Forum Moderators: martinibuster
For example, a click on an ad for digital cameras on a web page about photography tips may be worth less than a click on the same ad appearing next to a review of digital cameras.
[edited by: markus007 at 8:08 pm (utc) on April 1, 2004]
I don't think Google will cry bitter tears if the publishers it has deemed to produce lower ROI for advertisers switch to other services, as if their calculations are correct and the other services continue to charge a higher rate for those clicks, AdSense becomes a better deal for advertisers.
My primary complaints about AdSense remain:
* The hyperactive "offensive content" filter blocks ads from popular pages - even when Google has advertisers who would like to advertise on those pages (and who are relegated to less relevant pages as a result of the bad filtration); and
* The contextual filter is not very good at figuring out when 80% of a site is on a particular subject, that 20% of the site might benefit from different types of ads. **** seems to anticipate that its filters are imperfect, and lets publishers suggest themes and keywords. Google should do the same, even if it is cautious about how it uses the publisher-provided information.
If you have multiple kinds of sites and use channels, I think it may be easier to see which kind of sites are coming out ahead and which are making less revenue with the recent changes.
Will be interesting to see what I get charged!
No, every single person on this forum has NOT taken a big pay cut.I don't think there's enough data to make any firm conclusions. Thurs-Sun are my lowest earning days of the week in any case.
Ditto. Too soon for me to tell. The EPM which is all that really matters to me does not look too different yet.
At this point I have no obvious net gain/loss.
My affiliate links trend near a 10% converstion which I believe is rather high, and may have a direct correlation to my lack of seeing a major AdSense CPM drop.
"Because the difference in conversion rates between, say, an article on widgets and a gmail e-mail message about widgets is likely to be even greater than the difference between the difference in conversion rates between a widget ad on a SERP and one in a review." - europe
I agree because gmail e-mail, SERP, articles are seperate advertising mediums. Thus the need to let advertisers decide.
"Largely"? Partly, maybe. But it's unrealistic to pretend that there aren't intrinsic differences in value between leads from different media--and it's also unrealistic to expect advertisers to jump through hoops to increase conversion rates from traffic that doesn't perform well and which they'd just as soon avoid altogether." - europe
Whoa there. Read what you said. If you were to teach an advertiser to convert well off of content do you think they would do it? They sure would. Why is it so unrealistic to expect advertisers to learn how to market with a different medium?
Would you market the same in a newspaper as you would in a magazine? Would you market the same on TV as you would on radio? No marketing your products change to the type of media you are using.
I am not saying what google is doing is wrong but if google were to seperate content from SERP from email... and let market force determine the value you would see many more advertisers want to give it a try and learn what works. You can't have the same pricing scheme to fit all.
Even now with a discount provided, it is based on a different advertising medium's prices and value. You still won't see the effect on ROI as you would hope to see. I think google should seperate biddings then work on a better technology to deal with conversion issues and discount from there.