How to boost your Google Adsense earnings in 6 easy steps

by Hugh on March 31, 2009

Google Adsense has been around for several years now, and in that time Google have refined and expanded the range of tools available to publishers to monetise content.  The internet is full of articles – some bullshit, some not – about how to earn more from Google Adsense, but here’s a few tips for you from some of my recent optimization.

1. A high CTR (clickthrough rate) doesn’t mean higher earnings

Plenty of bloggers and internet publishers will tell you that the bigger formats – 338×250 and 300×250 work best when showing text-only ads, especially when embedded within content.  Whilst they are correct in some instances, i’ve actually found the 250×250 format to be better performing overall.

In most instances where i’ve tested the 338×250 vs the 250×250, the CTR for the former was higher, but the eCPM (effective CPM) for the 250×250 was double that of larger format.  Why is this?  Simply put, the smaller format usually shows between 2-3 text ads per instance, where the larger can show up to 4 text ads per instance.

When you show more text ads per instance, you’re letting the lower bidders show on your page – don’t forget, Google Adwords is one big bidding system where you pay more per click for the most popular keywords and keystrings.

Experiment – don’t focus on CTR, focus on eCPM.

2. Border when not near content, borderless when within content.

In blog style articles, where you may have several paragraphs of text taking up a large portion of the page, a borderless format implementation works best.  This allows the text ads to blend in with your content in a much neater way, and for the readers eye to be drawn to them in a natural way.

The opposite applies when the ad format is placed well away from content – for example above or to the right of a graph or table where ads cannot be integrated deeply within the content.  A border should be placed around the ads do draw the  eye to them, but don’t be too garish.  If your ad colours are two loud, users will become ‘blind’ to them, and ignore them.

3. Blend your ads to match the colour and layout of your site.

Back in the early days of Adsense, some ‘experts’ recommended using horrible red and yellow combinations to draw the user to the ads, even if your site was a simple black text on white background design.  As well as annoying your users enough to make them stay away forever, loud and annoying colour combinations simply turn users attention away from the ads (see above).

Integrate the text ads to match your site.  Make the ad title colour match the regular link colour across your site, the ad text should match the font of your site, and the url colour should match a secondary colour from your site design, or indeed a neutral grey shape can work well too.

Make sure to follow the guidelines in point (2) above if you’re using borders around your adsense implementations.  The border colour should also match a primary or secondary colour in your site design, or even a neutral shade of grey would work well.

4. Abide by the Adsense Terms of Service.

Don’t try to encourage clicks to your ads by using text like ‘Please click our ads to help us’, or ‘Links we like’.  You can use ‘Ads by Google’, or ‘Sponsored Links’.  That’s it.  If you try to take the piss out of Google they will stop serving ads to you, and may ban you entirely.

Also, don’t click on your own ads, or have your friends click them.  Aside from getting you banned from Google, you’re simply wasting valued advertisers’ money, and nobody wants to piss off the very people who pay their bills!

5. Experiment, track, and keep experimenting.  Set up channels.

Adsense has a great interface for running reports by format, by day, and by channel.  Every time you create some adsense code, add it to a channel so you can track the performance of the format every time you make changes to it.

I use an excel spreadsheet to record the site (I have several), ad size, colour combinations, CTR, eCPM, and earnings for each format on a daily basis.  This allows me to record the effect of every change I make to my adsense implementations, so I can roll back to previous versions if any of my changes have a negative effect.

6. Keep focussing on content!

Don’t let your optimisation of Adsense get in the way of what you should be doing most regularly – creating great websites and great content for Google to serve high-earning ads to.  There are plenty of useless ebooks out there telling you to research high earning keyword topics to write about.

Don’t bother with those ebooks, or the ‘advice’ in them.  Just write about what you love – you’ll be able to write better content more often, increasing repeat visits, adsense earnings, and your enthusiasm for writing!

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Jan Birsa April 1, 2009 at 6:10 pm

Absolutely loved these tips. BTW, how did you add the ads inside the post? Whats the code for the template file?

Hugh April 1, 2009 at 6:19 pm

Hi Jan,

Thanks for the comment :-)

It really depends on what theme you’re using. Usually you’ll find the area within the index.php file in your wordpress theme, but some themes might render posts in other parts of the theme.

Jan Birsa April 1, 2009 at 8:25 pm

Well, I need the ads to be wrapped by content…

Dhean January 28, 2010 at 4:38 am

great post..i try to learn more and more about adsense, and i think i found new tips at your blog. i newbie blogger and try to monetize my blog with adsense. do yo have more tips and trick about boosting adsense earning?

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