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Adsense Predictions 2006

What are your predictions for 2006

         

camweh

7:42 am on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I'm clueless at this point as to what lies ahead with Adsense - If it's more of what's gone before I'll be happy. Would love to hear what others predict.

GoldenHammer

8:28 am on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



This will be an interesting year as the YPN is about to official launch their "Adsense Killer"?!

Google may have that well prepared for the challenge, but it would still receive a significant impact at least in the first few months.

Google may also release additional controls for publishers and more statistics information to make their system more transparent to the market.

GoldenHammer

9:29 am on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



In any case, 2006 will be a good year for all publishers.... :D

21_blue

9:52 am on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



My predictions for 2006:

  1. There will be 365 days this year
  2. Tony Blair will be Prime Minister at year end
  3. US/UK troops have to stay in Iraq to avert civil war
  4. Google launch a linux competitor to MS Windows
  5. US scientists prove that using petrol (gas) in cars actually helps to combat global warming
  6. Competition from YPN plunges Google into financial crisis and they slash commissions to publishers by 50%
  7. The subsequent haemorrage of publishers plunges Google further into financial crisis and they quadruple commissions to regain dominance of the market
  8. Google go bust
  9. WW set up a charity to help destitute publishers and former Google employees

On the other hand, the increased competition in contextual advertising could make it a good year for publishers. Let's hope so :-).

TheDonster

2:40 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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I'd agree with #6 above, Google will face serious competition from Yahoo this coming year. If Yahoo starts to admit publishers worldwide soon, the competition will benefit only advertisers due to a larger choice in the marketplace. Where I think Google has an advantage is their program has been around longer and they probably have lots of contingency plans in the plex to keep publishers from abandoning in droves. When the dust settles, Google will still retain a larger % of advertisers and publishers due to its dominance in search. I'm guessing the % will just not be as large as it once was.

Frequent

2:50 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google would be foolish to slash the publishers cut in the face of increasing competition. They are smart and will go the other direction. They will boost the publishers cut so that the other programs can't deliver a comprable revenue stream. Just look at the Chitika gold rush, boom and (probably pending) bust.

Also, expect a LOT more "I got canned by Adsense" threads this year as Google addresses advertisers ROI being diluted by scrapers and fraud.

Freq---

Visit Thailand

2:52 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I would love and I believe we will be finally allowed to stop ads with certain keywords in them.

I am tired of seeing sexually orientated ads which while on topic are only on topic to a small percentage of viewers.

The sites are not aimed at any form of sexual persuasion and neither should the ads be.

hunderdown

3:00 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)



21_blue, I agree with all of your predictions except #5. The problem here in the US isn't the scientists--it's the politicians, and one politician in particular.

GoldenHammer

3:10 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[Google would be foolish to slash the publishers cut in the face of increasing competition. They are smart and will go the other direction. They will boost the publishers cut so that the other programs can't deliver a comprable revenue stream. Just look at the Chitika gold rush, boom and (probably pending) bust.
Also, expect a LOT more "I got canned by Adsense" threads this year as Google addresses advertisers ROI being diluted by scrapers and fraud.

Freq--- ]

Yahoo are smart and powerful too, what would be their strategy to have a greater share cut from Google?

Frequent

3:22 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yahoo is going to be hammered by the scrapers and scammers that have already been booted by Google.

Up to now, Yahoo has been very selective about it's Beta test publishers. When they finally go truly live it will be impossible to be so selective.

The first year for YPN will be a tough one.

I also see both Google and Yahoo implementing a "site by site" approval system so people can't slip in with one quality site and then put the code on other junky sites.

Freq---

alika

3:25 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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



Google has the first-mover advantage and YPN is only playing catch-up. YPN has to do a LOT of things from its current state to up the game to Google. From what I've seen with YPN, it is still no match to Adsense, revenue wise.

GoldenHammer

3:31 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Then if you were Yahoo, what would you do to cut a better share from Google?

Freedom

3:41 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Yahoo is going to be hammered by the scrapers and scammers that have already been booted by Google.

Bingo. Google could drop the hammer on scrapers with a policy change, knowing they will all go over to YPN and pollute their reputation. It's a little like when Castro let 25,000 refugees go to the USA in the early 80s, turns out most of them were criminals. We've all seen "Scarface."

- "Say hell-oh to my little friend!"

alika

3:55 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

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



YPN is still in beta and you already see posts about EPC dropping
[webmasterworld.com...]

If this is any indication, I won't be too scared for G when YPN opens in wide release. With YPN the hype was so much bigger than the real thing.

Kiomars

6:10 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



My prediction is that Google and Yahoo! both will make sure to read these comments from here and take a better action and decisions! :D

europeforvisitors

7:08 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)



I'd expect to see more of the same, with some new product extensions (just as we've already seen product extensions such as image ads and site-targeted CPM ads).

Oetzi

7:16 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



My predictions is that the ads arbitragers will flock to AW to buy the keywords they will use to boost their revenue in YPN.

Y will then decrease its commissions to less than 20%-30%, while G will be forced to increase it to over 70%-80% just to pay publishers the same amount as Y. Why? Because only Y has a strict auction system based only on the amount paid by the advertisers.

On the long run that means a lot more profits for Y, which will then, but not in 2006 yet, have enough cash to buy G.

G will try to save itself by dropping their funny (to use a polite word) algos in computing AW position and pricing. Will they realize it before it is too late?

bobothecat

7:20 pm on Dec 30, 2005 (gmt 0)



Also, expect a LOT more "I got canned by Adsense" threads this year as Google addresses advertisers ROI being diluted by scrapers and fraud.

That already seems to be starting... at least judging from the number of 'boo-hoo's' the last few days.

GoldenHammer

4:02 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[My prediction is that Google and Yahoo! both will make sure to read these comments from here and take a better action and decisions! :D ]

That would be probably too late to re-act.... :D

Yahoo has the advantage though they are just following in, they have the financial power behind and thus time to act on, they don't need quick dollar neither, but just going to cut a substantial portion of the cake.

bts111

4:17 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



More products, statistical information and overall more revenue for publishers that provide a ROI for advertisers.

Things are not going to go backwards in 2006.

jonathanleger

5:30 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I predict that most predictions are wrong and we will all be surprised at what really happens in 2006. But that, too, is a prediction. :)

Regardless of what happens, though, those who are smart and savvy will take advantage of both sides and win.

guru5571

7:41 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Most of you seem to have some pretty dismal predictions. I think 2006 will be great for publishers. More money is moving to online advertising in general. Online advertising is growing by leaps and bounds while advertising in almost all other media is flat or falling. Increased competition in contextual advertising will force G and Y! to increase payout to get all the good solid publishers from the fat part of the curve (not too big, not too small, but a big group of solid revenue producers).

So payouts will increase to get ads on valuable web real estate. I think payouts will eventually increase to 80% or higher putting G, Y! and eventually MSN in the same boat as traditional ad agencies.

No one here ever seems to think with an economic mindset. Google is currently a de facto monopoly in the contextual ad space. Some big competitors will erode that very quickly whether or not they offer the same quality as Google. Just look at any monopoly situation that has been disrupted by competition in the past by inferior products. Google may continue to do very well, but not as well. It will also lose a lot of the sway over publishers that it has enjoyed in the past. Even Google can not resist the tide of market forces. I'm sure we'll see all G hands on deck struggling to maintain course in the rough seas of competition now visible on the horizon.

RonS

7:56 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



...and don't forget that Y is staffed with business people, not academics.

GoldenHammer

10:30 am on Dec 31, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yahoo is on the active side to make "low cost, low risk attrack", every new advertiser, publisher they have is a new gain for potential profit, while Google is in passive to fight back, that is an impact for every advertiser, publisher they loss.

Google has to develop new add-on features and tools to cover their loss, and after all, they have to be more transparent with statistics for the advertisers and publishers to further optimized the business at the customers end.

Essex_boy

9:52 am on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)

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



staffed with business people, not academics-- Hoo ray!

alika

12:47 pm on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)

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



they have to be more transparent with statistics for the advertisers and publishers to further optimized the business at the customers end.

Do you really really think that Yahoo will be transparent with statistics? I don't think so.

GoldenHammer

1:44 pm on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[Do you really really think that Yahoo will be transparent with statistics? I don't think so. ]

Yes, sure they will let you know what they want you know .... lol.

europeforvisitors

3:43 pm on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)



...and don't forget that Y is staffed with business people, not academics.

And you're suggesting that Google's business departments are staffed with pipe-smoking college professors?

GoldenHammer

4:05 pm on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[And you're suggesting that Google's business departments are staffed with pipe-smoking college professors? ]

I smell they overweighted their alogthoms and overlooked the subsequent impact, they could also have a better managed implementation approach.

alika

4:22 pm on Jan 1, 2006 (gmt 0)

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



overweighted their alogthoms and overlooked the subsequent impact

any proof?

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