Google
 
Web 4Greatest.com
4Greatest Articles

Read Articles:

 Whats Google AdSense?

 The Easiest Way To Have A Google Adsense Accoun...

 Google AdSense: 7 Tips For Creating Sites That ...

 Easy Steps To Hands Off Passive Income

 AdSense is Stupid When...

 Affiliate Marketing vs. Google Adsense: Let the...

 Make Money Quick With Google Adsense

 6 Easy Ways to Increase your Adsense Revenue

 Adsense – When should you use it?

 Where’s the best place to put Google Adsense Ads?

 Google Adsense Page Positioning

 How to Make Every AdSense Ad on the Google Netw...

 6 steps to Adsense Domination

 Google AdSense – The text link ad with clout

 The Greatest Internet Marketing Strategy Using ...

 Adsense – The Powerful Passive Income Generator

 Treble your Adsense Income in 60 MInutes

 Adlink Success - A New Advertising Style From G...

 When AdSense Goes AWOL

 Google AdSense and Blogs

 The Basics of Making Money with Blogs And AdSense

 The Evolution of Google AdSense

 Are you using both sides of the GoogleCoin?

 Meet Adwords, AdSense’s Fraternal Twin

 Google Adsense

 Winning the (r) Google AdSense War

 Tips for maximizing Your Google AdSense Revenues

 10 Great things NOT to do with Google AdSense

 How to Help Google Make up its Mind

 Blogging for Dollars

 A Smart Trick for Attracting Higher Paying AdSe...

 Getting Approved by Adsense in a Jiffy…

 Traffic Arbitrage- The new kid on the block

 Adsense - 7 keys to empire?

 Five Knockout Affiliate Tips

 Is Your Site a One Trick Pony?

 A Niche Marketing Model In Three Easy Steps: Ke...

 6 more free steps to making money online

 Gaga over Google Adsense

 Concentrate on what's important...

Index Pages: 1 - 2 - 3
Google AdSense and Blogs

by: Diane Nassy

If you have a blog, or are thinking about starting a blog, then you are definitely going to want to read this article. It’s all about how to line your pockets with money that’s just waiting to be made without working much harder than you already are.

No only are blogs the hottest thing on the ‘net right now, but they are custom-made for Google’s AdSense program. Why? It’s simple. Blogs represent constantly changing and fresh content to Google’s search engine spiders. Feeding fresh content to those little spiders is just like tossing raw meat to a tiger. They just gobble it up. The more pages of your blog that get indexed, the more traffic you get. And the more traffic you get, the more exposure your AdSense ads get. Are you beginning to see where I’m heading here?

It’s not just Google that loves new content, all of the major engines do. In fact, some web-savvy bloggers are testing Google ads on one page and Overture ads on the other. It doesn’t take too long to see which ads are doing the best when you have nearly side-by-side comparison statistics to look at. Just don’t make the mistake of putting Google and Overture ads on the same page together. While they won’t kill each other like a pair of Siamese fighting fish in the same bowel will, you will be violating both sites’ Terms of Service, and it isn’t worth killing the goose (geese) that laid the golden egg.

It’s a snap to set up Google AdSense ads on your blog. Everything you need to know is right inside of the Google control panel. What’s not so easy is figuring out what ads are going to appear on each page. Since Google targets your key words, and your blog articles could possible wander towards any subject, you never know what you’re going to get.

Well, “never” is a strong word because there actually IS a way to pre-test your blog’s ads before you post your newest edition. Here’s what you do:

• Write your blog article like you normally would
• Plug in your AdSense code and then post your newest page to a sub directory that’s not part of your blog.
• Click refresh a few times until Google wakes up and starts sending ads.
• If you don’t like what you see then fine-tune the article until you see the types of ads that you’re looking for.

With some ads paying as much as $5 per click or more, I’d certainly spend an extra 30 minutes or so tweaking my blog. That’s for sure.

If you’re working hard to get your blog in front of visiting eyeballs, then it doesn’t make any sense at NOT to be using Google AdSense to draw every penny out of your site that’s possible. OK, that’s the end of the article. Now get busy tweaking your blog and checking your ads. You’ve got money waiting to be made!

About the author:
Diane provides marketing and internet profit tips.
For more Google AdSense tips, visit http://www.adsense.deeljeabiz.com
Email : deeljeabiz@gmail.com

More Resources

11/19/2008 11:01 AM
Follow Google's Advice for Better AdSense Performance (WebProNews)
Google has been providing tips for optimizing AdSense ads to enhance their performance. The company has provided a three-part video series on this subject, which it has just released the final installment for. read more
11/20/2008 10:08 AM
Publishers' Top Requests to Google AdSense Are... (Search Engine Roundtable)
A WebmasterWorld thread is gathering the top 5 publisher requests to be shared with Google's AdSenseAdvisor. Forum member participation is building up, with the following requests being made thus far: Ability to block more than 200 sites in the Competitive Ad Filter Ability to block by keyword in domain name. The example used is that a publisher wants to block spammydomain.com and ...
11/18/2008 08:23 AM
Google Promises They Don't Cap AdSense Earnings (Search Engine Roundtable)
We have questioned if Google limits how much an AdSense publisher can earn in the past. We even ran a poll where the majority of publishers felt Google did not have a glass ceiling for AdSense earnings. Now, a WebmasterWorld thread pulls out a quote from the new AdSenseAdvisor that Google does not cap publishers. Let me quote you: I 100% guarantee that there are no earnings caps on ...
11/21/2008 06:01 AM
Yahoo and AOL talking again (VNU Net via Yahoo! UK & Ireland News)
Yahoo is to continue the talks it started with Time Warner's AOL business earlier this year, according to a fresh wave of media reports.
11/21/2008 07:56 AM
Indian students in US pioneer photo embedding in videos (Deccan Herald)
The Stanford University researchers, computer science graduate students Ashutosh Saxena and Siddharth Batra, and assistant professor Andrew Ng, say the technology will have many uses...
11/21/2008 06:09 AM
Guy Kewney (Personal Computer World)
If Microsoft really is ready to accept that it has no long-term future in selling software licences, it becomes important to understand what the alternatives are. And so it was that I was shown figures for just how many billions of dollars Microsoft makes from advertising.
11/20/2008 07:41 PM
Extreme Makeover: Photos Realistically Embedded Within Videos (Science Daily)
Stanford artificial intelligence researchers have developed software that makes it easy to reach inside an existing video and place a photo on the wall so realistically that it looks like it was there from the beginning. The photo is not pasted on top of the existing video, but embedded in it. It works for videos as well; you can play a video on a wall inside your video.
11/19/2008 08:00 AM
Ooyala Launches Innovative Video Advertising Feature Set (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.----Ooyala, Inc, a leading global online video platform provider, is announcing the launch of Ooyala Backlot™ Ads. This feature simplifies the process of monetizing online video content by enabling easy ad integration with major ad servers and ad networks such as YuMe, Tremor, Doubleclick, Lightningcast, and Google AdSense for Video.
11/20/2008 03:16 PM
Google Makes Improvements to Ad Manager (WebProNews)
If you are not familiar with Google Ad Manager , it is a tool that lets web publishers organize their ad booking. It lets you use data from past campaigns to estimate how many impressions you need to sell to make your goals. read more
11/20/2008 04:01 PM
New Paid Links Service Sparks More Debate (WebProNews)
Quite a storm of debate has erupted over a new service called InLinks - essentially a paid text link service that allegedly makes it hard for Google (and other search engines) to detect them. And mouths of  Internet marketers begin to salivate. read more

Sponsored links

Copyright © 2006 4Greatest.com