How to earn money with AdSense
AdSense is an ad network belonging to Google. It is the biggest ad
network in the world and the main service through which Google can
display ads on a lot of websites. The secret behind AdSense is its
simplicity. As a website owner you just need to sign into your account,
create your first ad, and insert the source code on your website. The
last one is the trickiest part for non-technical publishers, but still a
lot easier than what some other ad networks ask you to do.
At the beginning there was just one way of getting paid with AdSense
and this was on a per click basis. This means that you earn money each
time a visitor to your site clicks on an ad. It doesn’t matter what he
did afterwards on the target website. But before you start thinking
about it: When Google figured out that some people tried to raise their
payments by clicking on the ads on their own sites, they started
penalizing for such behaviour.
68% of the click price
How did Google AdSense determine the amount you receive per click? Google also runs AdWords,
which is kind of a mirrored service to AdSense. On AdWords advertisers
running shops, services, or other marketers create ads and tell Google
to publish them on either the Google search engine or in the display network,
so all websites belonging to the AdSense network. 68 percent of the
amount an advertiser pays per click on their ads on your site is your
income. The rest is Google’s commission fee.
This still isn’t all you need to know about how much AdSense pays
you. The costs per click are calculated in an auction. Every ad that is
somehow in the pool to potentially be displayed on your website takes
part in it. In this auction, it isn’t just the highest bidder that wins,
but the winner is also determined by his “quality”. Without going
deeper at this moment just remember that Google will ultimately run some
smart algorithms that try to get the highest income per thousand
impressions (return per mille = RPM) for you (and them).
CPC, CPM, CPE
In addition to the cost-per-click (CPC) model, there are two other
bid types. Cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) is an income model where
advertisers pay you a fixed price per thousand ad impressions. No click
on them is necessary for you to earn something from AdSense. This bid
type only works if advertisers choose on AdWords that ads should be
displayed only on your website. Before they can do that you need to ad
custom channels. I might cover this in an upcoming article, so you might
want to subscribe to the newsletter so as not to miss it.
The most recent bid type is cost-per-engagement (CPE). In this case
the advertiser is defining an action the visitor needs to fulfill like
expanding the ad, watch a video ad, finishing a poll, etc. This form is
so new that the documentation from AdSense doesn’t even mention it. As
much as I would like to increase income from AdSense, we will have to
see how visitors react to this, because the new engaging ad units might
be a bit more jarring than the classical text or image banners.
Which is the best bid type?
You are not able to select the bid type yourself. Google calculates
the best income when combining them based on what runs best on your
website. If advertisers know about your good reputation and book CPM
campaigns on your website, they might outrank your CPC income. If your
CPC banners are well placed and your content is written for valuable
topics like finances, your CPC might be unreachable. Lets see how the
new CPE ad types kick in. The first AdSense accounts I have seen them in
look very promising.
Should I use AdSense?
Once the ad code is inserted in your site, you are ready to earn
money with AdSense. In practise, there is just one little problem for
most small websites: to earn money with any kind of ad type you need
traffic on your website.
This is the point where I normally stop new publishers who ask me for
consulting. You are just building your content and reputation, have to
fight for every newsletter subscription and the absolute traffic is
below 10.000 pageviews a month. In this situation you should consider
waiting with ads on your website. They might not only drive potential
visitors away, but you also need time to manage and optimize your ads. Are there exceptions? Yes, there are. You will know when you see one.
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