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My site was rejected by Adsense

         

Redfisher

3:48 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



No question here, just need a little space to vent. My site was denied for Adsense due to "Page Type". I since found 4 very similar sites as mine with Adsense and sent them back in a reply to the Adsense reject email. Do they just throw darts at a big dart board with "Yes" on one side and "Reject" on the other?

Funny the site is good enough for them for me to spend $80-$100/day in Adwords.

Sorry for the vent.

Mike

PS I feel a little better now.

bhartzer

3:59 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



In the case of those other sites like yours running Adsense, I would guess that they probably got approved with another site and are running Adsense on their "network of sites".

The site that you're seeing Adsense on wasn't necessarily the site that got approved.

europeforvisitors

4:17 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)



Funny the site is good enough for them for me to spend $80-$100/day in Adwords.

Being rejected by AdSense isn't necessarily a slam at your site's quality. It could be that there isn't enough text content on your pages for the AdSense Mediabot to digest, or that Mediabot can't crawl them for some reason.

loanuniverse

4:23 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



bhartzer makes a good point. The bar might be lower if the site gets in as an "aditional property" being added after the first one is approved.

alika

4:41 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

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



G's policy of allowing publishers to put the code in other web sites they own/control but was not submitted for approval contributes to the erosion of the quality of sites in the Adsense program. G will have reviewed and approved the submitted site, but the policy gives the publishers the freedom to put the code in questionable sites.

Advertisers who complain about the poor/questionable quality of sites in the Adsense program may be seeing the code running in sites not reviewed by G. With all the spammy publishers around, it is hard to make an assumption that the quality of the approved site is the same as the other sites owned by the publisher.

If G wants to uphold quality in its Adsense network, this is one loophole that needs to be addressed. Put the code only in sites reviewed and approved. Additional sites must be submitted for approval. This is the policy of the banner ad networks, and this is the way they control the quality of their publisher network.

Jenstar

4:50 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



G's policy of allowing publishers to put the code in other web sites they own/control but was not submitted for approval contributes to the erosion of the quality of sites in the Adsense program.

All sites are now subject to quality checks by the AdSense team, regardless of whether they were the site used to apply for AdSense or not. I am not sure how long it takes between placing AdSense on a new URL before it is quality checked for TOS/policy violations, though. But this is one area they have been addressing since the beginning of the year.

I agree, if these quality checks were not done, it would definitely lead to problems down the road with AdSense.

<added>I checked, and they began doing the quality checks at the end of last year. Here is a thread about this issue [webmasterworld.com] </added>

alika

4:58 pm on Mar 12, 2004 (gmt 0)

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



That's good to hear. But it would require less resources for G to control quality at the gates; rather than go around finding where the code was placed and checking on the sites.

There is the timelag to think of when G can actually handcheck the sites (e.g. do they check it as soon as the code goes up, or is there 1 month lag to get to all to those sites and review them). If there's a time lag -- say 2 weeks -- and during that time, advertisers see that Adsense runs on spammy and bottomfeeder sites, then that's two weeks of branding and image problem for Adsense. Those advertisers will not choose to spend their ad money on those sites. A loss for legitimate publishers.

Control the quality right at the start.