Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Still better to show some of these than PSAs, and who knows, that big auction house might be bidding $2.00 a click now.
I copied and pasted the list in Notepad first, just in case I need to add them back at a later date.
But really, if you have a page about the Industrial Revolution, who's going to click on an ad that says, "Get your industrial toliets here!"
Geesh... I'll give them this week, till all this settles down, then reblock if necessary.
What works best for me is blocking Ebay affilliates, scrapers and any site that is clearly made for adsense. Although blocking sites works very well for me, I'd certainly say that it doesn't work for everybody and I'd use the feature with caution.
Does broadmatched mean a "general" or "generic" keyword? Like hotel would be a general term, or cell phone. But they would pay higher if it was a specific Hotel or cell phone?
These general keywords seem to be where my one cent clicks are coming from. What if I block these 1 cent advertisers?
Try to optimize for the phrases that are more specific.
Those advertisers who you'd block for lower paying general keywords are the same advertisers (in my case anyway!) who also bid higher on the more specific terms.
I recently (mistakenly) removed a single phrase that was near an AdSense ad block. The same advertisers were showing, but the EPC dropped like a lead balloon. I put the specific phrase back in place and everything went back to normal!
Figuring out what the keyword phrase IS is the real challenge. ;-)
general keyword: hotel
higher-paying: "hotel in Madrid" or "Madrid hotels"
Not a specific hotel, but what the advertiser would expect a high-converting customer to have typed in for searching them out.
Remember, the advertiser is trying to optimize for the search engine users first and not the content network.