My website is getting rejected for insufficient content eventhough it has more than 300 words in the main page.
Earlier i hd submitted when the page was under construction, what should i do now
not2easy
5:06 pm on May 26, 2014 (gmt 0)
I would hold off applying again until you have developed your site enough for Google to decide its topic and range so they know the scope of advertisers who might want their ads on your site. Take some time to visit similar sites and see how your site content measures up to the rest of the web. Seriously, 300 words barely covers the content of one blog post. When you say "main Page' does this indicate that only the main page is short of content, is there more content deeper into your site so they would have something to measure? Try to think about how AdSense works, it is an advertising network that has as its main concern offering a wide range of traffic sources to their advertisers. They want to be sure that you are offering a place for people to see these ads that will start out with its own traffic and have enough to keep people from leaving as soon as they get there. They know from vast experience that people who don't stay on a site will not click their ads or be of any benefit to their advertisers. Create a useful site that makes people happy to be there and AdSense will be happy to sign you up. Repeated applications before your site is ready can make acceptance more difficult.
netmeg
5:34 pm on May 26, 2014 (gmt 0)
Also, even if you have 6000 words, if they are the same words as can be found elsewhere (just rearranged slightly) they may decide it's not unique enough.
LifeinAsia
10:36 pm on May 26, 2014 (gmt 0)
more than 300 words in the main page
Before I posted my message, this page had just under 300 words of "content" on it. That's barely enough content to convey a basic concept, let alone in-depth content that advertisers like. Especially when you consider that a lot of the content on the main page is going to be related to links to other pages.
What about your other pages? Google looks at a lot more than just the main page. If your other pages are equally as thin as the main page, it's going to be hard to find decent advertisers.
dukelips
10:37 am on May 27, 2014 (gmt 0)
20 pages with more than 300 words per page
netmeg
12:18 pm on May 27, 2014 (gmt 0)
Do you have information that is not found on other sites?
AdSense seems to be a lot pickier now than they used to be.
hannamyluv
2:03 pm on May 27, 2014 (gmt 0)
20 pages with more than 300 words per page
What happened to the days where people fussed on whether 100 pages of content was enough to launch a site?
wa desert rat
3:21 pm on May 27, 2014 (gmt 0)
Google doesn't think it's enough. I waited a year to develop content on my twi sites and both were accepted right off the bat. In fact, I had no idea there were issues around content. My problem is keeping the content brief, actually. :P
WDR
netmeg
5:42 pm on May 27, 2014 (gmt 0)
You could probably get approved with 100 words if they were the right 100 words, put together in a useful and unique way that nobody's ever done before.
Good luck with that.
that would be an interesting challenge if I didn't already have an account, and had enough time on my hands
jbayabas
2:37 am on May 28, 2014 (gmt 0)
OP, follow this process:
1. For the first year, don't focus on making money. Your main goal is to create good, original content which will generate good traffic to your site. 2. Once your site generates at least 100 unique visitors a day is a good indication that you're doing something good. 3. Apply for Adsense when you achieve one of these goals.