The rage to milk money from Adsense continues into 2012. While there are
many different ways to do this, it's no secret Google is keeping a
watchful eye on spam sites which automatically generate pages
consistently on a daily basis.
Every now and then, Adsense
'experts' would introduce a 'fresh' new way of generating pages which
Google "has not caught on yet", be it article, directory or backlink
generators.
While these software are very good at what they do,
you can't solely depend on them for long-term success. It's a natural
tendency that automatically generated content just doesn't look like
quality pages with highly informative, up-to-date content, but it's my
personal observation.
Most run-of-the-mill, ads-on-topfold
Adsense sites lack substantial sections and deeper structures to be
interesting enough to make visitors think they should come back to check
them out more often. While generating as many pages as possible is
crucial to get them indexed and thereby build substantial presence in
search results, these types of pages should only complement principal
content that reflects what your site stands for and the selling point it
serves to maximize its overall value. There used to be a question that
goes, "Is building Adsense sites a business?" My answer is: Adsense is
secondary.
Of course, like you I do want Adsense to be my
primary source of income. The secret is in emphasizing content and
value, not Adsense ads. You may have felt resigned to say, "Does that
mean more work?" Not really. Here's another secret inspired by a quote
from Albert Einstein: You can't solve your Adsense income challenge at
the same level of thinking.
Truth is: I have build a good number
of Adsense sites, but my main Internet Marketing site which I treat as
my core business earns more than some of them despite my intention not
to make it Adsense-focused, all the more so when it has absolutely
nothing to do with high-paying keywords and the tremendous amount of
time that goes into keyword research...which leads to the next secret:
create a site with a subject or niche you know you can continually
express and expand on instead of getting stuck with a 'lucrative'
keyword you may run out of ideas on in the long term.
This is as
good as saying Adsense is not just a keyword value game; it is still
the classic "How do I get and retain traffic" game, and traffic is not
some scoreline, but real people with genuine interest.
eHow.com
is an incredible example. It's a free site that shows people how to do a
lot of different things. The best way to explain the site is just for
you to go have a quick look now. They have hundreds, possibly thousands
of pages of content on all sorts of subjects and the way they get
traffic to their site is through the search engines.
Every page
on the site has an Adsense box on it and that's how it makes money. They
also have a Alexa traffic ranking of around 2000 which is great.
Of course, it doesn't make sense to write or purchase that much content
by yourself. eHow.com succeeds in getting its visitors involved in
content contribution. There's also a wikiHow to get contributors
involved in constant update of a common topic or article.
For a start, here are suggestions on the type of sections you can integrate into a site:
1) Lead capture page with freebies or incentives.
2) Article directory.
3) A 'Contact Us' page.
4) An 'About Us' page.
5) Forum: The challenge lies in the time and effort needed to build up momentum to encourage forum participants to write in.
6) An archive section of some kind, for selected articles for example.
7) Blog/podcast pages.
8) Reciprocal link directory.
9) Sitemap.
It doesn't take much to think of these standard sections. Even a
products section makes your site look good besides providing another
source of income, and then you replicate these sections site after site,
niche after niche.
4th secret: Only sites with a general theme
can afford to be massive-looking. Examples: Entrepreneur.com and
Dogomania.com. Then you break the theme down into specifics like
gathering them under an umbrella: dog training, dog hygiene, dog naming,
dog psychology, doggy habits etc. Accurate targeting of Adsense ads
depends on specific subjects as reflected on page. One thing to note is
it is better that specific sections are inter-linked in some ways. If
you run a site on everything about cancer, because "colon cancer" and
"breast cancer" are not intrinsically related, visitors interested in
one section may not want to take a first glance at another.
5th
secret about content: write from a 'consumer' perspective instead of the
'opportunist' or "how to make money" perspective. What is it your
visitors are looking to buy? Ads normally target and appeal directly to
consumers. It's pointless to put up content about how to make money with
car accessories when there are hardly ads on "how to make money". Stick
to introducing car accessories and let the ads do the selling. If an
accessory or equipment catch visitors' attention and they click on the
ads, you got Adsense dollars.
That's about all the ideas I have
at this moment. You should be confident now and maybe have some more new
ideas I haven't thought of. For sure, Adsense is a major income source
you should seriously explore and make it big if you haven't done so.
This is one of those money machines that will make you money-on-demand
pretty much for the life of Google.
Belum ada tanggapan untuk "5 Money-On-Demand Secrets To Creating Great Adsense Sites"
Posting Komentar