Forum Moderators: martinibuster
Someone please help me with this...
Newborn
MANY of the worst offenders are topic-specific. You have a recipe site--I bet my block list and yours have very little overlap, as other than ebay (the only generic URL I block) all the URLs in my filter have "publishing" or "writing" or similar terms in them.
What matters are the ones appearing on your site.
[edited by: jatar_k at 6:20 pm (utc) on Oct. 19, 2006]
[edit reason] no urls thanks [/edit]
Viewing your web pages with the Preview Tool really is the ONLY way to determine which adds need to be filtered. You can't (as has been said previously) use other peoples lists. Additionally, you really have to make sure when using the Preview Tool that the ads you add to the filter are actually being shown on your site as the tool will show many things that might seem logical to block but will never be shown.
And YES $0.11 for a click is not all that bad! Some days I'd be very happy with that for a click value!
Chapman
Like yahoo.com that you mentioned.
Ignore any www or anything before a dot (sub domain) like stuff.yahoo.com
Ignore anything after the slash too to block everything on the main URL. If not you may find hundreds of variations on a theme that you will not have the time or space to block!
Find the sites you want to block using the preview tool.
I find that only the main traffic areas (US, UK, Canada) are worth bothering with. The rest are low traffic (for me) and there are so many countries that you would never get to the end of your checking. Check as many pages on your sites as you have time for.
Some of what you will see will probably never appear on your site, and some of the stuff you will see on your site may not appear in the tool. But its by far the best method we have. It can take a long time before your blocking works. (days at times) and longer still to see any income improvement.
In cases where ythere are no "good" advertisers more bad ads may just replace your blocked ones. In other areas it really does improve things drastically.
Worked a treat - all the rubbinsh ads disappeared and were replaced by spot on targeted ads.
Maybe negative keywords in the metatags is another tool to add to the competitive ad filter.
[edited by: jatar_k at 11:00 pm (utc) on Oct. 19, 2006]
[edit reason] no specifics thanks [/edit]
Mike