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Anyone Else Seeing Low CTR in January?

January way down for me....

         

WolfLover

2:37 pm on Jan 25, 2009 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I was just wondering if I am alone in this? Januarys earnings are down about 25% from January of last year and from last month.

Impressions are about the same, but the CTR and therefore the ECPM is way down.

This made me think that my ads were not as relevant, but when I look at them, they are relevant for the most part. Always get an ad here and there that could be better.

Why do you think that visitors are not clicking as much as they normally do?

adfree

10:14 pm on Feb 6, 2009 (gmt 0)

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January 09 was my best month in 15 month on all ratios. No wonder, my main content deals with what's happening right now...

nealrodriguez

4:04 am on Feb 7, 2009 (gmt 0)

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based on the comments, it appears the disparity in ecpm is due to distinct ad rates or behaviors in verticals;

holzee

9:19 am on Feb 7, 2009 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



has anyone noticed a change in the average $$ per click, although the amount of clicks has remained constant since end of December i have noticed the average click for my site is now .19 as opposed to .25

Rumbas

1:43 pm on Feb 7, 2009 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I compared some months as on one site everything is UP. Earnings are up 25-30% due to an increase in traffic in January. Fortunately the trend seems to stick, so holding my breath is not necessary :)

mcskoufis

11:40 pm on Feb 7, 2009 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Personally my sports related website has seen revenues down as much as 75% since July 2006. It is seriously bad and getting worse and worse, even though traffic is up by almost 500% (since then).

It is really terrible, we are struggling to survive and have tried numerous ad implementations and positions throughout the website. Is so bad I had to get a part time job cause the site is barely making enough to cover operational costs.

Really desperate situation here, despite the enormous traffic (and server costs) increase. Also CTR is down to 0.5% from 4%...

It would be interesting to see if we can have a comparison of Adsense performance versus YPN or other network ads for those that use them. Clicksor for example has provided a good alternative (had to scrap some of the google ads for them which made us breathe a bit).

LostOne

12:01 am on Feb 8, 2009 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Saw a stellar October then gradual declines. All numbers are down about 25% from my averages, but I have only 12 months to compare against. I figure it's going to yo-yo anyway, why worry about it.

With other programs numbers are also lower. Advertisers are cutting back, leaving, or lowering bids.

explorador

3:06 pm on Feb 9, 2009 (gmt 0)

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



signor_john: IMHO, this is a good time to build for the future. When the economy recovers, publishers who have focused on improving and expanding their sites will be in a better position than those who have spent their energies on trying to squeeze every last drop of blood out of a drought-stricken turnip.

Agree. I've been thinking and reading about this Adsense thing and come to many conclusions as for the why and how long is this trend going to happen (lower incomes).

I'm seeing traffic increase on my sites (I also have two more sites) still, making slightly equal or less income than before with less sites. So, I guess by now:

  • Many adsense site builders will sell their sites after finding that MFA are not working anymore.
  • I think many sites similar to MFA will also drop the effort and sell or abandon the ship.
  • The big opportunity and challenge here is to stay alive, keep on growing (positioning your website) and wait. When this (IF) is over, the remaining stronger sites will have more opportunities.

Despite what the economic experts say, I still think eternal expansion and growing of any system is impossible. This would happen anyway (and maybe will get worse). It is very normal to grow, reach a point of zero growth (stop expanding) and then perhaps implode.

londrum

3:26 pm on Feb 9, 2009 (gmt 0)

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



i had big drop too, by almost half, but i've managed to get it more or less back to where it was by desperately fiddling around with new ad positions and sizes. so that makes me think i'll do well when the economy recovers (...if that is what is)
so in a way i'm glad i took a drop, otherwise i never would have changed it.

signor_john

4:05 pm on Feb 9, 2009 (gmt 0)



The big opportunity and challenge here is to stay alive, keep on growing (positioning your website) and wait. When this (IF) is over, the remaining stronger sites will have more opportunities.

I think that's always been the case. Cookie-cutter affiliate sites, click arbitrage sites, scraper sites, SEO-driven "user-generated content" sites that mine long-tail search, etc. have all come on the scene to exploit opportunities caused by weaknesses in the search engines or in AdSense. The first-generation opportunities make money while they can before selling up and/or moving onto something else; the second generation consists of wannabe opportunists who arrived too late, along with people who realize that there's more money to be made in e-books about how to get rich than in following their own advice.

During all the ups and downs of the business models du jour, user-focused sites with real content have been able to adapt profitably instead of throwing their work away and starting over each time a new fad or temporary business model comes along. Affiliate links, AdSense ads, display ads, and other revenue sources can be mixed, matched, added, or discarded without affecting the site's raison d'être. By thinking like real publishers (not just like "AdSense publishers"), site owners can continue to build on their successes instead of having to reinvent themselves every two or three years.

desiguru

8:00 pm on Feb 9, 2009 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes same her ethe CTR is much higher but the average cents per click is really low.

Seb7

8:35 pm on Feb 10, 2009 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I had a wierd day yesterday, EPC on ads accross all domains went to the floor, but EPC on the custom search multiplied by 10 making it my best day for adsense. Back to normal today.
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