Wednesday, September 22, 2010

FOLLOWING THE FIGURES

Response Tracking: Your Hidden Pot Of AdSense Gold!
In the last chapter, we talked about content. Google won't let you ask visitors to click on your ads, or use other deceptive ways to make them click. But good content is an endorsement in itself. Some of its charm rubs off on the ads, making the ads more believable — and interesting! If you have a website with impartial product reviews, for instance, visitors are more likely to click the ads to learn more about a product, check out the latest prices or order online.
It’s crucial to create content that’s genuinely interesting. But your work doesn’t stop there. After setting up your AdSense Account, the first thing you want to do is play with your ad formats and placement to make the ads blend in. That's where the bulk of the "easy-money" is hiding. But once you've got that right, what next? You start tweaking the text and making all sorts of other changes to improve your CTR. But every time you make any sort of change to your ads, you must track the results. Consider this example: Joe Drinker has a great website about "How to make Beer at Home". It's doing well on AdSense, but not well enough. His week’s stats look something like this Joe is pretty happy with his CTR but wonders if he can raise his CPM and in the process, lift his earnings. So he looks up high-priced keywords related to his subject, and works the term "beer cans" into his content. A few days later he logs into the stats on his AdSense account and finds that that change has actually HURT his income Joe has not only disappointed a lot of collectors who come looking for beer cans — his site contains lots of keywords but little in the way of good content — he has also discouraged visits from people who want to make beer at home. His search ranking has gone down, making his website harder for people to find him and lowering his impressions. It's also hurt his earnings per click as the people who visit the site leave faster. What's worse is that he's also risked his AdSense standing! Now, does that make it a bad idea to optimize your website for AdSense? Not at all. It is actually a good idea, if you do it right. And by that I mean… No Shortcuts! There is a simple, step-by-step process to optimize your website for high-paying search terms. And this method is almost fool-proof! So why isn't everybody doing this? Simply because very few web publishers know how to use Tracking to their advantage. Tracking will not only help you minimize your mistakes, it will also reveal hidden pockets of money that you would have never found otherwise. Read on to find out how YOU can use Tracking to sky-rocket your CTRs and increase revenues per-click.

How To Track With Channels
AdSense now hands you 200 such chips. Use them to track ads on specific domain names or to group ads according to specific ad formats, keywords, their location on the page etc. You can use any other factor that might impact their effectiveness, based on the type of website you have.

How To Create A URL Channel
Google lets you create two kind of channels: URL channels and custom channels. With URL channels you can track clicks across your site’s pages. You can do this by entering four different kinds of URL in the “create new channel” box. Each type of channel gives you information of different accuracy: example.com tracks all the pages in your site and gives a general picture of what your site is doing; subdomain.example.com tracks all the pages in one particular subdomain; subdomain.example.com/widgets tracks all the pages in a specific directory; and subdomain.example.com/page.html tracks the clicks on one specific page. That’s a huge range of choices, from an overview of a site that might have hundreds of pages through groups of pages that concern particular subjects to the clicks you’re getting on just one page. So if you had three sites, one about custom cars, one about custom bikes and one about speedboats, the first thing you’d do is create a general channel for each site. You should always create a channel for each one of your sites. That will let you see not just how much money you’re making overall, but how much money each site is making. You’re not going to get too far without that sort of information! Now, let’s say that the custom car site had tabs for American cars, European cars, Japanese cars and classic cars. Each tab is a subdomain and you could create a channel for each subdomain too. Now you could see which topic is making the most money. And if you discussed one car on each page, you could also create channels for the individual pages and see which cars are the most popular and deliver the highest earning clicks. Sounds good, right? And it’s now very easy to do. Back in the bad old days, Google required you to manually change AdSense tags for each ad block you wanted to track. Many AdSense partners complained about these pesky old channels until Google launched the URL Channels to make life easier. Now all you have to do is sign in and click the tab marked “AdSense Setup” followed by the “Channels” link.


And the next step is to use the link marked “URL Channels” and enter the URLs you want to track. That’s it! You don’t have to do anything else. Google will start tracking the URLs you’ve added automatically.
So apart from creating URL Channels for each of your sites, which of the other URL Channels should you create? As far as I’m concerned, you can’t have too much information. Major areas should certainly be covered and if you can go as far as tracking each page without going over the 200 channel limit, so much the better. It’s certainly worth tracking a few individual pages to make sure that the revenues are spread out across different parts of the site. If you find that one page is making lots of money and another is making none, you’ll want to know the reason why.

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