Forum Moderators: martinibuster
This August has been pitiful to say the least... although my traffic is strong I am way behind all previous years for the month of August.
Do believe that since adsense has deemed to have fewer ads in the ad blocks even the 300x250 size at times only delivers one BIG ad which looks terrible.
Is there any way I can be assured that my ad blocks deliver at least three ads per block as I only ever have two ad blocks at the most on one page... on the low topic pages I only have one ad block..
I have tweak my pages time and time again to no avail... is there anything I can do to improve my situation... I'm all ears...
Where Have ALL the Clickers Gone?
That's a Peter, Paul and Mary song from the old days, right?
Is there any way I can be assured that my ad blocks deliver at least three ads per block ...
Unfortunately, no.
I have tweak my pages time and time again to no avail... is there anything I can do to improve my situation... I'm all ears...
Stop teaking old pages and start building new ones. Far more bang for the buck in my book.
Frustrates me too sometimes.
Might be time to start a new site in another topic area.
Much less advertisers interested in that audience.
Let's face it most of your audience is boomers and they just took a major shellacing in the housing market debacle. What was once the most sold to affluent audience is simply not that any more. They are jamming what they have left into their retirement accounts so they can live a marginal live, not the extravagant one they fantasized. So less advertiser interest and $$$.
Well, Elvis will never die in Vegas but I can't vouch for the rest of the world.
Yes, I have been think that the bottom would drop out one day...but I never thought it would happen in my best earning month... down by half so far... too depressing to think it could get worse.
But with a niche site that is in google's top ten for 50 keywords and 25 thousand subscribers to my monthly newsletter I had hoped for just one more good year.
Adsense fiddling with block ads and delivering whatever ... and advertisers waning ... I do believe it is time to move on... but then what do I do ... sell all three sites... keep my fingers crossed... hope and prayer... it seems a hunka, hunka burnin' love is just not cutting it any more...
So for the 64 thousand dollar question? What are highest paying keywords? Just kidding...
But with a niche site that is in google's top ten for 50 keywords...
According to Google's Keyword Tool [adwords.google.com], there may be an additional hundred more keywords for you to work on. ;) With 350 pages and only 50 top ten, there may be some underperforming pages that can be fixed to bring in more traffic. Something as small as CAPITALIZING important keywords in the title tag can help squeeze in more visitors, especially in conjunction with a call to action in the meta description.
Visitor stats are good for identifying top ten ranking queries that can be improved with a better title tag and possible on page optimization. Identifying keywords you should be ranking for then matching them with the best pages on your site for those queries is another excercise for improving traffic and income.
As I will not be making the pilgrimage to Graceland this year... what better way to wallow away the hours but sitting in front of the puter and getting massive eye strain... but then again I do have Elvis in the background to keep me company...
Something as small as CAPITALIZING important keywords in the title tag can help squeeze in more visitors, especially in conjunction with a call to action in the meta description.
martinibuster, I have been capitalizing my titles for years, what is the reason for your suggestion?
Is it because capitalizing stands out from the sites that do not capitalize OR is there some favor given by Google or other search engines for capitalization? Just curious as to your reasons. My reason has always been to make my sites stand out in the search results, but I did not know if there might be other great reasons?
Title Tag catches the searchers eye, meta description convinces them to click through.
What you want to do is capture readers at every stage of the research and buying cycle--from the point where they're first thinking "Do I want a widget" through "Which widget do I want?" to "I'm looking to buy a widget." At least one major study has shown that, in the leading e-commerce categories, the typical purchaser conducts research several times over a period of five weeks or longer before buying. If you target only the people who are actively looking to buy something right now, you're competing directly with AdWords ads on Google's SERPs, and you're also leaving money on the table.
Do believe that since adsense has deemed to have fewer ads in the ad blocks even the 300x250 size at times only delivers one BIG ad which looks terrible.
The most common reason we would serve a single text ad in a larger ad block is that the advertiser has bid on a CPM [google.com] basis. That means the publisher is getting paid whether a user clicks or not. For that reason, many publishers like seeing CPM ads on their sites. (Keep in mind, though, that we'll always serve the ad that we think will earn you the most money, whether it's CPC or CPM.)
ASA
I have 3 - 250x300 per page I would be willing to make one CPM sensitive but not all 3. ( people in my niche tend to lowball). Currently I am opted-out for just that reason.
Let's say the Big M comes in a throws a low cost brand ad in there. Well, all the clickity little clickers want to know about Big M's offer. Bang, zoom profit in the toilet. Ok filter them, now the filter is eaten up at double the pace.
Can't say that about Big G, you guys at least pay fair.
To bad you couldn't set up a particular adblock for CPM acceptance.
Or--better yet from an advertiser's point of view--place CPM ads only in the highest ad block on the page, where they'd have a greater chance of being seen by visitors.
How accurate is your thinking wrt. reality? In other words what is the error percentage?
AdSense has been around for six years, and I'd imagine that Google has acquired a tremendous amount of data on user behavior, ad performance, and CTR patterns for individual accounts during that time. So maybe ASA's use of the word "think" needs to be taken for what it probably was meant it to be: a less formal way of saying "We'll always serve the ad that our computers project will earn you the most money, based on statistical analysis and your account's history."
Having to close when the "he is alive" theorist come on board and ruin it for everyone...
I will stick to what I know and try to improve on it... with working on my mega tags, improve my ranking and keywords...