Top 10 AdSense Tricks To Boost Your Commission
By Sheila on Nov 17, 2009 in Blogging Tips
A lot of people try to make money with google adsense. They sign up, get the code, put it on their website, sit back and wait for the cash to start rolling in . . . . .wait . . . . . what’s going on, I’ve only made a penny today, what am I doing wrong?
Is this you? I got a great email with some awesome tips to help you really earn with adsense.
Google AdSense – http://www.google.com/adsense – is fast becoming the preferred way for people to earn an income online. Forget eBay and multiple affiliate programs. Whether you are a work-at-home mom trying to make a little extra cash or an Internet entrepreneur with hundreds of monetized websites, AdSense is truly the easiest way to earn money.
Simply sign up for a free account, grab your ad code and paste it in your site. But here’s the amazing thing – no matter how much money AdSense is making for you right now, a few simple tweaks can increase that amount considerably. And I should know, after learning about these tricks, I more than doubled my AdSense commissions!
The self-proclaimed AdSense gurus and experts are sharing this insider knowledge, for a fee.
You can learn all these secrets from them, as long as you buy their e-book, sign up for their seminar or purchase their newsletter. But I’m going to share all their AdSense tricks for free. Here they are:
1) Color code your ads to match your web site palette *exactly*. Don’t use frames around your ads. Instead, in the AdSense code generation interface, make sure you choose the same color as your page background for the ad frame and the ad background.
When choosing the ad heading colors, match them to the *exact* color of your page headings. Use the exact same ad background shade as your page background. Use the exact same ad text font and color as the text on your pages. You can see an example of this color-matching on my Search Engine Advice Blog at – http://www.searchenginecollege.com/blog.htm – notice the 4 link ad unit at the top and the skyscraper text ad unit on the left hand side under the heading Ads by Google as you scroll down the page? The link and text colors are identical to the color palette used throughout the rest of the page.
Near enough is NOT good enough. If you can’t quite get the color matching right, use Google’s built in color palette together with the RGB to HEX or vice versa color converter on this page – http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Guide/Style. That handy little tool was a life saver for me.
This is probably the one single tweak that made the most difference to my commission levels.
2) Try not to use the traditional horizontal banner style or leaderboard image ads because people are blind to them.
3) Use Google’s own AdSense optimization tips at https://www.google.com/support/adsense/bin/static.py?page=tips.html and visual heat map to assist you in deciding where on your page to place your AdSense ad code.
4) Research competitive keywords using a keyword research tool such as Keyword Discovery at http://www.keyworddiscovery.com/ or grab a list of the most popular keywords from various sources and use them in your web site pages where relevant. This article – http://searchenginewatch.com/facts/article.php/2156041 – is a good source of frequently searched keywords. Targeting popular keywords should trigger AdSense ads on your pages that utilize those keywords. The more popular the keyword or phrase, the higher AdWords advertisers are generally willing to pay per click for it so the higher your commission on those clicks.
5) Incorporate the AdSense code into your page so that the ads look like a regular part of your site. You can see an example on this Internet Dating Stories site – http://www.lovestory.com.au/ – where link ads are incorporated within the regular left hand navigation of the site under the heading “Feature Links”.
6) Use Google’s new 4 and 5 link ad units wherever possible. They seem to have a much higher Click Through Rate (CTR) than regular ad styles. You can view all the AdSense ad formats at https://www.google.com/adsense/adformats.
7) Place arrows or images next to your ads to draw attention to them. You can see two different versions of on this search engine article library page – http://www.searchenginecollege.com/articles/article-library.htm – at the top (where a pointing hand directs your eye to the ad) and the bottom where 3 images draw your attention to each of the three AdSense ads.
Use the full allowance of multiple AdSense ads on each of your pages – 3 regular AdSense ads, plus 1 link unit. Use careful placement of these ads so they blend into your site and don’t distract from your content. Clever use of this allowance can be seen on this page about bad Internet dating stories – http://www.lovestory.com.au/bad-stories.htm – where you see:
- 1 horizontal 4 link ad unit towards the top of the page under the first paragraph.
- 1 vertical skyscraper text ad unit about halfway down the left hand side under “Sponsor Links”.
- 1 vertical skyscraper image ad unit down the left hand side under “Sponsor Links”.
- 1 horizontal text banner unit at the bottom of the page with images above each ad to draw attention to them.
You can also include 1 AdSense referral button in addition to the 3 other units.
9) Tailor your page content to a particular niche or focus. Page content that is tailored towards a specific theme is more likely to trigger AdWords ads that closely match the content and are therefore more likely to interest your visitors and inspire them to click.
Don’t create pages merely for the sake of placing AdSense ads. Visitors (and search engines) can see through this ruse in an instant.
10) Use custom Ad Channels for each of your ad placements, for example, “Top 5 Link Unit Blue Palette” or “Left Side Navigation Image Skyscraper” etc. Tweak, track and measure the success of each of these custom channels so you know what gives you the highest CTR. Some ad formats and colors will work better than others, but you won’t know which until you test, test and test some more!
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16 Comment(s)
By Walt Webb on Nov 17, 2009 | Reply
A very informative article. Thanks for the adsense tips. I will try them although I do write sports content.
Walt AKA All Sports on the Web
By chicky401 on Nov 19, 2009 | Reply
These are great tips, especially for newbies. Seasoned adsense publishers can learn a lot from these tips as well, thank you for sharing.
Have a great day
By turisuna on Nov 21, 2009 | Reply
This year my adsense revenue decreases drastically, I don’t know why, but maybe because the visitors already know if it’s an advertisement.
By Mikes Sumondong on Nov 22, 2009 | Reply
Great Tips!
Everything was everything I need!
Thanks AdMaster!
By sandy on Nov 22, 2009 | Reply
I had the text/link type ads, switched away from them after getting next to nothing from them, and after reading in multiple locations they produced less. It is trial and error, but mostly I think it’s blink luck. The topical of the blog has a great deal to do with it also. Example, my SIL who’s been blogging a very short period of time compared to me, does very little on her blog with graphics, gadgets etc, has a blog about writing. Her ads, pay much more than my ads on travel. I have more visitors consistently than she does, I often have double the clicks; but she makes more because her ads simply pay more. I get more return visitors, while she get’s mofre single or unique visits. She get’s wanna be writers, who are more inclinded to follow through on the ads, then someone who wants to pick a vacation destination. She also go more clicks when changed her ads to be a different color than her blog so they stand out. I’ve read, as you’ve suggested making the color the same so it looks like a part of your page; and I’ve read if you want them to click on it, they need to see it so make it different. I’ve done both; and can’t see any difference…though on her blog, changing the color made a big improvement.
All of this is frustrating, because if you really try to make sense from it, and learn from it you end up scratching your head.
Would you hop over and take a look, would love your opinion.
Thanks
Sandy
By sandy on Nov 22, 2009 | Reply
wow, sorry for the typos, need coffee to wake up before typing.
sandy
By Rob on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply
Yeah, that’s me…. adsense ads with about $.25 in revenue so far. I’m going to try to apply some of these tips. Thanks.
By Andy Fling on Nov 26, 2009 | Reply
Nice post! There are many AdSense units to choose from, though no unit seems to outperform the medium rectangle. The best place for it is right below the title before the content begins.
After you get the ad placement right, work on driving traffic. I currently have over 300 videos on YouTube.com, and 300 blog posts running for one of my websites. Today, at less then 2 years old, it welcomes over 150,000 visitors each month, and is making $1,800 per month.
By Wong Cerbon on Dec 1, 2009 | Reply
it’s nice share..
By KC on Dec 2, 2009 | Reply
I like this too! Thank you so much for sharing,,,,
By kolorowanki on Dec 5, 2009 | Reply
nice:)thanks a lot for this information! it is very useful, Your blog Sheila is one of the most wonderful places to visit.
By burn on Dec 12, 2009 | Reply
nice info. This is really helpful one. Do you have an idea how could I place an adsense every post?
By Jason Tipp on Dec 14, 2009 | Reply
I’m not very experienced in AdSense, thanks for the tips, I’m sure they gonna be useful. Anyway it is nice to see that someone is trying to help other people without looking for benefits from this help. Thanks for the post.
By BizriL on Dec 17, 2009 | Reply
Thanks a lot Sheila, it’s all very usefull for me, i like this lovely blog
By SLM on Dec 19, 2009 | Reply
Tried all kinds of tricks. I will try them all again.
By gry dla dzieci małych on Jan 2, 2010 | Reply
Sheila next wonderfull article, thanks for sharing this useful tricks with AdSense.