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Improve Adsense Coverage?

Ideas to increase adsense coverage.

         

leebow

8:09 am on Sep 18, 2017 (gmt 0)

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Can anyone give me any advice on how to increase coverage?

From what I understand about coverage - anything less then 100% means a visitor loaded a page that COULD have shown an ad - but becuase of lack of content / unrelated content - NO advert was shown.

Is there any way to track down which pages aren't showing ads? Or any advice on what you did to improve your coverage?

Thanks!

MayankParmar

1:24 pm on Sep 18, 2017 (gmt 0)

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If you reduce the ad units, the coverage should be better imo. It depends on the niche also.

NickMNS

2:06 pm on Sep 18, 2017 (gmt 0)

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Where to start?
From what I understand about coverage - anything less then 100% means a visitor loaded a page that COULD have shown an ad - but because of lack of content / unrelated content - NO advert was shown.

Yes that is correct. The reason for this can be many things, some related to content, niche, size of the ad-unit, time of day, etc...

Is there any way to track down which pages aren't showing ads?

Yes, maybe it depends. If you have your Adsense account linked to your Analytics account it is very simple. Go to "Behavior" -> "Publisher Pages" report, the second column should be coverage. So this gives you coverage at the page level.

If not you will need to use Adsense. To track coverage one needs to use the custom tab on the Performance Report. Click the tab and select a few relevant fields, I like Page Views, Impressions, RPM (both page and simple), and of course select coverage. With the tab configured you can track coverage across the site. Now to get to specifics depends on how your ad units are configured. If you use the same ad unit everywhere it will be more difficult or even impossible. You can then use advanced reports to try and parse out the unique characteristics of the ad units you use. Things such as custom channels, or creative sizes.

Or any advice on what you did to improve your coverage?

Yes. First, I don't recommend Mayank Parmar's advice, one it defeats the purpose, removing ad units simply ensure that no ads will ever be seen and depending on the underlying cause it may not have any impact on whether ads are shown in the remaining inventory.

Technical - Be sure that the ad-units are displaying in standard sizes (eg:300 x250 or 300 x 600). One needs to check across all screen sizes. If you are using responsive be sure that the ad-units do not compress down to some odd shape like 140 x 227 or whatever as there may be few ad creatives available to fill those units. If you are not using responsive ads, be sure that your not showing large ads on small screens such as 729 x 90 ad on 320 wide screen.

Content - I doubt that content will directly impact coverage. Ads can be contextual (according to page content) but they can also be interest based (based on users interest) so if one page happens to have limited content Adsense will likely serve an interest based ad. Now if your site as whole is thin on content, then that is a different issue altogether. Then you may be having trouble attracting any high quality advertisers. Also, overloading your page with ads as compared to content may deter advertisers and users.

Top level - more traffic, better traffic, will attract more advertiser that will increase the demand for the inventory. More demand ensure better coverage and higher pricing. However achieving this in not that easy, one will need to create great content and promoted it. As mentioned above a site with thin content doesn't help in attracting interest.

Be careful for what you wish for! If you have all the technical aspects sorted and you are still experiencing low coverage, that is then almost certainly due to a lack of demand. Increasing coverage may not be in your best interest as the ads that will fill those slots will likely be low quality and spammy, and that in turn will further deter legitimate advertisers. Instead use back-up ads. Either find a relevant affiliate program or promote your own content or other sites.

A small note about the diagnosing any technical issue. In Adsense you can go to Advanced Reports -> Creative Sizes and then see if there are any sizes that have low coverage and then correct the code to prevent those sizes from appearing.

frankleeceo

5:20 pm on Sep 18, 2017 (gmt 0)

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In short, setting up adsense passbacks to other networks to cover the ads that were not served. I was able to recapture roughly 3~5% of additional income from impressions not served by adsense.

Many reasons coverage can be low, but I would not raise an eyebrow unless it hits a really low number that sway from the average without a reasonable cause. Then that could be more serious issues like traffic quality.

Worry about overall total impressions actually served, it's a better metric. Especially when you start experimenting using more ad units as adsense official channels usually suggests.

ember

7:15 pm on Sep 18, 2017 (gmt 0)

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Also, overloading your page with ads as compared to content may deter advertisers and users.


More than 30% density and you'll also run afoul of the coming Chrome ad filter.

leebow

6:51 am on Sep 20, 2017 (gmt 0)

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Thanks so much for the replies guys - all really very helpful!

NickMNS - genuinely one of the most detailed replies I’ve ever had on a forum! Thank you!

vegasrick

7:38 am on Sep 22, 2017 (gmt 0)

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@ember, what does that 30% mean?

The 30% is only geared to mobile.

"Ad Density Higher Than 30%"

Based on everything I read it appears to be geared more towards "article" content.

I saw one Google expert give his answer on it and it appears to only count ads within the "main content" and does not count ads at the bottom of the page and/or after the main content.

Also, if they find one article page out of a 100,000 in violation - is that a page level violation? Because it seems to me that one article can create a site level violation, which is nuts if that's actually the case.

We usually have articles that are 300-900 words and there are no more than two 300x250 ads within the article - both below the fold and both separated by a few graphs. There are 4 300x250 ads on the entire page as a whole (different ad networks), but our pages as a whole are very, very long - many sections, many links menus, etc.

Below is what the Google expert wrote.



We're working on providing more detail around ad density in our Help Center and newer videos for Ad Density violations in the Ad Experience Report will even show what ads are included in the calculation as well as how "main content" is determined for a given page.

To answer your questions, specifically:

- The main content portion starts with the main content area of your page and includes all that you mentioned, photos, galleries, social bars, etc.).

- Ads include either external content recommendations or mixed (i.e., internal and external) content recommendations. If a module links to a page on your own site, and the presence of the link is not paid for, then it is not included in the ad density calculation.

- The calculation is based on the ads up to and within the main content area -- so if you have ads below the main content area, at the bottom of the page these would not be counted.
- We don't currently have an example of how this is calculated, the new videos in the Ad Experience Report should be helpful in showing how the ad density is calculated.

Also, I just want to call out that ad density is not calculated based on the viewport, but on the entire content area of the page.

ember

12:47 am on Sep 23, 2017 (gmt 0)

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I've talked with a couple of Google people about the 30%, and yes, it applies to the page, not the viewport. I have some ads - they are the 280x360 that Google now recommends for mobile - that take up half the viewport on little phones, although not at the top of the page. They would be a problem if the 30% applied to the viewport and not the entire page.

vegasrick

1:13 am on Sep 23, 2017 (gmt 0)

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@ember, but the question comes in - what do they consider the "main content"

What would be the main content of a main page or a 404 page (short page for example). Other networks allow banner ads on 404 pages, and Google is now obviously in the business of policing all ad networks.

If they only consider a portion of a long page as the main content, but you happen to have two ads there that ad up to over 30%, then you can have an issue.

They dont count the header or footer or any ads "before or after the main content."

This is going to lead to 3 possibilities.

1. People will make their pages intentionally longer.

2. People will stack ads at the bottom of a mobile page.

3. Ad networks will not serve their units to Google Bot to avoid publishers being penalized (some large sites actually do not serve ads to Google bot already).