Forum Moderators: martinibuster
The last couple of days I hit my first 100 click mark, and the last 4 days it has retained that average.
Thanks to the webmaster world adsense team, you've inspired me, and everyone else can do it too.
Admittedly, stats are well down this month -- it doesn't look like another $100 month, sadly.
About 7 weeks ago, I accidentally moved an ad to a "wrong" location on the pages. When I realized what happened almost immediately, I went to put it back where it was intended to go. Took a look at the logs to see how many people may have seen it and bam, FISH ON! Two clicks showed up on the adsense tracker just that quick! When I saw that, I put that "Google bait" right back in the wrong place! Nothing fancy, just a borderless generic colored ad. Been hitting near double digits every single day for the last 7 weeks!
As all of these much more experienced members have been trying to tell us the whole time, ad placement is everything! It's not always what the heatmap shows that I can confirm! It's a fun challange at the very least ;)
Everysite is going to be different, but mine is literally at the bottom of the page.
Yeah I hear you.... actually the heat map does show good performance at the bottom. Apparently, after reading an article, people are interesting in browsing around and those links are right there for them to click on. I don't get high Ecpm on those since the ad is usually 2nd on page, but the clicks do add up.
Well, what makes this so odd for me is that fact that I've had text links and leader boards on the bottom for months on end with poor results. They actually complimented the look of the site.
The "new" ads are the largest 328's and doesn't compliment the site at all.. but.. they get the clicks.
One more oddity I haven't mentioned. I have a single 250 square just like the heat map at the top of the page. Blended very nicely with the rest of the content. If I remove it (I've tested this several times) to try to avoid smartpricing.. the visitors quit clicking on the bottom ads!
My only thinking on this is that they may make a mental note of how the ads are blended in with the content, but when they get to the bottom of the page, see links NOT blended in, they click it?
My only thinking on this is that they may make a mental note of how the ads are blended in with the content, but when they get to the bottom of the page, see links NOT blended in, they click it?
I can't help you with that, it's still a mystery for me too, however, I have used the multiple background colors for an ad that google offers to display randomly, and I tried to give it a blended look and a slightly unblended look and it seems to work well. Must be helping against ad blindness.