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Adsense and serps
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 26
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The ads for adsense that you get depends on your SERP position,PR and traffic of the site.A site that is situated in top 5 for a keyword get better adsense ads then one is not in top 5?
Adsense is in no way related to search results, traffic, or PR. The ads you get are based on relevancy of the content of your site.
Last edited by stymiee; May 22nd, 2007 at 10:49 am.
John Conde
Brainyminds | Merchant Account Services | I Love Code
IT'S HERE: Merchant Accounts 101 Everything you need to know about merchant accounts!
Brainyminds | Merchant Account Services | I Love Code
IT'S HERE: Merchant Accounts 101 Everything you need to know about merchant accounts!
AdSense ads are displayed in the same order that they would be if one was performing a query on Google. The order is dependant upon how much an AdWords advertiser bids and their CTR (ad performance). The quality (how high up the chain) of ads displayed on an AdSense publisher site is dependant upon the publisher's CTR.
For example, suppose the following 10 AdWords advertisers are bidding on the keyword "computer".
AdWords advertiser #1 = Best CTR and high bid = top placement
AdWords advertiser #2 = Good CTR and medium bid = middle placement
.
.
.
AdWords advertiser #10 = Poor CTR and low bid = low placement
Now suppose there are three AdSense publisher websites which each have content that rates equally well for the keyword "computer". Additionally, each publisher is using an ad unit that can display three ads.
AdSense publisher #1 = High CTR
AdSense publisher #2 = Medium CTR
AdSense publisher #3 = Low CTR
Publisher #1 might display the top three performing AdWords advertisers, Publisher #2 the medium three, and Publisher #3 the bottom three.
As you can see, as an AdSense publisher, the higher your CTR, the higher the quality of advertisers you get for a particular keyword. Yes, every keyword performs differently, and that is why some sites make two cents per click on average and other sites make twenty cents per click on average. But across a single keyword, the better your performance, the better quality advertisers you get.
Secondly, you'll notice poor AdWords advertiser #10 was too far down the chain to be on an AdSense publisher's site. AdWords advertisers also need to keep their CTR up because that means they can bid less and still get the same top position, and it makes sure that they are high enough up the ladder to make it into the top X for a particular keyword.
For example, suppose the following 10 AdWords advertisers are bidding on the keyword "computer".
AdWords advertiser #1 = Best CTR and high bid = top placement
AdWords advertiser #2 = Good CTR and medium bid = middle placement
.
.
.
AdWords advertiser #10 = Poor CTR and low bid = low placement
Now suppose there are three AdSense publisher websites which each have content that rates equally well for the keyword "computer". Additionally, each publisher is using an ad unit that can display three ads.
AdSense publisher #1 = High CTR
AdSense publisher #2 = Medium CTR
AdSense publisher #3 = Low CTR
Publisher #1 might display the top three performing AdWords advertisers, Publisher #2 the medium three, and Publisher #3 the bottom three.
As you can see, as an AdSense publisher, the higher your CTR, the higher the quality of advertisers you get for a particular keyword. Yes, every keyword performs differently, and that is why some sites make two cents per click on average and other sites make twenty cents per click on average. But across a single keyword, the better your performance, the better quality advertisers you get.
Secondly, you'll notice poor AdWords advertiser #10 was too far down the chain to be on an AdSense publisher's site. AdWords advertisers also need to keep their CTR up because that means they can bid less and still get the same top position, and it makes sure that they are high enough up the ladder to make it into the top X for a particular keyword.
Dani the Computer Science Gal 
Follow my Twitter feed! twitter.com/DaniWeb
And if you're interested in Internet marketing there is twitter.com/DaniWebAds

Follow my Twitter feed! twitter.com/DaniWeb
And if you're interested in Internet marketing there is twitter.com/DaniWebAds
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