Screw
other AdSense publishers for traffic
By
Eric Giguere
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One
way to get traffic for your website is to pay for it through
advertising. This is in fact what you do for AdSense arbitrage.
But that arbitrage depends on search engine (in this case,
Google) traffic and potentially putting some serious money
on the line in order to attract qualified clicks. It's not
for the faint of heart and something that requires continual
monitoring and adjusting, at least in the early period. And
especially if you're in a competitive field.
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The
other approach you can take is to abandon Google search results
entirely and lowball your ads strictly on the Google content network,
i.e. your fellow AdSense publishers. It's very easy to do. When
you create an AdWords campaign, make sure that the Google content
network is selected in the campaign settings (it is by default).
You can even enable separate bidding for the content network, which
is what I usually do.
Now
build a large list of keywords related to your topic area. Make
it as comprehensive as possible. Set the maximum bid price so low
that all the keywords are marked "inactive for search".
This means that they will rarely be shown in Google's search results,
though it may still happen so make sure the bid price isn't
too high for you to handle if those ads get clicked. If you've enabled
separate bidding for the content network, set a really low bid price
per click, say $0.01 or $0.02. Then activate the campaign.
If
your topic is competitive, your ad will get a lot of impressions,
even at such a low price. Take the "digital cameras" topic,
for example. I've got a campaign running right now with a $0.02
bid price and over 1000 keywords related to digital cameras. So
far today my ads have been shown over 63,000 times. The conversion
ratio is tiny only 24 clicks, or 0.03%. But those 24 clicks
only cost me $0.48. Even a 10% clickthrough ratio on any AdSense
ads on my site makes me money in this scenario. And if I can get
someone to visit the Amazon Camera & Photo shop (with a $10-$30
commission on a camera sale) or click on a Chitika eMiniMalls ad
then my payoff can be even better. I'll even get the occasional
click from the search network, despite all their terms being marked
inactive for search.
Ironically
enough, you're making money off the backs of other AdSense publishers.
After all, it's the 1- and 2-cent ads that are being shown on their
sites that are making you money. So really, no one else will be
thanking you for doing this, not with the piddly payout they get
when someone clicks one of your ads. So you really are screwing
other AdSense publishers for cheap traffic. (You might want to look
into using your competitive ad filter to improve the payouts you're
getting, of course...)
And
no, you don't have to build MFA (made-for-AdSense) sites to take
advantage of this approach. Legitimate sites can benefit from it,
too. And it won't work for all topics. Look for highly-searched-for
topics with lots of AdSense publishers vying for the ads. Something
with a large enough advertising pool to make it worthwhile. Lots
of advertisers bid separately for the search vs. content networks,
sometimes avoiding the latter entirely this is what makes
the lowball approach possible, but you still need some advertisers
on the content network to make it worthwhile.
About
the author: Eric Giguere is the
contextual advertising expert who wrote Make Easy Money with Google
and Uncommon AdSense. You can read this blog by mail if it's more
convenient for you, just send a blank email to memwg-blog@aweber.com
to subscribe. Make
Easy Money with Google
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0321321146/ericgiguerecom
Uncommon AdSense
www.uncommonadsense.com/
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