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PPC Articles

Microsoft still referral spamming, jacking Adsense

Randall McCarley
by Randall McCarley
November 14th, 2007

This story broke in August but it’s heating up again because MSN is still up to something.

MSN has been referral spamming websites. This means they “ping” a site with a bot acting like a human and leaving a link in the referral logs back to MSN’s website.

Spammers do this hoping you will check your logs and follow the links back to their site where you will make a purchase, click an ad, etc. MSN claims this is a “quality check” but what kind of QC wreaks havoc on your primary competitor’s ad program?

Microsoft’s bots are triggering some javascript including the one used for Google Adsense. You may recall that the click through rate determines the quality (value per click) of ads placed on your sites. With MSN’s referral spamming they are racking up impressions but not clicks damaging your CTR and ultimately, income. Continue Microsoft still referral spamming, jacking Adsense »



How to set goals and make projections with Adsense earnings

Randall McCarley
by Randall McCarley
October 19th, 2007

Since the Adsense Tips from an Expert post, I’ve been paying attention to how much money Adsense is bringing in. Over the past couple of months, I’ve also been learning more about accounting. The combination of these two events is leading to new sources of profit for me and the inspiration behind many of the recent changes on this site.

I’ve been learning more about the Adsense program and how it works, experimenting with different methods of tracking and devising ways to project future earnings. Through this process I’ve stumbled quite a bit and discovered the numbers weren’t adding up… in other words the actual events didn’t match what my brain thought should be happening.

It looks like I’ve finally discovered a working system for tracking and projecting financial growth through Adsense. These are my tips from my limited experience, but I thought you may be interested in the things I look at and how I come to my conclusions.

Adsense is an earner but it is not a “get rich quick” scheme

I make a little money on Adsense each month. I have for years but it hasn’t been until recently that the income was worth looking at. I’m not ready to retire but steady growth and an understanding of what’s going on has encouraged me.

The growth is the key. By tracking everything at first and figuring out how all the bits of information relate to each other I have figured out how to encourage even more growth.

Unfortunately, the answer is to keep working at it! Continue How to set goals and make projections with Adsense earnings »



Google Referral Ads - Win Win Lose

NavyCS
by NavyCS
October 17th, 2007

I have been running Google referral ads on a few pages of my web site. Google Referral ads for those who don’t know are very similar to regular content ads except you pick the advertiser and it is NOT pay per click. To receive payment from a Google Referral ad the person clicking through must complete a predetermined action like filling out a form or actually completing a final purchase. As you may expect the pay-out is much higher than that of a content ad click through. As it states in the referral ad set up, “Choose up to 15 products or specific ads to rotate in the referral unit. You can also choose categories and keywords to ensure you get newer ads as they become available.” There are numerous categories to choose from and overall a large number of advertisers/products available.

My site was accepted to run referral ads a few months ago. I Have enjoyed 4 conversions so far, less than one a month, after numerous impressions and very few clicks - my site averages 40,000 unique visitors a month. Like any publisher I want to increase the click thru rate (CTR), I try to place ads that are relevant to the page but don’t think I’m doing a very good job, content ads are getting 100 times the click rate on the same pages - I have swapped ad locations with similar results. Could be a few reasons for the very low CTR, one being that “Referral ads by Google” is bigger and draws more attention than “Ads by Google”, my ad picking (this is most likely) and the heading tag used by the advertiser - referral advertisers are not taking the same time in referral ad creation as with content ads. I think Google should remove “referral” from the ad and have it display as the other types of ads do.

Good luck using the advanced reports to recall referral data - I think the old TI-99 4A I owned back in the early 80’s could process the information faster. It appears the problem is the impressions, has to be as the other data you could count on your fingers. The impressions are not from each time an ad unit is displayed but from each ad that is displayed within the unit (skewing the crap out of real results, well at least what we publishers are used to), have a 3 ad unit display once it counts as 3 impressions.

As I discussed the pay out for a conversion can be much higher than a content click through. From the advertisers prospective it is a great thing - basically 100% profit without any risk. Also, I looked and cannot find the answer to this question - if I have an affiliate ad on my site and a person clicks through I will get credit for a purchase even if a person makes that purchase much later, could be months later. Both the advertiser and the publisher are aware of how much time the referred shopper has to buy. Does the person clicking through a Google referral ad have to complete the action required for publisher pay out during the first visit? Until I hear different I will think this is the case.

Google Referral ads could be a win-win-win but I am afraid it is just a win for the advertiser and Google. It goes a long way in making the advertisers happy and is a little payback I guess for all the fraudulent click throughs in the past (I mean when it was really bad). Lose for the publisher - until an advertised time span is placed on the conversion beyond initial shopper visit and advertisers get serious about writing ads which will draw more clicks (my click through to conversion rate is actually pretty good) and most important we publishers get smarter about picking the ads, don’t let the payout be your only determining factor as tempting as that is.

Even after saying all this, I will continue to run referral ads on my site because of what can happen - it really is a beautiful thing when a conversion happens on a high paying referral ad, damn near better than sex…damn near.



YPN: less clicks, cash than Adsense

Randall McCarley
by Randall McCarley
September 12th, 2007

After testing YPN for the last two months it looks pretty conclusive: YPN has a long way to go to catch up to Adsense. In all fairness I believe YPN is still in beta, still there are some things they need to work on. My not-too-scientific approach was to use a site that was already pulling a small but steady amount of traffic and Adsense clicks and then swap the Adsense for YPN.

Problem #1 - YPN doesn’t offer link ads. On advice from Mystery Mentor, my plan was to use the ads he recommended for Adsense including the text link ads across the footer. YPN offers the standard text ads but not link ads. And because you can’t use Adsense and YPN ads on the same page because of the TOS I had to choose to either keep earning the money I was getting or continue the experiment. I opted to continue forward.

Problem #2 - YPN’s relevancy falls short. The ads that appear for Adsense sometimes make me scratch my head but the YPN ads were almost always off-base. I figured that it might take time for them to align to the content but after two weeks I had 0 clicks and was considering swapping back. I found a setting in the control panel that let’s you tighten the focus of the ads. I made the appropriate change and saw a very minor improvement.

Problem #3 - Low CTR. The ads were still targeted too broadly and the CTR didn’t improve.

Problem #4 - Limited pool of advertisers to pull from. I don’t have proof but I suspect the industry this site covered just didn’t have a very broad advertising base. I saw a lot of ads for “mortgage” which probably pay well but I’ll never know because my viewers aren’t interested in that and didn’t click the ads.

Problem #5 - Low gain for clicks. I thought that maybe the problem of fewer clicks would be compensated for by high payouts for the few clicks I did get. No such luck.

YPN has a solid platform and implementing ads is just as easy as Adsense. I beleive that as they progress and recruit more advertisers the relevancy will improve. And I did only test one site. Other sites or industries may have better luck. But for now the steady money is in Adsense, at least for me.



Google plexed over link buying

Randall McCarley
by Randall McCarley
August 23rd, 2007

Google TantrumSES San Jose included a session on link purchasing Tuesday that included Matt Cutts of Google. The panel covered the pros and cons of link purchasing and Google’s policy of blocking paid links. This issue is hot and Google’s motives are clearly selfish.

Cutts started by pointing out that paid links violate Google’s Webmaster Guidelines. This is odd because the guidelines do not say anything about buying or selling links. The closest reference to link buying is this part near the bottom:

Don’t participate in link schemes designed to increase your site’s ranking or PageRank. In particular, avoid links to web spammers or “bad neighborhoods” on the web, as your own ranking may be affected adversely by those links.

The emphasis here is on your outbound links and to avoid linking to sites that may be offensive. There is nothing about link sales. If you stretch the meaning of the first sentence you might say that selling links could make you part of a “link scheme” but even that would increase the PR of the site you link to - not your own.

Cutts went on to explain that not disclosing paid advertisements offline is against the policies of the FCC. Maybe Google has been working with China too long but here in America we don’t take kindly to the government approving our content. This is an obvious scare tactic - reveal your paid links or we’ll sick the government on you! Can you imagine the Department of Homeland Security digging through websites to discover the very real and dangerous threat of paid links?!

It makes me wonder if Google is lobbying for legislation on this issue. They have the cash for it. But most websites are good about letting users know how the site works by including a disclosure or advertising policy of some sort.

Google would like to see a label for paid links like “sponsored links” or “advertising links” along with technology to block the bots from following those links like using the robots.txt file, 302 redirects, JavaScript or the infamous “nofollow” attribute.

The use of robots.txt, 302 redirects and JavaScript do the job for Google. Their bots don’t read that information so there is no problem. The use of a nofollow is a bit more sinister and shows the weakness of Google’s algorithm: Google can’t tell what the purposes of links are without help.

As Michael Gray pointed out at the conference, the use of nofollows was to control links on public sites like forums or blogs. The whole site could be penalized if the search engines found a bad link. My impression was that the nofollow attribute was a temporary solution but not the ultimate fix because the first Basic Principle of Google’s Quality Guidelines is:

Make pages for users, not for search engines. Don’t deceive your users or present different content to search engines than you display to users, which is commonly referred to as “cloaking.”

The nofollow attribute does present different information to users than it does to search engines. When search engines find nofollowed links they move on effectively ignoring them. Users don’t see the attribute and can’t see a distinction between regular and nofollowed links (unless you get a plug-in for your browser). I see this as a mini-cloak to manipulate search engines that does the user no good at all.

Cutts compared paid links to littering or using the carpool lane with just one person - acts that have a negative impact on society. How about the impact of a bully threatening kids for their lunch money? I think that’s a much better analogy of Google’s anti-link buying tactics… Scare webmasters with smaller sites into thinking that selling links is evil and punishable by Google.

Cutts then went on to say that link-sellers are scumbags and that Google was very good at detecting paid links. More fear tactics I guess because if Google was so good at detecting paid links why would they bother fighting with them so much? Why would they ask people to report paid links? Why all the drama leading up to this announcement?

As of this writing Google’s stock is priced at $512.75 per share. Google makes it’s money by selling links. Let’s rock the hypocrisy, shall we?

Adwords is Google’s primary money-maker. Adwords works by bidding for key words and when those words appear on a site displaying Adsense (the publisher side of Adwords) your ad appears. The viewer may click the ad which then charges your account. The more you bid the more your ad appears the more clicks you get and more money Google makes. The ads are links to your site.

One of the issues is defining what a “punishable paid link” is. If someone offers cash for a link on your site then that link is paid for and presumably punishable. But what about paid directories like the Yahoo Directory? Google’s Webmaster Guidelines show that this is acceptable:

Submit your site to relevant directories such as the Open Directory Project and Yahoo!, as well as to other industry-specific expert sites.

Here Google is encouraging paid links. They claim that because Yahoo’s directory is human-edited with quality guidelines it is ok. It seems the rest of us are not able to create or enforce such guidelines for our own sites. I’m shocked Google has such a low opinion of us!

Google is missing the fact that every link, paid for or not, is edited for quality and content. Even on automated sites there are people behind the systems that decide what will best serve their viewers. Google is in effect saying that most webmasters are not able to do what is best for their users.

Is a paid review a paid link? Paid reviews are a standard advertising practice and oddly, Google is fine with paid reviews even though a link to the product being reviewed is a given.

Maybe linkbait or SEO efforts are paid links? After all, the links wouldn’t exist if someone didn’t work and get paid for that work to get them. What about PR companies? Their work usually returns links from prestigious news sites.

What if you want to buy something and a link is thrown in? Google has been caught selling high-profile links several times. I guess their rules for link-selling only apply to the rest of us. Or the rules are too hard for them to understand themselves. Or maybe, the money in link-sales is just too good to pass up. Now every time I buy something online I need to see if some bastard is going to link to my site and get me in trouble. In fact, I should ask my web host to remove this testimonial I wrote about their great service. I’d hate for them to get in trouble for my kind words.

All of this confusion comes down to Google having an unstable product, and insatiable apatite for profit and the mentality of an overgrown 10-year-old trying to bully the rest of us into submission. The “don’t sell links” policy is a bad call. Link selling has been around long before Google. Trying to close the door for this legitimate source of revenue for website owners builds dependence on Adwords.

If I purchase a link I deserve the full value of that link including any side-effects a third-party site (like a search engine) may throw my way. If I ever paid for links they would be on sites that have viewers that I want to attract so that I get the best ROI. That should fit nicely within Google’s “quality guidelines”. Or if I want to just throw money out there for attention that would be creating a cultural phenomenon just like in the offline world and there is nothing wrong with that! It’s the American way.

If I put the time, money and energy into building a site that other people want to purchase links from I should have the right to sell those links. I should not have to do extra work to appease a third-party site that says I should build my site like they don’t exist. And I should be smart enough to know that any links on my site will have an effect on the quality of my site (read: editorial control). And that if I link to sites that are no good my site will suffer for it in the form of fewer site visitors, fewer people willing to link to my site and a drop in search rankings naturally all without special controls from Google’s “we want your money task force”.

This policy is alienating Google from its market of suppliers (website owners). Google’s attempt to dictate policy to the rest of the internet is a bad move especially when they clearly have so much to gain if the rest of us fall in line. This policy is highlighting Google’s greed.

If another company made such a claim they would be ignored. If Microsoft tried something similar the backlash would be huge. As it is, Google is playing off of what is left of their small start-up done good/do no evil image but there isn’t much left of that image left now that the company is 10 years old and worth billions.

If Google put their resources into removing the need for a nofollow tag when it was first released instead of finding new ways to use it the internet would be a better place with all spammers having a more difficult time getting bad links through.

If Google wants to provide a better product they need to come up with the solutions on their end and stick with telling webmasters to “Make pages for users, not for search engines.”

If Google focused on new product development and improving their existing ones instead of telling the rest of us how to not make money everyone would be happier including the users and shareholders.

The best way I can think of to combat this bad policy is to do exactly what you’d do if someone else suggested it: ignore it. After all, that is exactly what Google has been telling us to do all along and they certainly can’t punish a website for working within their guidelines, right?

PS. Thanks to Rand at SEOmoz for his great coverage of SES and the inspiration behind this post.



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