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Showing posts with label AdWords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AdWords. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 July 2013

How to Find Higher paying Keyword using tools: Adsense with Adword keyword tools?

Higher paying Keyword using tools: Adsense And Adword keyword tools 

Easy to find high paying keywords

This article helps to if you have to get more Adsense earning with effective add high paying advertisement. Then you must be implementing this method in your blog.
If you are using best keyword in your blog or site post. Then google search engine helps to find your blog post after matching the more search keyword.
Now a day’s thousands of keyword tools (online) should available to find best higher paying keyword from google search engine.
The Higher paying keyword research service must be helpful in your blogging. Some of the powerful SEO tools developed by the developer. But its premium service very costly. To use these types of service you have to pay some thousands of dollars.
More of the sites are available till now. That’s called keyword research service with premium or some time for free.

Helps from google search engine

Google search engine always use keyword tools to find the search keyword in word wide server. If you are using high searchable keyword then your blogging must be more powerful and extra ordinary. It will be useful in alexa rank and google page rank also.

Helps from google adsense

Google adsense always worked with the Higher paying keyword. If you are choosing the right Higher paying keyword then your CPC always increase days by day. But thousand of blogger have to worry about your earning. At that time more page views are not effective if your CPC rate is very down.
If you have to increase your CPC rate than you implement the below procedure.
Higher paying keyword will helps to making money on the internet, or earning thought the adsense alternatives also.

Video Tutorial On : Find the higher paying Keyword for More CPC (Cost per click or Pay per click) in Gooogle AdSense account



Use Google adword : To Get high paying keyword and ads on your blog

Step 1
Go forward with Adword keyword tools. If you are already logged with your gmail account then you don’t have to need signup google adword separately.
Remember : if you get message to sing up adword then you have to click on that. After you got the actual graph. Otherwise CPC rate not available for gust users.
Now google adword changed its design and some of the functionality with some batter ideas.
Step 2
Now your next screen will be this :

Login screen1

Step 3
Now you job is start to find the best keyword for to get high paying keyword using Adword keyword tools. Hit the “Search for Keyword And ad Group ideas”
Search for high paying Keyword
Now you have to enter your keyword to check it’s all status using the selected criteria like targeting. Now hit the “Get Ideas” button.
Enter keywords

Now I am search high paying keyword for SEO TIPS with typing in text.
I got below screens.
Thousands of high paying keywords

using this method you get thousand of best keyword with Adword keyword tools.
You can use the releted high pying keywords in your post to get more SEO renk. And high paying Ads on your blog and get effective adsense earnigs.

All the best..
Stay touch with US…

Saturday, 6 July 2013

AdWords external keywords research tool is going to be retired

This quick article shares an observation about the likelihood that Google's free Keywords Research Tool is being turned off.


Most SEO advice says that if SEO is important for your blog, then you should use a keyword research tool to find out the words and phrases that people are actually searching for, and then use these words (so-called "keywords") a lot, because they are most likely to get more visitors for your blog.

There are many tools that can be used to look for keywords, but Google's own keywords research tool is often recommended:  it's free, and no one knows more about key-words than Google does.

The tool is provided as part of the AdWords product (ref AdSense vs AdWords what's the difference).

Usually, you need to sign in to an AdWords account to use their tools.   An AdWords account may be based on your usual Google account, but because it can be used to buy advertising, Google ask you to put a small amount of money into it, so you can use it to pay for advertising campaigns immediately.    (They don't charge you immediately, they just want your account to have a positive balance, so it's able to be used.)

However their Search-based Keywords tool (announced back in 2009) and it's upgraded version, the Keywords-tool ( http://www.adwords.google.com/keywordtool or https://adwords.google.com/select/KeywordToolExternal - both which currently re-direct to https://adwords.google.com/o/Targeting/Explorer?__c=1000000000&__u=1000000000&ideaRequestType=KEYWORD_IDEAS ) have been available without logging in, provided you complete a simple captcha-text .

Today, though, I've noticed this announcement at the top of the page:
In the coming months, the external Keyword Tool will no longer be available. To get keyword ideas, sign in to your AdWords account and try Keyword Planner.

I cannot see any announcements about this in the AdWords blog.   But this actually has very little information about the keywords tool anyway, most of what is there dates from 2008/09, and they haven't used "keyword" as a label for their posts.  

Google aren't in the habit of putting up notices like that which are wrong, so my guess is that, sooner or later, this tool is going to be removed, and their only keywords-research option will be the Keyword Planner, which isn't free .

So maybe it's time to start finding a new favourite free keyword research tool.   Some reviews to get started with:

Or maybe bloggers should just forget about keyword research, and focus SEO-basics, and then on writing good quality, natural-language, unique content.



Related Articles


AdSense vs AdWords what's the difference

 Five reasons why SEO is irrelevant for your blog

Getting started with SEO for Blogger users

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Blocking specific AdSense advertisers from your site

You can stop ads from specific AdSense advertisers from appearing on your blog - provided you know the URL that those advertisers are using.

Why block individual advertisers

Previously, I've described how to set up AdSense on your blog, and how to to block certain categories of AdSense ads from your blog or from individual sites.

But there may be times when you need more control than this, for example if your blog (or other website) has:

Poor contextual advertising fit:

AdSense is a "contextual" advertising programme:  it decides what ads to show to a person on a web-page based on the content of the page and the characteristics of the person viewing it.

But the contents in some blogs attract advertisers with directly opposite points of view.   For example, an anti-hunt blog will have posts about the things that hunters do to animals and why these are bad - but the contextual-advertising approach will probably attract ads from people promoting hunting or selling hunting equipment.

And other blogs just attract straight-out competitors   I've advised one person in the blogger help-forum who was running a blog about a particular educational scholarship and was very unhappy that their blog was showing ads for other scholarships.

Restrictions imposed by other advertisers

One of my blogs has affiliate ads from a particular budget-accommodation travel site.  One of their terms and conditions is that I don't display ads for a list of other websites that they provided.

Advertisers not categorised correctly

Even if you've applied category-filtering to your blog, there may be some advertisers that sneak into the wrong category - for example, an advertisement for diet products that uses pictures that are only slightly suggestive may be listed in the "Weight loss" category, but not the "References to Sex & Sexuality" category.

If you advertise your blog through AdWords

Sometimes, AdWords can be an effective tool for advertising your own blog.   But  in terms of keywords, your blog is likely to be a very good fix.   So there's a high chance that your ads will be shown on your blog, unless you tell AdSense not to.



In any of these cases - and others - you may want to tell AdSense not to show ads from certain advertisers on your blog.   Unfortunately, you cannot quite do this - AdSense doesn't let you identify individual advertisers.   But you can block ads that point to specific websites.


How to block ads from specific companies


Log in to AdSense,


2  Choose the Allow & block ads tab (from the top row)


3  Under Blocking Options (left hand menu), choose Advertiser URLs


4  Click the Block new URLs button.    This opens a window





5  From the Products drop-down, choose one or more products and press Apply (currently at the bottom right corner of the drop-down window).
  • f you just want to keep the ads off your blog, choose the "Content" product.  Or to be certain, choose all of them.

6  Enter the names (URLs) of the sites you want to block
  • Click Learn how to format your URLs for blocking fordetails about how to enter URLs so that you block sites at the correct level.   But in most cases, you just enter the top-level name, eg enter "blogger.com" to stop all ads pointing to anywhere under www.blogger.com

7  Choose one of the reasons.


8  Press Block Sites.


Result:

The newly-blocked site will appear in your list of blocked URLs - which is in alphabetical order.

You can un-block it at any time by going to the same screen, finding it in the list, and clicking the Unblock link at the right hand side of the name/product.



What your visitors will see


Within a short time (maybe even in about 10 minutes), advertisements that point to the URL(s) you entered will not be displayed on your site:  instead, visitors who see AdSense adverts will see other (non-blocked) ads, or Google (public service) ads if no payng ads are available.

Notice the risk for you:- if you block too many potential advertisers, your site may only show public-service or Google ads that don't earn you revenue.


Some final thoughts


Ads which you block because they feel "spammy" can easily re-appear from other not-yet-blocked sites:  folks who make money off them move servers etc regularly.  If you are  determined to keep certain ads off your site, you may need to keep figuring out where the ads are coming from and adding new sites to your blocked-list all the time.

Finding out what sites to block can be challenging, as not every advertiser puts their URL into their graphical ads.    Some ways of doing this include:
  • Looking very hard at the advertisement: 
    Sometimes the company URL is in small text at the bottom
  • Searching for a key phrase from the ad 
    Eg when I wrote this articl,e Blogger-HAT's home page was showing an ad for "Smallest hidden DV in the world" - I suspect I could identify them with Google fairly quickly).
  • Click the ad yourself:  Remember that this is against AdSense's terms and conditions, and that you won't get any revenue for it.   I'm not suggesting that it's good to do this - AdSense know that it occasionally happens by accident, so they are unlikely to penalise you for doing, so long as you don't do it often.
  • Click the same ad on someone else's site:
    This is allowed under AdSense's rules.   But it's not recommended, because the advertiser won't get any benefit from the click, so doing this will tend to put the price they are willing to pay for each down in the longer-term.


Related Articles


Settng up AdSense on your blog

Blocking categories of AdSense ads

Limiting AdSense categories for individual websites

AdSense and AdWords

Other advertising programmes for your blog

Monday, 15 March 2010

AdSense and AdWords - what's the difference?

This article explains the difference between AdSense and AdWords, from a Blogger's perspective.



What are they?

AdSense

This is a product from Google that lets you publish other people's advertisements on your blog:
  • You create the posts (or pages) that ads go on or with, choose where ads should go on your blog, and say what colour scheme to use. 
  • Google deals with the advertiser for you, chooses what ads to put in you blog, and pays you if your ads are "successful" (more about that below).

    AdWords

    This is a product from Google which lets you advertise your blog (or other website) in search results and/or on other people's websites or blogs.
    • You set up the Ad, and say how much you're willing to pay each day and per click.
    • Google negotiates ad placements for you (you're competing with other people who want to advertise in AdSense, and also with advertisers in their other advertising networks), and charges you if readers interact with your ad.




    Costs and Benefits

    AdSense is free for publishers (you are a publisher if you put AdSense ads on your blog) - and you get paid if your readers view or act on certain that are shown on your blog.

    AdWords is not free for advertisers, but many people think that it is cost-effective.  There is a sign-up fee (varies from country to country - for me in Europe recently, it was E10), and you also pay each time that a reader clicks one of your advertisements, or (in some cases) each time your advertisement is displayed.   You have a high level of control over how much you bid to have your advertisement shown (minimum of 1c per click) and can set a maximum budget per day (eg $1.00).


    AdWords is the tool that may generate traffic for you.

    AdSense is the tool that may generate revenue for you.



    Related Articles: 

    Advertising and Blogger:  Things to Consider.

    Setting up AdSense on your Blog

    Putting AdSense ads inside Blogger Posts.