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Copyright 2005 Randy Charles Morin
Part of the KBCafe Blog Network.
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Yesterday, I stumbled across great step-by-step instructions for using Google's Sitemap with a Blogger blog. I'll likely rewrite this today for inclusion in the 10 Steps to Professional Blogging e-book.
Update: Done!
Checkout Google Checkout! Seller transaction fees are $0.20 plus 2%. But for every $1 spent on AdWords, the seller gets $10 in free transaction thru Google Checkout the next month. Assuming your transactions are large enough that the flat fee is irrelant, then you save $0.20 on Google Checkout for every $1 you spend on AdWords. If your average transaction is $10, then you save $0.40 on Google Checkout for every $1 you spend on AdWords.
Sterling Camden is helping me write the Ten Steps to Professional Blogging. I've incorporated a bunch (hundreds) of changes he suggested. Many others have also volunteered to write sections. Thanks to all!
http://www.webvertization.com/makemoney.html
I think I'll have to attach a license to it to make certain all the contributors are fairly treated. I'm thinking anybody can republish the final version, as is, with no modifications to the actually content. You would be allowed to add sidebars, headers and footers (that may contain ads). You could also quote from the final version, with linkage back to the original. Licensing suggestions welcomed.
Update: I also filled-in the section on del.icio.us today.
Here' the top 12 most profitable AdSense keywords according to Xedant. Xedant the rest of the top 100 or so.
| Keyword | Cost Per Click | Clicks/Day | Cost/Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| insurance | $17.41 | 49,893.5 | $868,645.81 |
| hotels | $3.52 | 200,636.0 | $706,238.75 |
| film | $2.88 | 183,044.0 | $527,166.75 |
| home | $3.89 | 102,282.5 | $397,878.91 |
| car | $5.09 | 52,069.5 | $265,033.75 |
| schools | $4.13 | 60,913.0 | $251,570.69 |
| acting | $2.28 | 106,337.0 | $242,448.36 |
| credit | $8.67 | 25,705.0 | $222,862.34 |
| cheap | $2.71 | 82,139.5 | $222,598.05 |
| digital | $1.70 | 130,607.0 | $222,031.91 |
| hotel | $2.38 | 84,776.5 | $201,768.06 |
| film schools | $5.64 | 35,501.5 | $200,228.45 |
http://www.xedant.com/researches/top_500_adsense_keywords.php
Seth Godin: Even if you never cashed the checks from Google, you'd come out ahead.
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2006/06/why_does_fred_h.html
Randy: Seth is entirely correct here. A blog with some ads seems more professional than blog without. I have no confidence in blogs with zero ads, nor blogs with ads up the whooza. There's a balance. Ads on the right. Ads at the bottom. Content top left. It's the magic formula.
I can't believe how many self-titled AdWords experts go around the various AdWords forums misinforming users that CTR is somehow important. If you are using AdWords, CTR is about the biggest red herring in the business. The important thing in AdWords is profits, that's how much you make less how much you spend. Sometimes you can make more by working on increasing your CTR, but I've often found campaigns with lower CTRs are more profitable.
Let me explain. The easiest way to increase your CTR is to increase your ad position by increasing your CPC. This will have an exponential affect on your AdWords expenses (as both CPC and clicks increase). If this doesn't result in an equivalent exponential increase in revenues, then you are making less money. This is why it's so important to have good reporting tools that tell you if you are making money or how much.
Some important notes on section targeting.
it may take up to 1-2 weeks before you start to see changes to your ad targeting. Also, we want to make sure your ads are as effective as possible,so our technology detects whether section targeting will improve your results and implements automatically only if you'll earn more revenue.
That is, you don't have to monitor whether section targeting is working for you, as Google will do that for you and disable it, if you are losing from section targeting. That's pretty cool!
A reader of Besting AdWords asked.
I’ve just been reading your site. It is very helpful. I’ve developed a site [cut]. I get about 9K unique visitors a month. I have plans to build out the site even bigger by adding separate pages for each species of parrot but haven’t quite found the time to do it yet. I’ve been thinking of using Google Ads but someone told me to wait till I get my site fully built out to open an account with Google. However I did not get the reasoning behind it. My assumption was that the more pages I had Google ads on the better rate I got from Google on CPC. Is this correct or is there some other reason to not sign up till I am as big as I can be? Also I’m interested in your advice on how to use AdWords to help me generate revenue.
Addressing your question, I don't think there's a bad time to apply and start putting AdSense on your website. You'll likely make less than $100/month on 9K uniques, but it'll pay for hosting. More importantly, if you position your content to be the primary host in your webpages and place the Google ads in the right sidebar and at the bottom of the webpage, then you won't scare off users with ads while making a couple bucks. Further, CPC is not really a factor of unique visitors until you become a top 100 web publishers. That is, for the vast majority of us, the number of uniques, will never enter the equation. I'd encourage you to start experimenting immediately with AdSense.
As for AdWords, you can never really go wrong with AdWords. In your case, you have several ways of using AdWords-AdSense arbitrage to make a little money. For instance, you sell both birds and bird related products. At the moment you don't have any birds for sales, so let's focus on parrot related products. Place AdWords ads for your best selling products. Make certain the AdWords landing page is the webpage with the Add to Cart button. Bid 5 cents (CPC) and set your budget to $1/d. At $1/d, you can afford to experiment. Then track the conversions to determine if you are making any money. Don't be impatient, let it run for a week. If you are making money, then raise the budget and CPC. Don't be greedy and raise your budget or CPC too quickly. Further, remember that you are also gaining readers. Some AdWords clickers might click on your ad, not buy a product, but bookmark your website and return later. In other words, if you are breaking even on AdWords-AdSense arbitrage, then you are winning the game.
I add more content to the 10 Steps to Professional Blogging. The e-book is still weeks to months from complete, but you can follow along as I add more content. The last couple days, I added more content on Blogthings, RSS and leaving comments on other blogs. I've also got a couple friends who've said they will help write some content. If you want to contribute, then ping me or leave a comment.
Great news arrived today from the AdSense team, in response to my email query.
According to our program policies, FeedBurner FAN ads may be displayed on the same page as Google ads on your site.
Toivo Lainevool: Google’s AdSense has started to test CPA (Cost-Per-Action) ads.
I found YPN's showcasing with Jeremy Shoemaker pretty disturbing. Jeremy runs a Website called ShoeMoney.com which I recently found was spamming me. I sent Jeremy a reply indicating that spamming was against the AdSense terms. He replied "I guess its a good thing I dont use adsense anymore ;)". I noticed he had converted entirely to YPN. Anybody know the reason? Was he banned from AdSense for spamming? I replied back that Yahoo! doesn't permit spamming either, but haven't heard further. This last email was sent only yesterday and today he's highlighted by YPN. It's pretty disturbing to me that Yahoo! is showcasing a spammer, but it's entirely possible that they don't know he's a spammer, so I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. Please spread this blog entry, if only to educate Yahoo! about who they are dealing with.
Chitika Blog: Chitika introduces a new interactive eMiniMalls Multi Product Unit, allowing our publishers to show 4 products at once.
Randy: I'll have to try this. This might help the CPM of Chitika ads, which at present are too low to justify much usage.
Nikhil Achwal: Today we're launching the AdSense Calendar. You can use it to find our monthly payment schedule, a record of AdSense blog posts, future system maintenance periods, and upcoming events--all backdated to the beginning of April 2006. To subscribe to the calendar, simply follow these instructions.
http://adsense.blogspot.com/2006/06/make-date-with-adsense-calendar.html
Chris Sukornyk: I was recently having coffee with a local eco-friendly service and they expressed their frustration with the Google keyword system. It seemed that a competitor of theirs was purchasing advertisements using variations on their company name. As a result, their very competitors were profiting on the confusion about their name and the company was forced to try to out-bid their competitor. Despite many calls, Google would simply not respond to their inquiries.
I was very excited to receive the following email (excerpts only) from Jeremy Shoemaker.
Hello,
sorry to spam you ;)
No unsubscribe link and it was obviously an auto-mailer, as it didn't reference me by name or mention anything about me, my blogs or websites. Jeremy is an AdSense publisher and doesn't appear to be aware that SPAMming is against the AdSense terms and is a valid reason for Google to terminate your AdSense account. I've heard Jeremy makes some pretty serious coin via AdSense. You can't stop most SPAM, but I'm entirely sure that by CCing AdSense abuse on my reply, that Jeremy will think twice next time.
Besting AdWords reader shanX writes: I was wondering to step up into Adwords. Coz I've noticed traffic from Google gets more click throughs and earnings with Adsense than other sources. Coz I'm not sure whether Adwords would workout on content sites such as mine. I've no idea how to pay too. I need targeted traffic, who would go through Adwords > Content > Adsense. Would it be possible? And would Chithika eMinimalls would earn on sites like mine? Could I earn like Adsense with eMinimalls?
Randy: AdWords is always worth the trouble. As you point out, referrers from Google are more likely to click on your ads then your regular readers and user community. This is why AdWords arbitrage is so compelling. Let's say your average AdSense earnings per click is $1 and that 10% of your AdWords click-thrus convert into AdSense clicks. That means you could bid 10 cents per click and know that you are breaking even. But even better, some of those users will actually bookmark your website or subscribe to your RSS feed and return later for some more clicking action. Here's how to know if AdWords will work in an arbitrage situation. Multiply your AdSense earnings per clicks by your Google referrer conversion rate, if the result is greater than 1 cent, then you can make money. If you bid for AdWords less than this result, then you are making money and acquiring new users. Now, you wont necessarily get a lot of AdWords clicks bidding 1 cent, but you know that you're making money, so it's worth setting up the campaign and experimenting.
Chitika eMinimalls can work and has worked for me in the past, but the payouts of late are very small and I hardly think it's even worth the effort anymore. I still run some eMinimall ads, but I make an extremely small fraction of what I make on AdSense. Further, Chitika has screwed their publishers on more than one occasion and doesn't always pay on time.
Google has introduced a new feature to AdWords, called Dayparting, that allows advertisers to target particular days or times with their ads. I suspect many larger advertisers will retarget their ads to run during their prime business hours. For instance, sports website will likely enjoy better conversions in the minutes leading up to a live sports event and financial website will likely enjoy better conversions when the NYSE is open for business. This may in turn impact your AdSense earnings.
https://adwords.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=33227
You can now sell non-perishable groceries from Amazon.
Tracy: On your handy dandy step by step publication you've posted about how to make money blogging (at least the first parts you've put up), you mentioned using pingshot on feedburner. [cut] My question is why you choose the 5 additional services on pingshot (instead of the other 3). Is it just a matter of personal preference for you, or do those 5 simply outperform Tail Rank, Blog Buzz Machine, and RssFwd.
Randy: Tracy is referring to step 3 in the 10 steps to professional blogging e-book that I'm currently writing online. In this step, I select Feedster, IceRocket, Weblogs.com, Blogdigger and Syndic8 as 5 additional sources to ping when your RSS is updated. I left out Tail Rank, Blog Buzz Machine and RssFwd. I left them out because you can only pick 5 of the 8 options. My choice was based 100% on the amount of traffic that is referred to my site from these 8 websites. Tail Rank, Blog Buzz Machine and RssFwd send me next to zero traffic.
Maybe I should pause and re-examine using another index. How about Alexa ranking (a traffic ranking system)?
Same results again. BTW, Alexa is really getting slow these days. Last, Tracy sent me these questions in an email, which I asked her, if I could respond publicly. Thanks Tracy, I like questions that make me rethink my thunk.
Shhhh! Very shortly, I'll be testing the new FeedBurner ad network.
I have a friend who has a small Website at a local university. His webpages have never been indexed by Google, so nobody can find him. I showed him how to submit a sitemap to Google and get indexed. His sitemap has 5 webpages about the courses he teaches, with outlines and assignments. He successfully submitted the sitemap on the 7th and 5 days later, he's still out in the cold. The sitemap website indicates that the sitemap is validated and without error. Sitemap also indicates that it was retrieved countless times in the last 5 days and he remains completely unindexed. Further, he also submitted his site homepage elsewhere to Google. No luck! The Google indexer appears to be completely borked this last month.
It's been awhile since I wrote my last book, but I've become quite passionate about bloggers making money. I'm clearly no a-lister, yet I'm making very good money blogging (just ask my wife). A few weeks ago, I kinda got tired of the constant negativity around making money blogging. At BloggerCon IV there will be a session on how to make money blogging and they will tell you that unless you are an a-lister that you can't simply throw up AdSense and expect to make a living. My new book will attempt to dispell this lie. I've decided to make this a free e-book and I'm writing it online for all to criticize and help. Here's my first few paragraphs. Please post comments. If you leave feedback, your name and blog address, then I'll add you as a contributor. I'm looking for any kind of feedback; typos, errors in logic, suggestions. I'm even looking for co-authors. Once the e-book is complete, I'll present it to publishers. Another great experiment begins.
Somebody had a good month. They thought it was Darren Rowse, but Darren admitted it wasn't him.
Kristian Fiskerstrand sent me a link to this blog entry showing a combined ad unit. It's both a regular ad unit and ad link unit. I've never seen this myself, but I've heard them reported in quite a few forums.
http://www.kristianfiskerstrand.com/2006/06/10/google-adsense-and-combined-ad-units/
This is my first podcast on the Besting AdWords blog and is meant primarily as a motivation speach. Listen and realize, I'm an idiot and you can be an idiot like me that makes money on the Web.
John Palfrey: Dave Winer has kindly (or, well, maybe…) offered me the chance to be the discussion leader for the “How to Make Money” session at Bloggercon IV. [cut] One obvious answer is the classic approach of throwing BlogAds or Google ads or whathaveyou ads on your blog. That works for some people, but it generates more than beer money only for a select few at the left-hand side of that famous power law distribution.
Randy: Weird! I'm not part of the select few at the left-hand side and I'm making money.
I've been waiting to write this story for a few months. It's about a company that is making the biggest of all AdWords mistake. But, not only are they making this mistake, they know they are making it and they continue to make it. Let me explain and I'll start by showing you the steps to follow what I'm talking about.
A user clicking on this ad will be presented with the following text (abbreviated).
The page cannot be found
The page you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable.
Now, here's where the story gets interesting. I first noticed this months ago. I couldn't tell you how many, but let's say 3-6 months, I simply don't remember. I fired off an email to a contact at Pluck and didn't really think twice about it. A few months pass and I happen to click their ad again and again it's 404. This time, I forward an email to Pluck, which they respond to saying they cannot replicate the error. I asked a few friends over IM and they were able to easily reproduce the problem. Eventually, after a bit of back and forth over email (including with a VP at Pluck), I had to create a screen capture of the error to prove to them they had this problem. Of course, their email gateway ate the attachment and I had to resent the video embedded in a zip file. Finally, they admit to the problem, indicate they are gonna fix it and thank me for taking the time. They never fixed it, but rather they patched it. They redirected all 404 errors to a more friendly webpage. And a few weeks later, the 404 redirect disappeared and the ad clicks again started going to the ugly plain Jane 404 webpage. I sent them a final, laughing, email about the issue remaining unresolved and decided to write this little blog entry.
Pluck has over a long period of time maintained a rather high position in the paid listings for the RSS keyword. From that, I can only image that they are paying somewhere between $1 and $5 per click, but I'm just guessing. They also seem to always be in the paid listings, which indicate also they are likely getting 100s, if not 1000s of clicks per day. I'm gonna make a wild estimate that they are wasting $100 to $1000 per day or $35k to $350k per year.
The mistake they are making is not testing their ads. If you use AdWords, then test your ads. You don't even have to pay to test them. You simply have to login to AdWords and click the previews of your ads. But even worse, they've known about this problem for weeks, if not months and have never fixed it or at least paused their campaigns. This is what I call a toilet bowl. It's where VCs go to flush investor money. Don't be dumb like Pluck.
Here is an all-too-familiar story about an AdSense publisher who's earnings are rapidly falling.
I am perplexed. I have Adsense Ads & Google Search on 5 websites The ads on each site are coded as channels so I can better track results. Discovercircuits gets by far the lions share of traffic. From October- December of 2005 I made what I considered to be a good income, but every month in 2006 my revenue continues to drop. Nothing has changed. Traffic & click thru's are about the same. But the revenue is now HALF of what is was in December. What is going on?
I reformatted the article slightly to make it more readable, but you can read the original at the following URL.
http://groups.google.com/group/adsense-help-earnings/msg/6b6f943b5852c929
If you take a look at the sites above, they are extremely low quality and contain little real content, mostly links from what I could tell. This type of site will generate low quality AdSense clicks, which should translate to lower conversions for the advertiser (but not always) and according to smart pricing, this will cause your AdSense earnings to decline. As you can see, this is exactly what's happening. This guy likely made some good money, in the good old days, prior to smart pricing.
JenSense: However, a couple of Chitika ad units caught my eye due to their very adult nature, complete with images.
http://www.jensense.com/archives/2006/06/chitika_running.html
Randy: The ads in question, shown below, are definately adult, but I didn't find them all that bad. You likely don't want them on a kids site, but they're no worse than what you'd find on many MySpace profiles. Chitika has already blocked the ads.
Today, I came across this free sitemap generator. The free version is limited to 500 webpages and $15 for an unlimited version. Very nice!
Mark Cuban: This is why I think clickfraud FAR exceeds what is being published by search companies.
http://www.blogmaverick.com/entry/1234000257073723/
Randy: Start by reading Mark's entire blog entry, which is well written.
I think Mark under-estimates just how much effort Google is piling into preventing click-fraud. If Mark can think of ways hackers can make money with click-fraud, then surely the specialists at Google can think of ways to prevent it. No matter what, there'll always be an element of click fraud in CPC advertising, but you'll be amazed how many AdSense accounts Google is terminating each and every day.
He compares click-fraud to splogs. But who is trying to stop splogs? Nobody really, because no-one actually owns the blogosphere or is willing to put any dollars behind an initiative to stop it. So, associating the growth of splogs and click-fraud doesn't hold water. Google is trying to stop click-fraud and nobody is really trying to stop splogging. So, splogs are growing leaps and bounds because it works. Click-fraud isn't because Google is actually terminating the AdSense accounts of fraudsters. Note that Google doesn't terminate the Blogger or AdSense accounts of sploggers.
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