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Increase Your AdSense Revenue With “Who Sees Ads?”

By Pinyo • Feb 8th, 2008 • Category: Monetization

One key concern about having advertisement on my blog is the fear of alienating my readers; especially regular readers who come to the blog daily and leave comments. Unfortunately, some of the best monetization opportunities call for disruptive ad placement. For example, one of the best performing AdSense ad is the large rectangular block placed inside the content itself.

So, how can a blogger strike a balance between maintaining an appealing blog while maximizing its revenue potential? On my personal finance blog, I struggled to make decent money with AdSense. I can’t reveal my CTR (Click Through Rate) and eCPM (Effective Cost Per 1,000 Impressions), but I thought they were abysmal. After some research, I stumbled upon what seems to be a perfect solution. The plugin is called, “Who Sees Ads?

Who Sees Ads? allows me to show a 300 x 250 AdSense ad block for posts older than 20 days old and for anyone that comes through a search engine (note that these conditions are highly configurable). This means that my regular readers (who mostly read newer posts) wouldn’t see the large and disruptive AdSense ad block at all.

This is what most regular readers see:

Web page with no ad

This is what shown on posts older than 20 days old:

Webpage with ad

The result? My AdSense revenue (measured by CTR and eCPM) increased by over three folds!

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16 Comments

  1. gravatar
    Four Pillars, 8. February 2008, 7:28

    Interesting - I really like this plugin.

    I’ll have to try that ad block in the content - I hate when I see it on other blogs but for search engine visitors it should be ok.

    My click rates etc are awful - I’ll bet they are worse than yours! :)

    Mike

  2. gravatar
    Mrs. Micah, 8. February 2008, 14:37

    Pinyo, you’re my hero.

  3. gravatar
    Patrick, 8. February 2008, 19:08

    Alright… I guess it’s time to install it! :)

  4. gravatar
    Living Off Dividends, 9. February 2008, 3:08

    very interesting. i’ll check it out.

    while your eCPM has obviously increased, has your actual revenue gone up or down?

  5. gravatar
    Living Off Dividends, 9. February 2008, 3:15

    i created separate ad channels for different placements, and removed the lowest eCPM ones.
    that boosted my revenue and eCPM.

  6. gravatar
    Pinyo, 9. February 2008, 7:54

    @Patrick - I’m sure you will love the result.

    @Living Off Dividends - The revenue has been growing steadily. Regarding removing the lowest performing ad, I do the same as well.

  7. gravatar
    Living Off Dividends, 9. February 2008, 7:57

    what about the ratio of traffic growth to revenue growth?

  8. gravatar
    Living Off Dividends, 9. February 2008, 8:05

    hopefully, it’s less than 1!

  9. gravatar
    Pinyo, 9. February 2008, 8:27

    Traffic increased 178% (page views) and AdSense revenue increased 238%.

    But you are already showing large block on your blog, so I don’t think this plugin would help.

  10. gravatar
    David, 9. February 2008, 10:29

    The only problem with that is that if someone comes in with no cookies or a refreshed browser, they see the ads too, even if they are a regular visitor. For example, I see those ads on your site, and I visit almost daily. So just a word to the wise!

  11. gravatar
    Pinyo, 10. February 2008, 9:31

    David - I tried to replicate the problem but couldn’t. I removed one of the referrer variable and just stick with posts that are 20 days or older (which shouldn’t depend on cookies). I hope this will fix the problem.

    Please let me know.

  12. gravatar
    Working at Home Mom, 11. February 2008, 1:10

    That looks pretty cool. I am going to check it out.

  13. gravatar
    Jay, 11. February 2008, 14:00

    Yeah, I’m going to be switching to Wordpress for my new blog and I definitely have to look into this…

  14. gravatar
    mariam, 17. February 2008, 19:35

    I use something similar with Shylock Adsense and there’s also a hack from scratch99.com for that search engine issue. I haven’t implemented the hack yet because quite frankly, my blog isn’t search engine optimized. I’m all over the place :)

    I wonder about the difference between plugins though…

    That’s the hard part if you’re popular with SM, they just kill your Adsense CTR and you get smart priced. That’s okay though as my blog is for fun. If I were more serious about making money, I’d start niche sites.

  15. gravatar
    Pinyo, 19. February 2008, 14:00

    @Jay - Wow, I can barely tell you are on blogger. That’s some good theme. I think it’s definitely worthwhile to switch to WordPress.

    @Mariam - “Shylock Adsense” looks similar “Who Sees Ads?” You’re doing pretty well for a non SEO blog :-)

    As for social media, I think it’s worth sacrificing short-term AdSense CTR to gain new readers and subscribers.

  16. gravatar
    Jay, 19. February 2008, 14:56

    Soon enough, soon enough… I think I’ll probably do it at the end of March.

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Blogthority is a group blog started by members of the M-Network. As a group, we have grown and learned a lot together. We learned many things about blogging, search engines optimization, and web site design along the way — since our blogs are geared toward personal finance discussions, we created Blogthority as an outlet to share these experiences with you.