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The AdSense URL filter list revisited...

Increase your EPC/CPM in one easy step...

         

Jenstar

6:23 am on Nov 30, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



When I spoke at the WebmasterWorld conference, one of the points I brought up in my session was about the AdSense URL filter list, explaining why it should only have a handful of URLs, if any. I was surprised at the number of people who didn't know this could make a difference, and have already heard back from a couple publishers about how it increased EPC/CPM after doing it.

So I thought it might be time for a refresher course on the AdSense URL filter, and why you should take the one easy step and remove all those dozens of URLs you have been filing away in your AdSense control panel.

Here is the original post I made this summer on the filter list:

Since advertisers can block up to 200 advertisers with the URL filter tool, many have gone to town blocking ads they believe to be low paying, slightly off-target, or in an attempt to block one type of widget ads in hopes of getting a more profitable type of widget ads appearing instead. But the problem with going filter happy is you could also inevitably be blocking the best targeted - and best paying - ads from appearing on any of your AdSense sites as well.

If you are blocking for competitors, or companies whose ethics you do not agree with, there is not a problem with using the filter - that is what it was intended for.

The problem with the filter is not only are you filtering a specific ad, but you are theoretically blocking hundreds of other ads associated with that advertiser's URL - ads that could be completely relevant and pay well. Advertisers aren't just running that single ad you just blocked on an Adwords account - most run hundreds or thousands of unique ads. So while you could believe that you are blocking a single irrelevant ad from appearing on your site, it actually goes well beyond that. You could also be blocking thousands of other ads that are not only completely targeted and relevant to your site, but that could also be the top paying ads for those keywords among the advertisers who have turned content targeting on in their Adwords account. In short, by blocking that single URL, you could have cost yourself a larger piece of the AdSense pie.

Here is a sample case study to explain what happens a little better:

Jane sees an ad for "green spotted widgets" on her site. She thinks, well, my site is on widgets, but green spotted widgets aren't really that profitable a keyword phrase, so I am going to block that one, in hopes of showing better targeted and higher paying ads. So Jane goes and enters the URL of the ad for "green spotted widgets". A few hours later, that pesky "green spotted widgets" ad disappears. Good? Not neccessarily.

Her CTR drops. Her EPC/CPM drops. Her earnings drop. She comes to the AdSense forum asking if people are noticing a drop in earnings lately. She is earning less and concludes that AdSense must be to blame. After all, it is AdSense who decides what ads to show.

If she is paying attention to the ads appearing on her site, she may notice that suddenly, ads for many of the top paying "widget" keyword phrases - "purple striped widgets"; "orange polkadot widgets" and "blue pinstripe widgets" - not to mention the highly coveted "widget" ads - have also vanished from her site. She writes it off as being fluctuations in ad inventory that is beyond her control. Or perhaps AdSense is mistargeting her ads and thinks her pages are actually about something else - when in actuality they are showing less relevant or themed ads because all the relevant ones are blocked.

But not once does she think about the impact of the URL filter. In actuality, the drop could be attributed to any of those URLs she recently added to her filter list to block those green striped widgets - because the advertiser is also advertising all the profitible and targeted widgets as well.

Unfortunately, she doesn't put two and two together, and will continue to suffer with a lower CTR/EPC and earnings.

A similar case study could be John who blocked an ad geo-targeted to his specific area. The advertiser could have set up individual ads to geotarget every specific area in the US, while still paying high bids for those ads. And they could also have other high paying non-geotargeted ads as well. But as we have seen, blocking one geo-targeted ad can have a much larger impact on reducing the availability of relevant and high paying ads for your account.

What can you do to see if your filter list is actually hurting your bottom line?

First, take your filter list and paste it into a text file and save it. Then go and delete the entire thing out of your filter URL list in your account. Yes, the entire thing. You can go add selected URLs back into it, but ONLY the ones you are using to block competitors or unethical companies.

After a few hours, you should begin to see some new ads show up on your site (you can use the AdSense ad viewing tool if you are outside of the geotargeted area the majority of your audience is in, since the tool also takes into account the filter list). Try and resist the knee jerk reaction to automatically go and put those "irrelevant" ad URLs back into the filter, because that one URL could also be responsible for higher paying ads that appear on your site.

Don't forget AdSense is in it to make money too - they are going to show the highest paying ads available for the keywords it has selected for each individual page. The more the advertiser pays, the more both you and AdSense earn. It doesn't benefit them to show the ads worth the least amount of money, so blocking ads because you think they pay too low is a mistake (especially since again, you could be blocking all their highly targeted and high paying ads from your site as well.)

Watch your stats over the next several days - preferably over weekdays and over a non-holiday week, since other factors (such as advertisers lowering bids for weekends and holidays, or pausing campaigns all together) can have an impact that is not related to your filter list at all.

  • Did your CTR go up?
  • Did your CPM go up?
  • And most importantly, did your bottom line increase?

    Hopefully, you should see your earnings increase with the reduction of URLs on your filter list.

    If you saw a dip that can't be attributed to anything else, start adding URLs back to your filter list, starting with the URLs you believe to be so unrelevant that there is no way that advertiser could be advertising anything that is targeted to your site. And keep watching your CTR, CPM and earnings to see if you hit a balance where you have filtered the ones that really do need to be filtered, while leaving the ones that could be showing those profitable ads.

    Hopefully, some of you will be able to reduce the number of URLs on your filter list, while getting more profitable ads to appear and earning even more money :)

    And yes, I do practice what I preach ;) I only have 9 sites on my filter list - 7 sites are either my own or direct competitors, 2 are advertisers who are showing relevant themed ads, but their target market is not the same as mine :)

    <end of original AdSense URL Filter post [webmasterworld.com]>

  • DamonHD

    2:31 pm on Nov 30, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    Thanks JenStar.

    I am back down to just my own AdWords URL in my filter list.

    Google's new keyword "On Trial" / "On Hold" scheme seems to have gotten rid of most of the stupid->tasteless->irritating->illegal eBay aff chaff.

    Or else the Big G had a quiet word with MediaPlex and NetMeans about the quality of the ads they were passing though...

    Rgds

    Damon

    PS. I assume that one should alomst always block one's own AdWords URLs since that otherwise becomes an expensive way to cross-link your sites, yes?

    MikeNoLastName

    3:13 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    I've noticed some geographically oriented advertisers in particular using separate sub-domains like newyork.#*$!.com and seattle.xxx.com on thier ads. When these come up on our OTHER geographic area pages where they aren't relavent the URL filter rules allow that you can specify only newyork.xxx.com and thus all other ads from xxx.com which MAY be relavent aren't blocked.

    I have a question: say three advertisers have bid 1.50, 1.49, 1.05 respectively. Does blocking the 1.49 bidder from your site cause the 1.50 bidder's price to be lower when clicked from your site?

    Jenstar

    3:14 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    I assume that one should alomst always block one's own AdWords URLs since that otherwise becomes an expensive way to cross-link your sites, yes?

    I do, but I know others that don't ;)

    FromRocky

    4:11 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    I assume that one should alomst always block one's own AdWords URLs

    I don't and I haven't seen my AdWords ads on my AdSense sites.

    I have a question: say three advertisers have bid 1.50, 1.49, 1.05 respectively. Does blocking the 1.49 bidder from your site cause the 1.50 bidder's price to be lower when clicked from your site?

    Don't block the ads due to your prediction on ad pricing.

    1. No one knows the actual CPC for each ad and
    2. Ad position is based on ad ranking, therefore, the first ad doesn't mean it has the highest pay.

    level80

    4:17 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    10+ Year Member



    I assume that one should alomst always block one's own AdWords URLs since that otherwise becomes an expensive way to cross-link your sites, yes?

    This sounds like something Google should offer as a default option. After all what is the closest match than the site itself! However people not realising this probably nets Google some money. ;)

    How many people are there who are Adwords & Adsense users for the same site approximately?

    Jenstar

    4:33 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    I don't and I haven't seen my AdWords ads on my AdSense sites.

    I have. Wasn't until I happened to be using a US proxy that I noticed (the campaign was for US-only). I showed up on the product page with an AdSense ad for the product with the same URL, lol. That was over a year ago though.

    Some use it as part of their marketing and branding campaign though, since many have similar sites in the same area and they do want to cross-promote.

    How many people are there who are Adwords & Adsense users for the same site approximately?

    I'm one... do we have two ;)

    hdpt00

    5:01 am on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)



    two

    howiejs

    2:53 pm on Dec 1, 2004 (gmt 0)

    WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



    Great post Jensar!

    And I am 3 on Adwords