9
Tricks I Used To Triple My AdSense Earnings In your blog or youtube
Hello
gys welcome back to my blog
now my blog will shared information about earning adsense
now my blog will shared information about earning adsense
I
have been using Google AdSense to monetize my blogs and websites for as long as
I remember. In fact it was the first method I ever tried (I made a whooping $15
on my first month… back in 2005). Over the years I migrated to other methods
(e.g., direct sponsors and affiliate marketing), which made AdSense become
merely an inventory filler. I was still making around $1,000 monthly from it,
but whenever I could I would use other methods over it.
Then
some months ago I started noticing an upward trend on the CPC of my sites, and
I figured that I should give AdSense another try. I started applying some
tricks here and there, and the next month I made over $3,000 with it (that is
combining all my sites). I was pleasantly surprised, and I decided to keep
using it actively on some sites.
In
this article I want to share with you the tips and tricks I used to triple my
AdSense earnings in one month.
1.
I added units to my Big Websites
Daily
Blog Tips and Daily Writing Tips are my largest websites in terms of traffic. They
are getting close to one million monthly page views (combined). Despite that I
was not using AdSense on them, mainly because the direct sponsorship model was
working relatively well.
Some
months ago I decided to load some AdSense units on the sites, however, and the
results were very positive. Around 70% of the boost I generated to my earnings
came from these two sites. At the same time I managed to keep the other
monetization methods working fine, and no reader ever complained about the new
ads (more on that later).
Even
if your blog is already making money with direct sponsors and affiliate
marketing, therefore, you could still manage to increment your earnings by
strategically adding some AdSense units.
2.
I added units to my Small Websites
As
many webmasters do, I have a bunch of small websites scattered around the web.
Some are on free hosted platforms like Blogger, and others are self hosted
sites that I abandoned along the way. Most of these sites still get traffic,
however. Not much, but combined the numbers get decent.
I
figured that adding AdSense units to all these sites could yield some money,
and I was right. The main reason is that, since these are abandoned sites and
don’t have loyal visitors, I can place the units very aggressively. The result
was a very high CTR (Click-through rate), which compensates the small traffic
levels.
Don’t
underestimate the earning potential of small websites, especially if you are
willing to place AdSense units aggressively.
3.
I used the Large Units
If
you want to make money with AdSense you’ll inevitably need to use one of these
units: the 336×280 large rectangle, the 300×250 rectangle, the 120×600 large
skyscraper or the 728×90 leaderboard.
Whenever
I tried to use smaller units the results were disappointing. Even if I
positioned them aggressively the CTR was just too low.
All
four units mentioned above can produce good results, but the best performing
one is by far the 336×280 large rectangle, and that is the one I used to boost
my earnings.
4.
I placed the Units above the Fold
My
first trial was to place the 336×280 large rectangle between the post and the
comments section of my blogs. The results were OK. I then decided to try
placing them below the post titles for one week, and the CTR skyrocketed. In
fact I still need to find a placement/unit combination that will beat placing a
336×280 unit below post titles.
I
knew this rule, but I guess I needed to test and get confirmation. The rule is:
if you want to make money with Google AdSense, you must place your units above
the fold.
5.
I Focused on Organic Traffic
My
main concern with adding a large AdSense unit right below my post titles was
that some of the loyal readers could get annoyed with it. At the same time I
knew that loyal readers become ad blind quite fast, and that the bulk of my
money would come from organic visitors (i.e., people coming via search engines
to my posts).
To
solve this problem I decided to display the large rectangle only on posts older
than seven days (using the Why Do WorkWordPress plugin). It worked like a
charm, as loyal readers don’t even notice the ad units when they are browsing
through my recent posts, and organic visitors almost always see the ads because
they usually land on posts older than seven days.
6.
I started using AdSense for Search
I
was not sure how much money I would be able to make with AdSense for Search,
but I was not happy with the search results provided by WordPress, so I decided
to give it a shot anyway.
Currently
I am making around $60 monthly with AdSense for Search. It is not much, but if
you sum it over one year we are talking about $720. On top of that the search
results are as relevant as you’ll get, so it is a win win situation.
7.
I started using AdSense for Feeds
Another
AdSense product I decided to try was the AdSense for Feeds one. I opted to
display the ads below my feed items (you can also place them on top, but this
would be too intrusive in my opinion). The results here were pretty good, both
in terms of CTR and earnings.
You
obviously need a large RSS subscriber base to make this work, but I am guessing
that even with a couple thousand subscribers you could already make $100
monthly from feed ads.
8.
I played around with section targeting
Section
targeting is an AdSense feature that allows you to suggest specific sections of
your site that should be used when matching ads. You can read more about it
here.
I
found that on niche and small websites section targeting can help a lot. Often
times Google was displaying unrelated ads on these sites because there weren’t
enough pages. After using section targeting I managed to increase the relevancy
of the ads and consequently the CTRs.
9.
I tested with Different Colors and Fonts
If
you enabled both image and text ads on your units you should be able to
customize the colors and fonts. I did some testing with both of these factors,
and it helped to increase the numbers. Nothing dramatic, but it was definitely
worth my time.
You
just need to track your CTR for a couple of weeks. Then change the color or
font and track it for another week, seeing if you can beat the original CTR. If
you can, keep the new format. If you the performance decreased, try a new color
or font and track the CTR for another week, until you find the optimal
combination.
in the succsess...
your blog with adsense your ,your a work hard in everything ,
in the succsess...
your blog with adsense your ,your a work hard in everything ,
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