Adsense
is giving away $100 bills, Dont Accept Them
by
Mark Wallace
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I
had heard so many times about the google Adsense Program that
I decided a couple of months ago to make the step and sign
up for a google adsense account. I told myself, Its
free, easy to install so what is the worst thing that can
happen to me? That I will be wasting my time? Well for little
or no effort I was ready to make the step
If
this google adsense program was going to reduce my website
costs or even pay for all the costs I was already more than
happy. The site already had what was needed to make the money:
visitors interested in learning more about the topics of my
site.
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Since
the begninning of November 2005 Google Adsense has been giving away
$100 per referral. Heres why you should turn that money down and
concentrate on the big bucks instead.
Background to Adsense:
The Google Adsense contextual advertising program has been making
waves ever since it started some three years ago. It offered the
easiest way ever for webmasters to convert their traffic to cash;
they simply signed up for the program, copied some javascript code
from Google, pasted it into their pages and the Google machine generated
a check for them at the end of each month. There was no competitor
to the Google Adsense program. That, combined with the simplicity
of the system, quickly acquired Google a frighteningly large number
of sign-ups. Quite how large their "publisher" base is can be gauged
by a cursory glance at a few sites you normally go to. Any sites.
Thats right - many of them have Adsense ads.
The Adsense ad is ubiquitous, its cleverly designed to blend into
some sites to look like content (and who hasnt accidentally clicked
one of those?), and it doesnt look like what youre conditioned to
think is advertising. Its not a banner, its not animated, and surfers
didnt have to resist their ad-hate to click on them. So they got
clicks.
Where is Adsense now?
Adsense is a victim of its own success. Almost every regular internet
user now knows what an Adsense ad looks like and, if they have a
natural reluctance to click ads, they avoid them. Further, having
so many publishers means that the available ad inventory is getting
spread thinner and thinner and publishers are noticing the ad relevance
dropping and CTRs being affected. Google, however, cant sit still.
They have to innovate and improve and move to larger volumes and
larger profits. And for that they need more publishers and advertisers.
Hence the referral program.
It
works like this: You recommend someone try the Adsense program and
if they make $100 out of it Google will pay them the $100 and match
it with a $100 payment to you. Sounds like a good deal. What have
you got to lose by sending Google new publishers and getting a free
$100 bill?
I
still say: Turn it down. Ill elaborate in a minute.
Whats
the other reason Googles paying commission?
Getting new advertisers and new publishers is not something that
has suddenly become useful, has it? Throughout its history Adsense
had a vested interest in building the publisher base. Why pay money
for it now when they didnt for so many years? I think I have the
answer: Its because theres serious competition now. The thinking
has got to be along the lines of ... when we were a "monopoly" we
were the only game in town and could afford to let publishers find
us. Now that theres competition we need to make a little more effort
to keep up the growth.
Which is all very well but the sharper ones among you would have
already formed a question. Competition? What competition? Tell me
more.
Programs like the Yahoo Publisher Network, Microsofts AdCenter and
Chitikas eMiniMalls are all targeted at the same publishers who
are running Adsense. Whats more is that they have aggressive plans
to build big publisher bases themselves and aggressive plans often
involve paying commissions. Which leads to the most interesting
question of all: If Im going to be recommending a particular program
shouldnt I be recommending the program that pays the most rather
than the program thats been around the longest? Bingo! Youve got
it. Getting new publishers to sign up to anything is no easy task.
If youre expending time and/or money to sign them up you want to
make the most for yourself. Whats wrong with that?
So far there are only two major contextual ad programs that pay
you a commission for getting your webmaster mates to sign up. Theyre
Adsense and Chitika. Chitika pays 10% of what your referral makes
in the first 12 months. Adsense pays a flat $100 when your referral
reaches $100 in earnings. Summary: If your referrals are going to
make more than $1,000 in the first year ($84 a month) then Chitika
is going to be more profitable.
But the bottom line is something that most affiliates arent going
to recognise and thats where you have the distinct advantage.
You realise that its going to be a lot more difficult finding Adsense
a new publisher whos never used them before. Cmon, everybody and
his dog has heard about Adsense. Do you know a webmaster who hasnt?
Chitika, on the other hand, is a new kid in town and you can "sell"
Chitika to both those webmasters whove never heard of Adsense (if
you can find any) and to every webmaster who has! Thats a
massively larger playing field.
Being
the honest person you are you dont want to recommend something based
purely on your personal profit; you want to recommend whats best
for the friend youre making the recommendation to. Youre going to
be pleasantly surprised. Chitika has a fresh look, an irrestible
looking ad format, a usually much higher EPC and those select few
whove tried it out already have been raving about how much more
profitable its been for them. (And if your referrals have the same
sort of success with Chitika you get 10% of it!) Take Chitika for
a test drive today and if you need reasons to promote it to your
webmaster friends as being the best affiliate program around you
can always point them to our
review of the Chitika eMiniMalls program.
More
AdSense Resources:
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