How to Earn Money Through Google Adsense

Posted by Lionel on December 24, 2009

Google’s AdSense is a fascinating revenue-sharing opportunity for small, medium and large web sites. Some webmasters are designing brand new sites specifically for serving AdSense text ads, however it’s against the AdSense rules to design a site purely for AdSense, so you’ll want to include a few Affiliate links or sell your own product, too.

Steps

  1. Determine a goal for what you want to earn using AdSense. Of course, you want to earn a lot, but make sure it's realistic.

    • Consider that to earn $1 a day per page, you need, per page…

      • visitors, 5% click-through rate (CTR) and average 5c payout.
      • Or 200 visitors, 10% CTR and an average 5c payout.
      • Or 100 visitors, 10% CTR, and an average 10c payout.
      • Or 100 visitors, 5% CTR, and an average 20c payout


  2. Consider whether these goals will be possible given your site. If it's too tough, create two sites, each attracting half the number.
  3. Start building keyword-rich pages containing well researched, profitable keywords, and get lots of high quality links to your site. For example, if your site is about topics such as debt consolidation, web hosting or asbestos-related cancer, you’ll earn much more per click than if it’s about free things. On the other hand, if you concentrate only on top-paying keywords, you’ll face an awful lot of tough competition. What you want are keywords that are high in demand and low in supply, So do some careful keyword research before you build your pages.


Tips

  • Quality is the most important part of any web site. If your site does not contain the content of expected quality the visitor might not come back,
  • A great resource for earning money is using traffic driving sites like Flixya. You can sign up for Google Adsense and Flixya, without the costs or time needed to build traffic or your own site.
  • Avoid non-English characters on English pages. There is a bug which can cause these pages to show irrelevant French ads.
  • Although Google doesn't release exact details as to how they determine the ads to serve on a given page, they do say that it's the text content of the page that matters, not the meta tags.


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