Google Updates AdSense Rules, Still Working on Radio 66
Photocritic writes "The practice of placing images above or next to adsense banners has been around for a while — the idea is to trick visitors into thinking that the Googe Ads are clickable image captions. Unsuspecting visitors click on the ads, and the webmasters make money. Now, Google has officially announced that the practice is no longer allowed. Meanwhile, the Marketwatch site is reporting that the company's previously discussed move into radio advertising is getting a mediocre reaction. Google, as yet, does not have enough access to airtime for the project to be profitable. The company plans on purchasing more airtime to expand the program, and is reportedly also looking to begin selling television ads as well." From the article: "Until Google can strike a deal with CBS, or some other radio giant, 'there will be no significant impact until mid-2007' on Google's bottom line, or the radio industry in general, [analyst Jordan] Rohan said in his research note. 'We believe a critical mass of advertisers is interested in testing the platform,' Rohan said, based on his interviews with his own sources. 'However, there is simply not enough radio inventory in the Google Audio system (yet) to enable buyers to run campaigns.'"
Adsense makes me a ton of money (Score:3, Insightful)
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Good idea, but... (Score:1)
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one advertiser call me directly and told me that my visitors that I have sent convert 50% of the time and that he was going to become a long term advertiser on my site. ( his ad's shows up on my site just about every day on the top).
my sit
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I both place ads (for my photographic services) and run them on my web site. I've been happy with the results I've gotten from running my own ads, and haven't had false click-throughs as an advertiser. (I have seen something like that once as a publisher, which I reported back to Google, etc.)
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> and $1.00 (average) per click, it wasn't worth it in the long run.
Two things here.
1. If 40 people visit your site and only 1 person signs up, then your ads were probably too generic or not relevant. If your ad claims 'free pictures of Britany' and then links to a porn signup page, well.. no surprise that people don't sign up.
2. If the ad was relevant, but your conversion rate is low (40 to 1), then you should lower the price pai
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Re:Good idea, but... (Score:4, Informative)
AdWords is for advertisers, AdSense is for webmasters. As an advertiser, you have the option of only paying for Google search traffic (plus optionally partner search like AOL). If you don't like AdSense traffic at all, disable it for your campaigns. AdWords now allows you to block poor converting AdSense domains through the web interface.
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You're right though, if you're fighting for space with established players, it's a tough game.
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When we turned it off, guess what? It turned itself back on. Of course, we had no explicit record to demonstrate this to google, and they had no records of their own. It cost us several thousand dollars in fees to google.
We now take screen shots of every single interaction with google's adword/adsense control system.
Overall, however, we are findin
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Google tracks all changes made to your account. See Campaign Management -> Tools -> My Change History. I just changed a test campaign from content network to Google search only and it shows in the history:
Opted out of content network
Opted into Google
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Was it click-fraud or was it a poorly optimised site?
I'm not saying you're wrong, it might well have been a click fraud problem, but lots of people clicking through then leaving is not an uncommon problem for any advertising, not just on Googles network. People are impatient and busy, they have many things to do, which is why Google now focusses on landing page quality as an interesting thing to measure. Really improving the landing page for an advert can make a dramatic difference to the conversion rate.
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it takes about 3 months to get it right, but when you do, you get quality advertisers and your revenue stream should increase.
Mike
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Maybe it was time to think whether it is really fraud, or whether anyone is really compelled to stay on your site for more than 2 secs after entering.
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Um, yes. Exactly.
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With other policies Google has, I'm told, been pretty direct about closing down publishers when their sites seem to be the source of fraudulent clicks. I'm OK with that, although it's a bit intimidating, I make a decent amount of money off of AdSense right now (legitimately, I believe), and I'd like that to continue, but then, I'm not trying to scam them, either, I've been happy with both AdSense and with buying ads on their system (for my photographic services as well as fo
Running on empty? (Score:5, Funny)
Got it started, but then ran out of G.A.S.? <grin>
Is it worth it? (Score:2)
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I believe that such services are subscription based (i.e. no ads) so there isn't any room for Google to come in.
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Not really. Satellite radio gets its programming from two sources - in house, and 3rd party. In house stuff is supposed to remain commercial free. It's the 3rd party stuff that carries ads, because the 3rd party supplies them. Clear Channel, for example, supplies content for several XM channels. They were initially commercial free, but then CC decided to put ads on. XM scrambled to setup new channels t
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And regular radio isn't? (Score:2)
And regular radio stations aren't "geared" toward a particular demographic? C'mon, kid: almost all modern media, including SlashDot is directed at a particular audience/demographic.
(As a Google AdWord subscriber, I can also tell you one thing Google currently does a very poor job of now is targeting particular d
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Perhaps, but given the wide number of radio station formats with solid demographic ranges, and also given that people do still listen to the radio quite a bit despite the advance of technology (else why would there be satellite radio?), Google's making a smart move in trying to wedge its way in. After all, there is an untapped market for them -- the casual computer user. Someone who may use one at an Internet cafe or library for browsing, or has a computer at home but rarely uses it for more than email or t
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Coming Soon (Score:4, Funny)
Similar policies exist, or do they? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, unless I have misunderstood the policy completely, here Google prohibits content from mimicking the ad too closely. Do we have any thing like that in the print world? Time Mag specifically making its article look like an ad?
Does it mean that someday TiVo would ban TV shows from inserting fake ads to fool its ad-skipper? Nah, TiVo has already sold out to the corps. MythTV does not have the clout.
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In this case, it's the PUBLISHER trying to trick the consumer. The advertiser is the one who is really tricked though, because they ultimately pay for the click.
I wonder what will happen to share price... (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, I wonder why Google doesn't just hand this "challenge" to its gaggle of geeks and say, "no deadline, no pressure, and you can call it beta if you're afraid to stand behind it."
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And for those who are interested, Yahoo is 412th despite sooo many fingers in sooo many pies. Ditto for eBay at 458th. Microsoft is 48th, not 666th as many
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That's somewhat apples-and-oranges. Google isn't a media company - its an ad agency. Time-Warner and the other big media companies are content creators and providers - niether of which Google does.
How broadly is "unacceptable" defined? (Score:1)
I happen to run a fairly popular online comic site and use AdSense ads to supplement some of our existing advertising. What I want to know is just how broad their definition of "unacceptable implementations" is. The common practice that I and many other online cartoonists tend to use is to place images above or near the ads to actually draw attention to them, hoping our readers will click on them. The images tend to be eye-catching and related directly to the comic; i.e., the images on my site are of one my
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If you images were actually there for a reason, like clickable thumbnails of other comics, then, that would be a different story.
Since this practice is so wide spread, I think they'll only slowly act. They probably will only go after the people putting the images next to the ads first. How
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Not sure what to make of this news. I was quite happy earning the extra money, but I'd rather not have my account switched off.
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Adsense vs Bidvertiser (Score:1)
here here [blogspot.com]
Up next (Score:1)