Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Is it a violation of the ToS to use a javascript or response.redirect to send the people coming to my high traffic page to another one of one of my sites that would be more profitable?
The redirect would happen before any Adsense is displayed. In speicifc, I would be using the built in banner-ad javascript on each of these pages to redirect randomly to one of a few different properties I own.
I can't imagine it could be a problem, as if it was punishable you could just redirect your traffic to your competitor and get their account fried..
Apologies if this has been covered, I couldn't find an answer in a reasonable amount of searching..
The whole POINT of AdSense is to display ads relevant to what surfers are demonstrating some kind of interest in, but if you redirect them blindly then the level of targeting goes down to zero.
On one hand, it seems logical that people are going to a free-content site not looking to spend any money; but on the other hand, a lot of sites with free content make killer money. For example: humour sites, blogs, community bookmark sites, etc..
But jomaxx is right -- the biggest determinant in getting higher eCpm/money is targeted traffic, and one simply cannot get that by redirects or similar means.
I'm saying that when you have a lot of visitors who immediately leave, regardless whether free or not, the value of your page goes down in google's eyes. Consequence: Lower EPC.
I'm saying that when you have a lot of visitors who immediately leave, regardless whether free or not, the value of your page goes down in google's eyes. Consequence: Lower EPC.
I think this is bad, very bad. Imagine you have a site made up of many pages, each one dedicated to provide an in-depth review of a camera, but you do not sell any camera. Most likely a visitor gets to your page because he/she searched G using that camera brand and/or model. Now the visitor is not interested in other brands or models, he/she is just interested in that camera and AS displays ads for that camera. Why is this click worth a lot less than a click of someone who went through all your pages? That visitor was probably readier to buy than the visitor that went through many pages. If G people read marketing statistics they should know that buyers during the last stage of their product research are very focused on a brand and they just want to find the best price and order, while buyers at the beginning of the product research are more likely to visit many pages looking for comparisons and advice. To me is clear that the click of a buyer in the last stage of shopping is far more valuable than the click of a buyer in the first stage of shopping.