain an advertising system that advertisers will trust and want to spend the time pursuing isn't what I'd call trivial and neither is the time and knowledge required to do sales, marketing, billing, support and customer management, but that's just my take. It's a different story when you're talking about throwing a banner up for a flat monthly fee for a local merchant who's not particularly knowledgable - at least in my experience.

alika

6:24 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Some advertisers would prefer to deal with ad brokers like Google because of convenience in terms of payment (they can pay by credit cards), tracking and reporting features, etc.

So if you are planning to approach advertisers directly, or if they go to you directly, then be prepared to provide the features that would enable them to monitor their campaigns. There are a lot of banner/text advertising management software out there that can help you out a great deal (beware though as some are bandwidth hogs).

We do Google and also sell our own ads (banners, text, skys, etc). Sometimes, our advertisers are also Adwords advertisers. We turn off their campaigns on our site if they are showing up in Adsense, so they won't be double served on our pages. They appreciate that. But we don't have time to run after each and every advertiser that runs in our Adsense. We figure that if their ads are doing well on our site, they'd come to us.

alika

6:29 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Well, we always talked of making sure that Adsense is not your only source of revenue. That there must be fallback sources, if not significantly better sources of revenues.

This guy wants to sell more advertising on his site, and he has solved his main problem of where could he get advertisers. Of course, Adsense is perfect: (a) they are clearly targeted to their site; and (b) they advertise and may have more resources to advertise.

Now, you need to think of ways how you could lure them away from Adwords and advertise on your site directly. What can you offer them that can give them better return for their buck?

Born_User

6:40 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Now, you need to think of ways how you could lure them away from Adwords and advertise on your site directly. What can you offer them that can give them better return for their buck?

That's really the burdoning question. I'd have to have an angle.

This is a great thread. All the opinions are very valuable. Sounds like there are folks out there who have already tried this.

Then again, Adsense is my primary source of income. I live in a nice house, bunch of kids, suburban lifestyle. I wouldn't want to ruin it. But, as I get more eggs, I need more baskets. I have to diversify. I would definitely want to proceed with extreme caution.

dataguy

7:10 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I run AdSense on some of my sites, and some of them I sell advertising directly to the advertiser. I think that if you asked the advertisers that buy from me directly they would all say they are much happier with the results that I give them than they are buying results from AdWords.

I charge a flat-rate per month, so there is no incentive for click-fraud. They like the fact that they don't have to question the traffic I send their way.

From a publisher point of view, I have a freedom to experiment with ad style and placement without fear of triggering some flag that gets my account turned off. If I send a significantly higher volume of traffic, I just re-negotiate the rates. I know I'm getting more from these advertisers than I would be if it was going through AdSense.

There are definite pluses and minuses to each scenario, but I certainly wouldn't discourage anyone from giving it a try.

yump

7:21 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



First of all, you could of course come across an advertiser anywhere, so the fact that they are using Adwords and the ads. are appearing on your site can't possibly give Google exclusivity.

We were running flat rate advertising for some advertisers that also appeared later through Adsense. The difference is that for particular advertisers who have an excellent fit with our visitors, we can provide much more flexible advertising than the Adsense ads. ever could.

For instance, we run pre-sell / information pages about the advertiser, whereas the Adsense ads are just a click-through. Our visitors recognise the
difference and obviously value it because the CTR is way higher for our flat rate ads. compared to Adsense ads. The advertisers get their logo out there and will pay for this.

anallawalla

10:43 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



The original point about contacting an advertiser can be made without reference to AdSense, can't it? You do a Google search for a term in that niche and see the same ads and can contact the advertiser directly. They are "AdWords advertisers" anyway - AdSense is just one of many content outlets.

Being out of the US, I see "opportunities" all the time, i.e. advertisers who are clearly targetting only the US and wasting their money should a foreigner click. Offering PPC *management* services is different from *selling* a competing form of PPC advertising.

jomaxx

11:00 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Back when I was advertising with Overture I used to get contacted all the time by PPC search engine reps. It was always quite obvious that they simply saw me advertising on Overture and thought I'd be anxious to give them some money as well.

The most annoying part was that they were probably clicking on my listing in order to get to my site - i.e. these cold calls were costing me cash money.

ChrisKud5

11:05 pm on Jun 9, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Of course you can approach any company you want.

Google cannot limit communication between any two parties. I am disgusted that Google would even have the nerve to put that in the TOS.

newbies

12:30 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It is ridiculous that g won't allow you to carry ads for any advertisers who have used adwords (Is that Possible? Reasonable?). I have advertisers who sponsor some pages of my site and who also run adword. However, they won't appear on the same page, because once a page is sponsored, I will not run adsense on that page.

europeforvisitors

12:40 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)



It is ridiculous that g won't allow you to carry ads for any advertisers who have used adwords (Is that Possible? Reasonable?).

Google doesn't say that, at least not in so many words. However, Google does have the right to cancel your account for any reason, just as you do. So you're welcome to pursue advertisers whose AdSense ads have appeared on your site, but you won't have recourse (or even legitimate grounds for complaint) if Google chooses to stop working with you.

alika

1:48 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Google doesn't say this, but to be kicked out because their advertisers are advertising on your site not using Adsense seem to be extremely flimsy, bordering on the ridiculous.

How can they tell that you actually found the advertiser through Adsense? These are the same advertisers that you see when you do a search for your keywords.

Unless G revises their TOS to say that publishers are not allowed to display any form of targeted advertiser, and their advertisers must never advertise on publisher sites, then that's the day you worry.

Our goal should be to diversify sources of income, and not just put all eggs in the Adsense basket. If that means selling your advertising space directly, then by all means, do so. G recognizes that they cannot demand exclusivity from their publishers.

richmondsteve

2:15 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I think some people are being a little paranoid about this and are completely misinterpreting that clause from the TOS. But for sake of argument:

Google would have difficulty proving how you became aware of an advertiser and whether you had a pre-existing relationship with the advertiser.

Publishers negotiating directly with advertisers wouldn't make a dent in Google's AdSense revenue.

The backlash associated with demanding and enforcing exclusivity would be strong.

Yes, yes, I know that Google can boot you for any reason they see fit, but would they ever demand and enforce exclusivity? Let's look at an extreme scenario and then think about it. A publisher has a network of sites - some are niche, some are general topic. Over the course of a month, 10k different AdWords advertisers' ads appear on the publisher's sites. The publisher already had direct and affiliate advertising in place with 200 of them and is interested in pursuing more advertising from a handful of these advertisers. Boot him for already working with 200? Boot him for wanting to work with 10 more? I don't think so.

jomaxx

3:13 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



That's not what I am saying, or what I think anybody is saying.

Quite simply, when you cold-call an AdWords advertiser and try to get them to pay you by the click...
(a) you are most likely going to be turned down because the advertiser has never heard of you, and
(b) the ADVERTISER might alert Google to your tactics, especially if they see that the site is also an AdSense publisher.

What would Google do if they found out you were poaching their clients? I don't know. All I know is what *I* would do - and that's kick the poacher's butt out of the program.

ChrisKud5

4:13 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google canceling anyones account for approaching adwords advertisers is very no no in the day of frivolus lawsuits.

Why not just kick me out because i am 6 feet tall?

I have always thought of Google as a free thinking company that promotes education and good things like that, but over the past couple months i have seen them turn into a schiester like business with no reguard to individual advancement. They want people to play by their rules or they will break your knees.

I am getting quite fed up with this stupid language in the Adsense TOS already.

europeforvisitors

5:45 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)



I am getting quite fed up with this stupid language in the Adsense TOS already.

In that case, why not show them?

luckychucky

6:05 am on Jun 10, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The only rub- just throwing this out there- is that Google's bestowing the SERP rankings which get your ad clickthroughs/attractive value in the first place...if for some reason you piss Google off, you lose both AdWords and independent advertising possibilities, not to mention all organic traffic to your own site via Google. Nonetheless, in order for Google to know what you've done, they'd have to be running software to somehow know you're now showing your own ad links to former AdSense advertisers, a possibility so remote and unlikely it borders on preposterous.
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