Make Money With
AdSense
About Google
AdSense

- AdSense
- Google's AdSense program lets you sell advertising
space for other people's ads on your website and not just
any ads that Google chooses, but ads that are relevant to
your site's content pages. The service is free, and you
earn money every time someone clicks on an ad.
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- AdSense is a great program,
Despite the nomenclature issue, AdSense (www.google.com/adsense) has become
popular with bloggers and other people who run
noncommercial sites. You sign up, carve out some space on
your pages for the ads, paste a few lines of code from
Google into the HTML for your site, and let Google fill in
your pages with color-coordinated ads. When somebody clicks
one of the ads, Google pays you a fee (the amount varies,
and the company doesn't disclose its
payments).
Note: AdSense
can be tricky for e-commerce sites because you can't fully
control which ads appear on your site, and you wouldn't want to
run ads for your competitors' merchandise right next to your
own displays. You can, however, filter out some
ads.
Though you can't decide
which ads appear on your site, Google does a very nice job of
assessing your pages and supplying ads that might interest your
visitors. For example, if you run a site about the history of
window treatments, Google is likely to dish up ads for vintage
blinds and specialty curtain rods. That kind of relevance is
important, because Google doesn't pay you when somebody sees an
ad on your site; it pays you when somebody clicks an
ad. So you want Google to fill your space with blurbs likely to
interest your readers.
The $64,000 question is, of course, how much can you make?
The exact answer is: it depends. If your site gets tons of
visitors, and you focus on a narrow topic, there's a good
chance Google will serve up ads that appeal to a lot of people
hitting your site. For example, if you run a popular site
devoted to mobile gadgetry, you might make enough to buy a new
device every few months. If your site gets sporadic traffic, or
more important, if it's not clearly
about something, it may be hard for Google to
supply highly relevant ads, and you might make enough to cover
a box of paper clips every so often.
How Does Google Know What Ads Will Interest My
Audience?
Google's AdSense engine, as with
everything Google, is rather sophisticated. Rather than simply
serving up random ads from its advertiser base, Google works
hard to make sure the ads your visitors see are likely to pique
their interest.
From the day you start offering ads, the AdSense robot
visits on a regular basis, reading through your pages with ads.
The robot takes a look at the words you use, the frequency with
which you use them, even some of your page structure and
formatting (for example, bigger fonts usually signify something
important). Then Google uses all this info to figure out which
ads your readers will warm to.
Even better, Google takes the language
of your site and the location of your visitors into account,
serving up language- specific, location-targeted ads for
maximum impact. So a visitor from France (or a person browsing
the Internet from a Frenchified computer) may see AdWords in
French (shown here) or from French companies, while your U.S.
visitors see theirs in English, Germans in German, and so
forth.
Bottom line: Google may know more about your audience
than you do. Use AdSense to work that knowledge to your
advantage.
The beauty of AdSense, however, is that it's free—absolutely
gratis—to join and run, so you may as well give it a whirl. And
the program automatically tailors itself to your site over
time, supplying more relevant ads as it gets to know you better
or as you change your content. It can take a few months before
Google hits the sweet spot with ads that your readers love, but
the only thing you have to do is set it up and watch it go to
work. (Bear in mind, however, that participating in AdSense
doesn't have any effect on your site's rank in Google search
results.)
Warning: Don't try to
game AdSense. It probably won't surprise you a bit to learn
that people have set up sites primarily to showcase ads and
draw lots of clicks (and make buckets of money). When Google
finds out about these sites (and it often does) it blocks the
ads immediately. But dirty play makes the whole system weaker,
and it harms not only Google but the people who pay for clicks,
too. Don't be part of that damage.
Some Quick Tips for New Users
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- Google prefers pages with lots of text rather than lots
of pictures, because it can better assess what kind of ads
will be interesting to your visitors.
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- If you want to see how your ads look before they go
live, you can check them on an online test server. But keep
in mind that if the server is connected to the Internet,
Google can see your pages, so it can, and will, index
them.
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- Google's online help pages for AdSense (
https://www.google.com/adsense/online-help) are
chock-full of useful information on setting up shop,
getting the most out of the program, maintaining your
account, troubleshooting, and so on. Visit every so often,
especially before you write in for help. If you have a
question that isn't answered by the help pages or is
specific to your account, drop the AdSense crew a line
using the form at https://google.com/adsense/contact.
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- For more help, including instructions on blocking
robots other than the Googlebot, check the
Troubleshooting Tips section of the "Google AdSense
Technical Implementation Guide"
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