Showing posts with label use. Show all posts
Showing posts with label use. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2011

3 Reasons NOT to use Adsense

Even though Adsense (and Adsense residuals) are the rage of the internet right now among the blogging and black hat SEO types, there are some very good reasons why people should NOT use Adsense on their blogs or sites. Below, I list the three main reasons why using Adsense to make money on a blog is probably not a good idea.

1. Small blogs/sites can't make any money with it: If you have a small blog or website (say one the brings in a few hundred visitors or less per day), you are probably not going to make any money using Adsense. First off, the click through rates per visitor (the number of times a person visiting your site clicks an ad) are generally quite small and the amount of money you get per click is usually less than a dollar. Combined with the 100$ payout threshold for you to get your checks and a propensity for Adsense to declare some (or many) of your clicks invalid, it can take months before you see your first check.

Use instead: I would personally use something like MyLikes or a PayPal donation button instead, especially if I only cared about making a few bucks per month. The payout threshold on MyLikes is a couple of bucks, and the pay per click is usually in the 0.20$ -0.50$ range -- probably good enough to get token amounts every month.

2. Big sites don't need it: As for big blogs and websites, most of them can do much better than Adsense. If you have a large site (thousands of visitors per day), Adsense is not a good alternative unless you really don't have the time to find anything better. Most of the ads that pop up on Adsense tend to be not well targeted to your specific niche, and the payouts and pay-per-click rates are below what you could negotiate with a private party.

Use instead: With a large site, it's much better to sell space on your site to specific advertisers. It takes a lot more work, but it's also probably much cheaper and more cost effective than just throwing your ads out shotgun style, like you would with Adsense.

3. Lazy advertising: Advertisers also should probably not use Adsense because, in most cases, it's just lazy advertising on their parts. Think about it: if you're going to spend thousands of dollars on an advertising campaign for your product, wouldn't you much rather have control over where your ads show up instead of leaving it to a third party that doesn't care if your business exists in two years?

Use instead: In most cases, it is better for advertisers that are serious about getting their name out to negotiate directly with websites/blogs that match their niche. Often, the resulting ads are much more targeted and productive than Adsense ads.

So, even though Adsense may be a good tool in some limited cases, it's also a good idea to avoid it in others.

Leave your thoughts on Google Adsense below.
The AdSense Code: What Google Never Told You about Making Money with Adsense

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Banned Commercial - Condoms

This has several million views on Youtube, so I guess that a lot of you have probably seen it. However, it's still a funny commercial. Just remember: use condoms, or this could happen to you.







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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Social Networks and Blog Promotion: Which Ones Work and Which Don't

19450025Image by jerandsar via Flickr
I have been using social networks now for about a year or so, and I have learned a lot of things: what works and what doesn't. Being that it's 2:30am here and I can't fall asleep, I've decided to share my secrets with you, my esteemed readers.
Here are the networks that work well to attract traffic, in the approximate order of how many followers they attract. Also, a small explanation of why the work (or not) is included to the side.
1. Twitter: In my opinion, Twitter is the "gold standard" when it comes to attracting traffic to your website. In general, I count on a minimum of about 1 viewer per 1,000 followers per day, assuming that I update regularly. If you have more engaged followers than I do, you'll probably have more hits from them too. In any case, Twitter is a godsend for blogging. I actually get about 33-50% of all my daily traffic from Twitter, and I only have about 20,000 followers.
2. Facebook: The Facebook account that I have associated with my blog is relatively newer, but I'm still seeing good results from the initial trials. With only about 200 friends, I'm seeing about 2 hits per day originating from Facebook -- results even better than Twitter per capita. Of course, if you have friends and family on your blog Facebook page (as opposed to strangers), I would expect that you would see higher traffic from this. However, Facebook is still below Twitter in my estimation because it's much harder to add new followers -- meaning that even a lower rate of click through from Twitter will win in the end through sheer volume.
3. Digg/Reddit: It depends on which "camp" you're in here (team werewolf vs. team vampire guy anyone?) but both services are marginally successful in driving traffic to a blog. Both have problems, however. In the case of Reddit, they like to block users who submit a lot of articles to Reddit from a blog, and they are difficult to deal with in general. Also, the interface sucks rocks. For Digg, they have a much cleaner interface and are much more lenient on submission, but they send a lot less traffic to a blog per article submitted. I guess which one (or preferably both) of these sites you use depends on your approach to blogging. More articles -- Digg is better. Fewer, higher quality articles -- use Reddit.
4. Myspace: In theory, this dying giant of a social network site should send lots of hits to my blog -- in theory. In practice, my 1,000 plus followers have generated very few hits for my blog -- probably because many of them no longer use the service.
5. Stumbleupon: I have blogger friends that swear by this, but I've never seen a large number of hits coming from that site. For each article I submit, I can usually expect a maximum of five hits to my blog from that site, I think that the problem here is that they receive such a high volume of article submissions that most of your articles are never "stumbled upon" by the site's bots.
In summary, all social networks are good to some extent to drive traffic to your blog, but some are better than others.
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