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Absolutely Consistent Earnings

Not up, not down, just in the middle!

         

RonS

3:29 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I don't know the statistics to figure out what the odds would be for this but my earnings for the last 4 months all fell within 1.12% of the median for the four months.

1.12% is the LARGEST difference from the average. The four months were:
May: -0.80%
June: +1.12%
July: -0.63%
August: +0.31%

Calculation used:
Average = (May+June+July+August) / 4

Difference = (SingleMonth - Average) / Average * 100

I'm not so sure about this month, so I figured I'd post this now! LOL

I can't give you any dollar figures here, otherwise the smarties will be able to calculate my earnings to the penny. Suffice to say that it's nicer when it's on the plus side of the average, and it's enough for dinner. It is somewhere between the McDonald's Value Menu and "Smith and Wollensky" for 2 with no wine.

So -- How are the rest of you "average folk" doing?

[edited by: RonS at 3:30 pm (utc) on Sep. 16, 2006]

mzanzig

4:05 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



May: +10.93%
June: +3.97%
July: -6.05%
August: -8.86%

Indeed, not up, just down. Perfectly... predictable! And September looks even worse so far.

jimbeetle

4:21 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

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



When all is said and done, after the day-to-day up, down, back and forth variations, whenever I do an (ahem) "analysis," it all boils down to--except for a bit of seasonality--average.

mzanzig

4:27 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Jim,

you are so right. All one has to do is to increase the number of samples. :-) For example, if you do a 90-day-moving average, each day all of a sudden becomes very predictable (at least on the 90d average).

Hobbs

4:49 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

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



my 2 cents says there is no middle
you are building content, adding depth to existing or adding new topics
you are gaining or loosing traffic
you are tweaking ad locations, removing or adding ads
your advertisers are coming and going
your seasons are flowing
your network (AdSense) is changing
you competition is gaining on you to loosing to you
and you're trying to find a middle ground to stand on

no middle, no roof, perhaps a bottom if you're really bad.

enjoy :-)

europeforvisitors

4:53 pm on Sep 16, 2006 (gmt 0)



May + 2.69%
June - 9.59%
July - 2.36%
August + 8.37%

These numbers are for a travel-planning site that normally has its highest traffic in May with a secondary summer peak in August. (September will be worse, and AdSense revenues will continue to slip between now and next year's boom season, which will start on or about January 1.)

minthu

4:25 am on Sep 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



it's just going down. I think it's because of many ads from spam sites.

GoldenHammer

4:42 am on Sep 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



My site is getting very stable traffic, over 70% are repeated, so it is a good sample:

May: +8.8%
June: -20%
July: -3.8%
August: +15.07%
September: -23.71% (latest estimate)

Interesting?

david_uk

7:40 am on Sep 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have a graph of past earnings, so knowing how far I deviate from average (whatever that is) is fairly obvious.

I would agree that the excercise is interesting rather than meaningful, as there are just too many factors to consider. In my case I'd have to factor in an improvement in serps where most of my traffic comes from, and a deterioration in ad quality.

But the figures are as below:-

May 2.9% +
June 0.21% -
July 3.6% +
August 5.7% -

The previous five months average was double, and before that was double that. But the trend has been a slow slide into the toilet. Over the four months in question, I've seen the site go from number 5 in serps to number three, and the ads getting spammier and spammier until I removed them a couple of weeks back. The fact that the earnings held up remarkably well is due to an increase in clicks and traffic.

The earnings wasn't part of the decision to remove the ads, but the ads sure were! An increase in serps SHOULD bring about an automatic increase in quality advertisers. However, all I got was the odd one or two real ads, and loads of scrapers. Hopefully Google will improve the quality of it's advertisers one day, and make me proud to have the ads on my site again.

GoldenHammer

11:43 am on Sep 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[...The previous five months average was double, and before that was double that. But the trend has been a slow slide into the toilet. Over the four months in question, I've seen the site go from number 5 in serps to number three, and the ads getting spammier and spammier until I removed them a couple of weeks back. .... ]

******
I am not very surprise to learn your story, look like I am going to run into a similar trend.

Now I am ready for an *** EMERGENCY STOP *** of AS for spammer ads or unreasonable earnings or whatever reasons. It would just a ON to OFF switch that completely removes AS codes from all pages from my web site in seconds ..... :P

[edited by: GoldenHammer at 11:52 am (utc) on Sep. 17, 2006]

Pengi

1:44 pm on Sep 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I love this thread, but don't have enough data to join in properly yet.
I launched my site (and Adsense) late June

May: N/A
June: -95%
July: -41%
Aug: +84%
Sept: +51% (and counting)

Currently I'm a happy bunny ;-)