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More pages - More Page Impressions - More clicks - More Revenue?

Does this compute?

         

JamaicanFood

6:28 pm on Aug 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Can anyone atest to this theory I got from another quarter on the web. I think its true and I would like some feedback. This of course is based on a major assumption 'Good content'. Assuming a minimum 500 words 5-6% keyword density for each page and you start with 1,000 pages, and grow at a rate of 3,000 pages a month etc.

What say you all your thoughts guys

Publisher

12:47 pm on Aug 25, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



what jamaicanfood is describing is a blog posing as a website.

stamp and go, escheveach (sp?) fish, manish water, jerk chicken, good rum raisin ice cream at the little icecream shop in kingston...now that's jamaican food

ronburk

5:21 pm on Aug 28, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Like I order 20 articles each ten days for my website, I really don't care if somone reads it or not as long it brings me more traffic and people sign up to my affiliate progi, or click on the ad-sence

That can certainly make you money in some situations. Of course, it also leaves you vulnerable to someone else who comes along who is willing to give the reader something of value. There's nothing more fun than watching my PR1 page shove a bunch of PR6 pages out of the way as Google gradually figures out that my visitors are finding what they needed.

You also pass up the opportunity to educate/qualify/motivate your visitor and thereby increase revenue and work with (instead of against) SmartPricing. When visitors arrive at my "How to Choose the Best Widget to Buy" article, yup, I really do want them to read it rather than just click on the wrong ad, not purchase the product, and help torpedo my SmartPricing benefits.

europeforvisitors

5:55 pm on Aug 28, 2006 (gmt 0)



Articles are ment to be read?
I always thought articles are just way to get boring traffic in no one reads them just need to click on the google ad-sence :)

That's one strategy. It may not be a viable long-term strategy, but at least it gives clueless publishers an opportunity to grab a chair in the support group's circle when they see AdSense Forum threads that begin: "Help! Smart pricing has cut my EPC down to almost nothing."

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