Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Could it be another factor contributing to the decline?
CPM ads can only increase your bottom line
google claims this because it calculates what you would earn per page with CPC and compares it what you would earn with CPM and chooses the higher model to use on the page.
all of that makes sense, but what if the very presence of the CPM ad (huge-font text ad, or image ad), causes your visitors to leave earlier than they would have otherwise, thereby dropping the average number of pages/visitor, and thereby dropping the number of impressions.
i wonder if google uses actual data to verify what its algorithm predicts.
sort of reminds me of the heisenberg uncertainty principle... the actual observation of something on the atomic level, changes it, and therefore observations of such things is subject to skepticism.
i have no proof of this phenomenon wrt to adsense, just stating it as a theoretical possibility.
As stated on [webmasterworld.com ]:
The minimum CPM that an advertiser can bid on your site is $2 and their ads will only appear if your eCPM from CPC ads is less than $2. Basically our algorithm looks at your page and the overall eCPM it's generating. If there's a CPM advertiser who has targeted your site and is bidding more than your current eCPM, then we display their ads. So, you should only see an increase in earnings because of CPM ads.
If you've seen a negative impact on your earnings, sticky mail me with your URL and I'll have our product team investigate.
Thanks,
ASA
One oddity: I occasionally see the site-targeted CPM ads on channels with eCPMs that are way above the minimum bid for CPM ads. So either the advertisers are paying fairly generously for those CPM ads or Google's algorithm is letting CPM ads slip through on pages that do well with CPC.
Even if you have image ads disabled, CPM ads can show as text ads. As text ad, CPM ad fills up the entire ad unit -- even if you use 4-ad skyscraper, you'll see only 1 ad and that is the CPM ad. Sometimes it looks exactly like a PSA, and sometimes it looks like an ordinary Adsense ad (if this is the case, it looks a bit awkward since the ad unit will have so much white space or depending what your background color is)