Making Sense Of Stats, Logs And Reports…
Stats are a vital part of your success. If
you can’t follow the results of all the changes you’re going to be making to
your ads and your pages, then you’re never going to maximize your revenues. But
reading your stats can be confusing. You’re going to be staring at all sorts of
tables filled with all kinds of numbers which can be rearranged and reorganized
in all sorts of different ways.
The Most Important Stat Of All
There’s one figure that’s more important
than any of the others. Know which one I’m talking about? Revenue! If you
aren’t making money, no other stats matter. If you are making money though, the
next stat you want to watch is your CTR. The higher the percentage of clicks to
page impressions you receive, the higher your CPM will rise — and the higher
your revenues will become. When you make a change to your ad placement, to your
keywords, to your ad colors or anything else, wait a week and check your stats
to see the result. And look first at your revenues. Bear in mind too that when
you have multiple ads on a page each ad unit counts as one impression — but you
won’t be able to get three clicks from them! Multiple ad units then can reduce
your CTR while still giving you good revenues. You might also want to translate
your results into charts. If you do want to do that, the most important things
to look for are trends in CTR and in earnings. Tracking impressions will also
let you see any radical fluctuations in traffic.
Optimum CTR
Much of your success will depend on
lifting your CTR as high as possible. Obviously, the more people who click on
your ads the more money you should make but it’s not always easy to know when
you’re inviting as many people as possible to get clicking. I’ve gone from less
than 1% CTR to over 8% on some sites but I know of some sites that are getting
over 30% CTR! Your CTR will depend on a number of different factors, including:
Site Content — Some types of content get more clicks
than others (but don’t necessarily make more money per click...)
• Site Design — We’ve
already talked about the importance of where you place your ads and how you
place them
.
• Number Of Links — Why
give your ads competition? If people want to click away from the page, you
should get paid for it.
• Ad Relevancy — If you’re not
getting served ads that are relevant to your content, you’re going to have a
low CTR.
AdSense Arbitrage
Once you get to grips with the numbers
that you see on the stats pages and your logs, you might notice something
interesting. You might see for example, that you’re getting 5,000 ad clicks on
a page each month and that page is generating $1500. Divide $1500 into 5,000
clicks and you’ll realize that each click for that type of content is bringing
you 30 cents. That means that when you come to buy content, as long as you
spend less than 30 cents for a click to that page, you’re going to make a
profit. And one way to do that is to open an AdWords account and buy
advertising space on Google’s search pages. You could pay as little as 5 cents
per click, giving you a profit of 25 cents each time your 5-cent users click on
your 30-cent ads. That’s AdSense arbitrage and it sounds like a foolproof way
to increase your revenues. If it were that easy, everyone would be doing it.
The first problem with arbitrage is that you can never get a 100% CTR. Not
every 5 cent click you buy is going to give you 30 cents back — and every
impression that doesn’t result in an ad click is going to eat into your profits.
With these kinds of figures (and obviously, yours are going to be different),
you’d need a 16% CTR to break even. (If every ad click costs 5 cents and gives
you 30 cents, you can afford to lose five out of every six clicks or 16%). So
if you can see that you’re getting a 16% CTR, buying advertising on AdWords to
send traffic to your AdSense ads could be a good deal. Or not. The second
problem with arbitrage is that your CTR rate is based on users coming from your
current traffic sources. The users you buy through AdWords might behave
differently. They’ve already clicked on an ad once so they might not want to
click on an ad again.
, because you know they’re the type who do
click on ads, it’s possible that they’re exactly the type who’ll click on the
ads on your page. Results from using arbitrage vary. Some people report that
the clicks they buy on AdWords give them less revenue, others report that
they’ve increased their CTR. The real key to arbitrage success is buying
traffic based on the right keywords. And to do that you need..
WordTracker
WordTracker is a great way to find
keywords to target for arbitrage. The idea is simple: if you can find popular
keywords that few sites are targeting, you can increase the CTR of the ads you
buy and improve the chances that users will click on the ads on your
page. It’s those keywords that will give you the best revenues for
arbitrage—and the most clicks from search engine listings. WordTracker actually
helps in four different ways. First, you enter a keyword—say, “football”.
WordTracker will then give you a list of hundreds of different keywords
related to football—words like “stadium” and “team” and “football player”. Some
of those words you’ll probably have thought of, but lots of them you won’t. Now
you’ve already got more keyword options than when you started!
“Find the best keywords for your website”.
Says it all really! The next step is to see how popular these keywords are.
WordTracker looks across all of the main search engines and tells you how many
people searched for each keyword in the last 60 days. That’s certainly
interesting information in itself but there’s not much point in targeting a
word that 1,000 people search for every couple of months if a million Web pages
are already targeting it. Your ad would appear on page fifty-something of a
search engine listing and get very few clicks. The next stage is where things
get really interesting. Wordtracker compares the number of searches that
people are making for each keyword with the number of sites targeting that
keyword. It even awards each keyword a score that indicates the size of the
opportunity for new pages that want target that particular keyword. It then
becomes easy for you to see which words are likely to give the best search
engine listings—and which will get the most clicks for the lowest prices when
you pay to advertise.
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For example, if you asked WordTracker to
look up the word “football,” you might find that 3,474 people look for
“shoulder-pads” each day but only 2,375 Web pages are targeting that word. If
one of the pages of your football site targets that keyword, you’re almost
certainly going to find yourself high on the search engine listings, giving you
plenty of free traffic. But if you also choose to pay to advertise your site on
a GoogleAd, you can be confident that you’ll get plenty of clicks—and great
revenues.
WordTracker is a fantastic tool. It should
definitely be in your money-making toolkit. Take a look at it at www.wordtracker.com.
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