Forum Moderators: martinibuster
We recently changed a large bunch of our PPC campaign URL's to include the search engine that was the source of the campaign. We mistakenly used the search engine name as the search argument: "http://www.blahblah.com?srcheng=ppc_engine_name".
Suddenly, our usually wondefully relevant ads started including mostly ads for PPC search engines!
We rapidly went back and altered all our ads to have a numeric value for the argument "?srcheng=9999".
So don't use a valid english word for your search argument keywords, or values. You can test this yourself pretty easily of course. Just take one of your AdSense page URL's and try adding different search arguments in the browser address bar.
This seems a bit silly to me.
thx
arg=widget
but not
widget=arg
In other words, ads will show relevant to whatever's on the right-hand side of the = sign.
Gads. On the other hand, I wonder if this could be used to point relevant ads on pages that show highly irrelevant ads or PSA's?
I'll bet this puts WAY too much control in the hands of the webmasters as far as Google is concerned. Enjoy it while it lasts: I'm sure they'll put a stop to this asap.
Anyone that tries that sort of thing is really asking for it. Tracking people playing games with search arguments is a thousand times easier than doing fraudulent click detection. All Google has to do is analyze the document referrer property from their syndicated ads delivery server.
My post was what it was intended for. To warn other PPC campaign users of innocently and inadvertenly diluting their AdSense ads through the use of tracking arguments.
thx
JAG
It is, of course, somewhat tempting to change the links to some of my pages that have poor targeting or PSA's only, but while I don't think this is "strictly" against the TOS, I have the feeling that at the very best it could lead to a "fraudulent yadda yadda" email, so I'll refrain.
What would be really cool would be if they did something like this:
First, tell everyone they can influence their ads in that manner using whatever keywords they want. (But make it so that only GoogleKWArg=keyword will work instead of "arg=keyword". Tighten it up a bit.)
Then, set a minimum CTR requirement if you DO do that, and disable ads on all pages that don't get X click-through. This way, people can't just blatantly advertise, say, pet food on a car site without being penalized.
When I say minimum CTR and ad disabling, I'm only talking about for ads which are using the influencer keywords, and not normal ads.
Wonder if they're working on something like this, or if their algo just hiccupped? :-)
JK
I have some pages that really DO have bad targeting consistently, despite generally good content (e.g., pages all about professionally crafted widgets bringing up ads on arts and crafts, or pages in which a single word happens to override the otherwise oft-described major concept of the page). So I tried jiggering the AdSense targeting (ethically, IMHO) to get ads that really DID fit with the page.
It worked -- for about a day or two. Then it was back to PSAs or laughably untargeted ads.
Don't get me wrong; I'm generally pleased with AdSense, and am still making decent cash from it. But I do wish we Webmasters had a better way to guide, if not fully dictate, appropriate targeting.
So, basically, it sounds like they're aware of it and don't have a problem with it since spidering will review the page, notice that it doesn't have anything to do with "high-ticket-keyword", and display PSA's or regular ads based on the full content.
Regardless of whether they do or do not have a policy against this, it still strikes me as a bad idea to do, though, unless you want PSA's where once ads appeared. :-)
JAG
So arg=iuhweiuhrfouhjuohref would surely screw up a page then.
I don't think it would. It's rather the other way around.
If your site has some site-generic content ads. Try adding one of those as arg=widget and you would immediately get targeted ads, without having to wait for the spider to come by first.
notice that it doesn't have anything to do with "high-ticket-keyword"
I think the extension to the URL has to be able to skew things a lot, even completely, because if you do it on a page about one topic and type in arg=other%20topic at the end of the URL, you'll get ads about the other topic.
I don't know what else would factor in those ads being served, except the keywords, given that the actual page content has nothing to do with the ads.