Forum Moderators: martinibuster
as anybody experienced a reduction in % commission following a good month? I did. Each end every month since the beginning.
They cannot play with the impressions or the clicks because we track them but they decide how much we get paid.
So this is the thing: the more traffic I get and the more revenue I produce for them, the less I get paid. And the new (lower) commission structure kicks in a few days after the month end.
What to do?
MSN?
Jeez, if people don't trust Google, do you think they're going to trust Microsoft? :-)
[en.wikipedia.org...]
This is not to say this explains it; just that it should be taken into consideration.
How long do you wait till you evaluate the stats?
I watched the channels for a couple of weeks before I made any changes. During that time, one group of pages generated over half the daily impressions, but less than 5% of the income. The content didn't lend itself to tweaking to improve the ad targeting, so I just took Adsense off those pages.
1. Never apply statistical models to data unless you first know the data fits the model that stats were based upon. Otherwise it is completely misleading.
2. Do you really want to believe a wiki that is open to anyone to edit at any time, anonymously?
For example, if a big account says they want to pay big media players X for performance but trim profits from the small independent publishers, what's G to do? It could either say no and stand up for fairness or give in and simply make sure its not obvious.
In most industries the established players want to collaborate to keep out the upstarts, whether through standards bodies or carefully-crafted alliances. Tech was different, but post-bubble can a tech company afford to NOT "go along to get along"?
If G said NO to Time Warner, M$, or Diller's tough terms, for example, those accounts are big enough to fund an upstart competitor pretty well. G would take a loss on cetain aspects of the accounts just to keep them, no?