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What is the Average Size of your AdSense Page?

         

henjon

2:30 pm on Oct 9, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi,

I got a rather simple question. I live by the rule of thumb that content is king and that if a website is a shrine then the content is the sacrifice on which the allmighty G feast.

But i also feel that too long articles often become too much for the regular online reader. Is is my experience that short and to-the-bone articles are better than page long explanations of specific widgets.

But then again, i do not want to upset the G by making to short articles.

How many words would you guess that the average article you write and publish are?

My average is around 450 per article.

The stuff i just wrote is 120 words. ;-)

ceweman

2:37 pm on Oct 9, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I am writing my own magazine with car-related topic. Average lenght of my article is 3500 letters, maximum 10700. I am using a lot of graphic content in articles - 2-5 pictures (320x240 size).

Maybe the text is the king, but ugly webpage with plain text is #*$! for me. Webpage must be as a printed magazine - great text with nice graphic - it is the only road how can people fall in love with your webpage :)

Andreals

12:17 am on Oct 10, 2006 (gmt 0)



I don't have articles, just multiple short reviews and related info, often about 40-100 entries per page. My pages with server-side includes but excluding graphics total between 25K and 75K of which about 9K is coding, markup. I have about 500 pages in the site, about 90% with three AdSense blocks.

I do very well with AdSense, I hope that helps.

edited to include more data

[edited by: Andreals at 12:20 am (utc) on Oct. 10, 2006]

jhood

2:11 am on Oct 10, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



There is a little known rule of thumb among those who write direct-response mailings: the reader will stop reading when he is persuaded or has found out what he wanted to know.

Therefore, it is essential that a story, page, letter or whatever be long enough to answer all of the potential questions. When the reader has had enough, he will go on to whatever is next. If he does not get enough information on your page, he will quickly flip on to the next site.

So, in terms of retaining readers, a well-constructed longer page is better than one that is too short.

As one who used to write for politicians and other idiots, I was constantly amazed to be told to "just write a one-page press release," a completely worthless document dested to hit the round file.

So, I could write a lot more but perhaps I have made my point: you're not paying for the paper and ink so longer is better.