Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Google keeps all the money on a google search, naturally. They split it to some degree on ads clicked on a content site. But they pay next to nil for an ad clicked via a websearch box on a content site. So, they reduce their payout and capture more income.
Yes, they probably do reduce their payout, since they're providing a service (search) that incurs expense for them. There's nothing sinister or even greedy about that.
And, if they can get your site's visitors to exit your site via websearch versus adsense, they make out like bandits while you see your earnings continue to drop.
Not necessarily. What if a search takes the user to a site that isn't running AdSense? Google loses AdSense impressions and clicks.
AND---->since adverstisers are likely to see lower ROI on websearch clicks, their bids will likely go down over time, causing earnings to drop even more for publishers.
Why are advertisers likely to see lower ROI on search clicks? The conventional wisdom among AdWords advertisers is that search clicks convert better than content clicks.
So, is websearch innovation? Or just greed, the kind that begins to kill a good program?
It's another service that publishers can use or not use, at their discretion.
Just checked my stats to see today I got 3 clicks from WebSearch for a grand total of $.05 cents... That's less than 2 cents per click!
I can understand they may give a little less compared to Adsense, because the search goes through them and stuff, but is everyone else noticing these really low EPC's?
How are those EPC websearch folks?!?
Not as good as on content pages, but better than on other SERPs from third-party providers.