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Archive for March, 2008

The AdWords Death Dance

March 11th, 2008

As you know, I’ve been experimenting lately with sending traffic to sites via AdWords. If you’ve tried this before, you know it’s tricky to do, because it’s easy to fall into the “AdWords Death Dance”.

The AdWords Death Dance is an upwards spiral in ad costs that is triggered primarily by ads with low clickthrough ratios (CTRs). The CTR of an ad is perhaps the most important thing about it, because Google rewards high CTR ads with higher ad positions and lower ad costs. Even if you have a great, relevant landing page, a poor CTR will push you into the death dance and turn your AdWords campaign into a money-sucking black hole.

Most AdWords advertisers spend a lot of time choosing the keywords they’ll target. But that’s a mistake. Spend most of your time on the ad text. If you can’t make an ad that people will click, you’ll find that after about 100 ad impressions your minimum bid prices will start to increase — even though you’ve done nothing to change the situation. I haven’t quite figured out what the CTR threshold is, but certainly anything below a 1% CTR is a fast push into the death dance.

After you’ve got the perfect ad text, deliberately overbid when you first activate your campaign. Compelling ad text is absolutely necessary, but you also need to get the ad up where people will see it. You have to bite the bullet and overpay in order to get high initial ad positions. Then when the ads are clicked and you have a reasonable CTR you can start ratcheting the price down to something more reasonable. Your ad should stay in relatively the same position if you do it slowly and the ad maintains a high CTR.

All of this takes time and (perhaps most importantly) money. You’ve got to approach it seriously. Don’t do the AdWords death dance!

[Note that everything I just said applies to ads on the search network. Ads on the content network aren't treated in the same way because of the sheer number of content sites out there. Which is good, because you can get cheaper traffic that way. But it doesn't seem to convert as well, either, so you need more traffic. A high CTR is still important here.]

Sponsored Link: PLRSiteBuilder is an easy way to create and maintain content-rich websites written by yours truly. Try it today!

Eric Giguere is the author of several printed books and knows a thing or two about content monetization. Subscribe to his AdSense blog today and never miss any of his insightful comments. And the not-so-insightful ones, for that matter.

OPAD Challenge Now Closed

March 11th, 2008

Yesterday was the last day for our One Page A Day challengers to get their last entries in for the contest. Overall, I think it was a great success for the participants, although it was a washout for me. But anyhow, I’ll be tallying the entries and announcing the winners in a few days, as soon as I find an hour to go through everything. Thanks for participating everyone! All the challengers who succeeded will get a free copy of Uncommon AdSense and a nice summary post (with some good backlinks) describing what they did.

Sponsored Link: PLRSiteBuilder is an easy way to create and maintain content-rich websites written by yours truly. Try it today!

Eric Giguere is the author of several printed books and knows a thing or two about content monetization. Subscribe to his AdSense blog today and never miss any of his insightful comments. And the not-so-insightful ones, for that matter.

New AdSense-Friendly Privacy Policy Plugin For WordPress

March 5th, 2008

Yesterday I wrote about how Google is requiring AdSense publishers to display a privacy policy on their sites. If you’re a WordPress user, I’ve made the job a bit easier for you with my new Privacy Policy Plugin for WordPress, which you can install for free on any or all of your WordPress blogs. It generates AdSense-compliant privacy policies like this one, even creating the page for you if that’s what you want. You can also use it with non-AdSense blogs, as the privacy policy is fairly generic.

If there’s interest, I’ll add more options to this plugin to make it more flexible. Please leave a comment on the plugin download page with your requests and I’ll be happy to oblige.

Spread the Word!

If you think this plugin is useful, I’d love to see you help me spread the word about it. Feel free to vote for it:

And, of course, be sure to bookmark it with del.icio.us and your other favorite bookmarking services.

P.S.: Don’t forget to check out my SEO Siloing plugin as well.

Sponsored Link: PLRSiteBuilder is an easy way to create and maintain content-rich websites written by yours truly. Try it today!

Eric Giguere is the author of several printed books and knows a thing or two about content monetization. Subscribe to his AdSense blog today and never miss any of his insightful comments. And the not-so-insightful ones, for that matter.