After more than two weeks and no more pictures or graphics by my AdSense blocks, my CTR's have only dropped about 1% since removal of them. Now were I getting 1000 clicks a day, I might be upset about that, but since my traffic at my main site is only about 350 uniques a day, that amounts to about 3 clicks a day potentially lost. Were those clicks each worth a dollar it would add up quickly though.
I find it interesting that Google feels that surfers might be fooled into clicking on an ad by using "misleading" graphics. By using "good blending" are we not trying to "fool" them, which is fine to do and in fact Google even tells you how to do it? If that were not the case, then ad blocks with huge pink borders would work just as well as the good blending techniques do in "fooling" someone into clicking on an ad would not be done by all of us using the program?
To me the pictures and graphics were nothing more than attention grabbers like ad banners (before the advent of banner blindness) do with bright colors, flashing graphics, etc. You never thought that you weren't clicking on an ad, but it "caught your attention", and I feel in most cases short of the "pointing arrows or click me to support this site" type graphics, it was no different by lining graphics up with the ad blocks.
It was simply a eye catcher to say to the visitor, "hey I'm an ad but I might have what your looking for so look here before you continue on down the page". It's just using good advertisement techniques. How are they any different than the backgrounds for ad blocks that draw a persons attention to them but those are still OK? Next to them, under them, what's the difference? I'm guessing this will rage on for a while as the rules continue to evolve. I guess I give the average surfer more credit than that.
I just checked my CTR's for yesterday and they were up 2% from the previous two days. I'm starting to think my initial data that told me the pictures helped increase my CTR's was flawed, at least on my main site, as removing the pictures and graphics has not made enough difference to really matter. I'm sure with every site that this will vary, but what it does at least say is that with good blending, the pictures only marginally helped improve it beyond that for me. I know when I first started to blend last year, my CTR's quadrupled immediately following and with some final adjustments after that, increased another 1% to where they currently are. I guess I just need to find another adjustment to get another 1 or 2% back now
It'll be interesting to compare a full months worth of data to see if that trend holds. Then at least if it does, there will be less to be angry about for those that thought the pictures made a "big difference" all things being equal over good quality blending alone.
Technorati Tags: AdSense, AdSense Graphics, AdSense Pictures
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Showing posts with label AdSense TOS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AdSense TOS. Show all posts
Monday, January 22, 2007
Friday, January 19, 2007
Latest AdSense policy updates and explanation
Many people have heard the latest from Google regarding AdSense and pictures but yesterday, they released the entire new policy update on the AdSense site. The part I was most interested in was this as there are some subtle changes and a better "description" of the picture allowances than the original email they sent out explaining it.
From Google's Site the new version can be found here but these two lines I think are paramount for those who have used pictures or graphical gimmicks on their sites. This is under the Encouraging clicks section of the page:
May not direct user attention to the ads via arrows or other graphical gimmicks
May not place misleading images alongside individual ads
The two partial sentences that I put in bold are of special interest to many. It has always stated that you could use arrow or pointers but it's now expanded to include "graphical gimmicks". I have seen and used some different graphical gimmicks in the past and low and behold I was warned last week to remove them as well some images that I had aligned with the ad blocks. The new changes how ever do not disallow the use of backgrounds for the blocks if you choose to do so good news for the people doing that.
I would suggest great caution if you continue use pictures of graphics that line up with you ads. If it helps anyone, to be honest when I removed the graphics, I saw less than percent drop in CTR so not much of a hit.
Technorati Tags: Google Adsense, Adsense Pictures, Adsense Graphics
From Google's Site the new version can be found here but these two lines I think are paramount for those who have used pictures or graphical gimmicks on their sites. This is under the Encouraging clicks section of the page:
May not direct user attention to the ads via arrows or other graphical gimmicks
May not place misleading images alongside individual ads
The two partial sentences that I put in bold are of special interest to many. It has always stated that you could use arrow or pointers but it's now expanded to include "graphical gimmicks". I have seen and used some different graphical gimmicks in the past and low and behold I was warned last week to remove them as well some images that I had aligned with the ad blocks. The new changes how ever do not disallow the use of backgrounds for the blocks if you choose to do so good news for the people doing that.
I would suggest great caution if you continue use pictures of graphics that line up with you ads. If it helps anyone, to be honest when I removed the graphics, I saw less than percent drop in CTR so not much of a hit.
Technorati Tags: Google Adsense, Adsense Pictures, Adsense Graphics
Labels:
AdSense,
AdSense Graphics,
AdSense TOS,
AdSense Violations
Saturday, January 13, 2007
Adsense picture update - January 12th
Well it finally happened. I have received a letter from Google about a policy violation and guess what it referred to? Pictures next to the AdSense ads. Here's what I received yesterday:
"Hello,
While reviewing your account, we noticed that you are currently displaying Google ads in a manner that is not compliant with our policies. For instance, we found violations of AdSense policies on pages such as www.wm8c.com/acne_treatment.htm.
Publishers may not implement Google ads in a manner that disguises the ads in any way, for instance, by formatting neighboring content to look similar to the ads, or by making ads look like games or forum threads. Additionally, publishers may not attempt to associate specific images with the individual ads appearing on their sites. Such an implementation may confuse users who assume that the image is directly related to the advertiser's offerings.
Please make any necessary changes to your web pages in the next 3 business days. We also suggest that you take the time to review our program policies (https://www.google.com/adsense/policies) to ensure that all of your other pages are in compliance."
Now I love this program and I am grateful that it wasn't the dreaded banning letter and I immediately made the changes as requested. If you've read my blog recently, you would know that I had already switched from the pictures I was using, to a slow colored animated graphic. Evidently, this is also not acceptable with the new AdSense guide lines regarding graphics.
My advice? If you like AdSense, remove the graphics before they come knocking. It's not worth the risk to wait for them to tell you that you are in violation.
"Hello,
While reviewing your account, we noticed that you are currently displaying Google ads in a manner that is not compliant with our policies. For instance, we found violations of AdSense policies on pages such as www.wm8c.com/acne_treatment.htm.
Publishers may not implement Google ads in a manner that disguises the ads in any way, for instance, by formatting neighboring content to look similar to the ads, or by making ads look like games or forum threads. Additionally, publishers may not attempt to associate specific images with the individual ads appearing on their sites. Such an implementation may confuse users who assume that the image is directly related to the advertiser's offerings.
Please make any necessary changes to your web pages in the next 3 business days. We also suggest that you take the time to review our program policies (https://www.google.com/adsense/policies) to ensure that all of your other pages are in compliance."
Now I love this program and I am grateful that it wasn't the dreaded banning letter and I immediately made the changes as requested. If you've read my blog recently, you would know that I had already switched from the pictures I was using, to a slow colored animated graphic. Evidently, this is also not acceptable with the new AdSense guide lines regarding graphics.
My advice? If you like AdSense, remove the graphics before they come knocking. It's not worth the risk to wait for them to tell you that you are in violation.
Labels:
AdSense,
AdSense Graphics,
AdSense TOS,
AdSense Violations
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