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Showing posts with label Advertising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advertising. Show all posts

Monday, 17 September 2012

Google Affiliate Network has a widget for UK Bloggers

This Quick-Tip is about the Google Advertiser Network widget becoming available for Blogger users based in the UK.





Today, Google Advertisers Network announced that their Blogger widget is now available for some Blogger users in the United Kindgom.

You don't control whether you see the widget or not.  If you:

  • have an AdSense account, and 
  • have linked it to your blog's Earnings tab, and 
  • are blogging in an appropriate niche (ie one that Google Advertiser Network has advertisers for), 

then the widget will show up in your post editor (I'm guessing on the right hand panel) when you are editing a post.

I can't see it myself at the moment, so I have no idea whether you can get rid of it, like you can with the Zemanata post-editor gadget.

Actually, I'm wondering how Blogger decides where someone is based, and why it's relevant: one of my blogs is very specific to Ireland (where I live) but gets a lot of interest from the UK - and lots of people from Ireland buy things direct from the UK anyway.  So I could see some of the UK GAN advertisers being quite relevant.

And as I've mentioned before, this gadget makes it easy to put ads into a post.  But if you can see the gadget, you could easily enough put them into a widget (ie sidebar header or footer) by taking the HTML from the post editor's HTML view, and putting it elsewhere in your blog just like any other 3rd-party code.

Saturday, 4 August 2012

Chitika now supporting all countries

Chitika is one of the advertising programmes that is an alternative to Google AdSense.

Initially, their ads were only shown to website-visitors who were in the USA and Canada.   That list extended a while ago.   Now they say that they're available in all countries.

Actually, their post makes it sound like you can sign-up as a publisher no matter what country you are in.  But I was signed up while they were still limited to showing ads to USA/Canada visitors, despite not being in those countries.   So I'm pretty sure that they mean their ads will be shown in all countries.

Monday, 18 June 2012

Google Advertisers Network - now has UK advertisers

Google Affiliate Network (one of the alternatives to AdSense LINK, which lets you deal with specific, relevant, advertisers) has signed up 30+ UK based advertisers.  Ref:   http://googleaffiliatenetwork-blog.blogspot.ie/2012/06/announcing-new-uk-advertisers.html

(When you're looking for them, don't forget to set Relationship status to "available", instead of the default  "approved".)

Fingers crossed some of these will also be suitable for my Ireland-focussed blog!

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

A new advertising option for Blogger: Google Affiliate Network

If you are already an AdSense publisher, then today's announcment about Google Affiliate Network: Introducing Google Affiliate Ads for Blogger may be of interest.

Google Affiliate Network (GAN) is a different type of advertising programme:  instead of getting paid per click, you get paid per purchase (or whatever other key action the advertiser decides).

So far, it's limited to Blogger users who are based in the USA - presumably because this is where most advertisers are.   It's also limited to "select bloggers" - this seems to mean ones whose blog is a good fit with the available advertisers, and the criteria for "a good fit" is as decided by Google.  This is unlike regular use of the Google Advertisers network, where you apply to a particular advertiser based on your own assessment of the fit.

After you have signed up for AdSense (and, I guess been approved!):
IF GAN options are available to you
THEN they will be shown when you are editing a post, in a gadget that appears in the right-hand Post Settings area.   

This means they will only available from the "new", ie post-Sept-2011 blogger interface.

I guess you will be allowed to copy the HTML code for the GAN advertisement from the post editor, and put it into a regular gadget - since you can put regular GAN adverts into your blog in this way.  But this is a detail that should be checked against their terms and conditions:   as with AdSense, the additional requirements for GAN are glossed over when you are accessing it via Blogger, but I expect that they will still apply.

Friday, 16 December 2011

More categories to ban from your AdSense ads

AdSense has added 88 new categories to the list of advertisement-topics that can be blocked from your sites, including apparel, business, family and sports. The may make it easier to keep ads for competitors off
your blog.

You can block a maximum of 50 categories - and there is still no way to block categories by site.

Ref: How to block competitors ads from your site.

Friday, 23 September 2011

Blogger / Amazon integration is finished - what are our options now?

This article is an update about the interation between Blogger and Amazon, and what options Blogger users have instead.


Blogger and Amazon working together ...

In December 2009, Blogger announced integration with Amazon (which was actually only integration with Amazon.com).

At the time, there were hints that this was only the first of many new money-making  options and programmes for Bloggers.

These features were added to Blogger to support the integration:
  • Ability to sign up for Amazon.com on the Monetize tab
  • Existing Amazon.com users link their Blogger and Amazon account on the Monetize tab
  • A tick-box on the Monetize tab that let "amazon-integrated" bloggers turn on the Amazon-product-preview  without having to install the code
  • Amazon Product Finder (APF) - a gadget that bloggers could use in the the Post Editor, to make a link to a product from Amazon.com without leaving the Post Editor screen
  • A range of gadgets from Amazon were added to the list  in Add a Gadget 

... but not any more?

For months, there have been complaints in Blogger-help-forum that existing Amazon.com associates couldn't  link their Blogger and Amazon.com Amazon.com accounts on the Monetize tab any more: the function just returned an error, or appeared to work, but didn't actually storing the connection.

Now, with the release of Blogger's new interface, the Monetize tab has been renamed Earnings.  There's no mention of Amazon on it, and no sign of the Amazon Product Finder (APF) in the Post-editor.   And there are reports in Blogger-help-forum that people who had APF turned on in "old blogger" find that it's gone in the new interface - and is broken even if they switch back to the old interface.


On the Amazon.com site their official Amazon-Associates blog is now made with TypePad.   I know that I recently saw instructions about putting things (widgets?) into Blogger, that that these commented that blogger has a new look.   However the instruction were still based on the old interface.   And today, I can't find them at all.

There has been nothing said (that I've seen anyway) by either company.  But I think it's safe to assume that the Blogger / Amazon integration has been abandoned.


Why Did This Happen:

My guess is that there are two big issues.

Firstly, Amazon.com is a lot more than just a bookseller:  Google and Amazon are competitors in some areas (eg document storage), so there's bound to be some friction, even though they managed to agree a compromise in 2009.   And possibly that compromise wasn't profitable enough for either of them.

Second, and possibly more importantly, there is an internationalisation issue.

Blogger is a multi-lingual, multi-country platform:  different languages and cultures are catered for within the same platform and subject to the same terms and conditions.  Blogger users all live with the same rules, that are based on American law (eg the 13-year age limit, which is most probably based on America Children's Online Privacy Protection Act).

Amazon, on the other hand, have different platforms for different countries (even amazon.ca for Canada, vs amazon.com for the USA+rest of the world).   This is understandable, because countries have  vastly different laws about on-line selling and taxes, so Amazon's rules need to be quite different in different places.  Even in the European Union,  we see regular updates to the terms and conditions that basically amount to the addition of new countries/languages - Amazon.es (for Spain) was the latest one - and these come with small rule-tweaks too.  These big differences mean that integration with a multi-national product like Blogger is not easy:   there would be lots of on-going issues with making the sites work well together.

My guess is that these two factors combined have killed off the integration.


What can bloggers do instead

You can still sign yourself up for Amazon.com (or Amazon.co.uk, or .ca or whatever-other country), and make the links to products and Amazon-widgets yourself.   Personally, I think this better anyway, because it gives you control ove the look and feel (colours, backgrounds, tracking-IDs) used on the ads, and choices about where to install the HTML on your blog.

There is no alternative for the Amazon Product Finder gadget - except opening Amazon in a different tab, and making the links there as you need them.  It's little bit more work - but only just.

There are still Amazon.com gadgets in the Add a Gadget list  (from Layout in the new interface, Design > Page Elements in the old one) - you can find them under the features tab.



For now at least, it looks like Blogger's monetize tab is limited to AdSense , and it is a money-making option that you can sign up for from within Blogger.  (Even though there are a few vital extra steps that you should take, even though Blogger hasn't told you about them, like blocking certain ad-categories, and stopping malicious use of your AdSense ID).

And there are, of course, many other advertisting programmes and affiliate programmes that you can consider if AdSense doesn't work for your blog.



Related Articles:

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Signing up for Amazon.com

Alternative advertising programmes

Stopping malicious use of your AdSense ID
.
Making links to products and Amazon-widgets yourself

Changing colours and design of Amazon.com advertisements

Installing the Amazon Product Preview code

Amazon / Blogger integration is with Amazon.com only

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Chitika overview

This article is an introduction to the Chitika advertising programme, which is one of the alternatives considered by bloggers whose sites are not eligible to use Google AdSense.


Advertising MonitorChitika is another advertising programme - similar to Google AdSense, but run by a different company with slightly different rules and ways of publishing advertisements.

Ads shown by Chitika are not context-sensitive.  Instead, they are selected for your site using the search-terms a user entered to find the site.

Because they're not context-sensitive, you can display them on the same pages as AdSense ad-units.   At least the reason Chitika give - personally I've never been able to to find the AdSense condition that says "we must be the only context sensitive ads on a page", just one that says "no ads that look like ours".

Who sees Chitika ads:

Origianlly, Chitika ads weren't worldwide:  they were only displayed to readers from Canada and the US who got to your site by searching.   However this has been changed:  now they have two products:
  • Premium, shows ads related to the search query used by people who visit your site and come from one of Chitika's "accepted countries".   Currently (Aug 2011) there are 12 of them, including the USA, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and India.
  • Select, shows less-well-targetted ads to visitors from other countries, or who did not get to your site by searching for something.

If you want, you can opt-out of showing Select ads, so that visitors who don't get Premium ads don't actually see an ad at all.

You can see an example of Chitkia ads here:  this opens a new window showing you this page (the one you're reading now) as it would look to someone who arrives at the site by searching for "Blogger Hints".    


How to sign up for Chitika:

You sign up for Chitika in the usual way - they ask for a range of information about you and your website.   They do personally check each site, so it may take a few days or even weeks for account approval to come through .

It's a bit more "tecchie" to set up than AdSense - mainly because you need to install code from Chitika into your blog, instead of being able to just add a gadget in Blogger.    But (in 2010), I was able to log in for the first time, read the terms and conditions, mess around with some ad-formats, and place ads on my site in less than 2 hours this evening, with no glitches along the way.


Terms and Conditions:

This article is based on my understanding of the terms and conditions of Blogger, AdSense, and Chitika - as at today.   These companies may change their policies at any time, so before you implement anything, it is essential that you read the currrent T&C documents yourself, to sure that your site will comply.

Chitika has some quite stringent conditions.  For example, you can't use it on site promoting sale of alcohol, tobacco, haz-chem, weapons, and some other things.  This bit is quite near the end of their terms-and-conditions document - yet another reason to double-check before you start showing Chitika ads.



Related Articles:



Some other dvertising programmes

Setting up AdSense on your blog

Installing code from advertisers etc into your blog

More details about the Chitika programme.

Sign up for Chitika

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Using Google Analytics to get statistics about AdSense performance on your blog

This article is about how to set up your blog so it collects data about your AdSense performance, using Google Analytics.

Google Analytics and AdSense


Recently, I described options for installing Google Analytics into blogs made with Blogger.

If you have decided to use Analytics, and you are also a Google AdSense publisher (ie person who has AdSense ads on your blog), then you probably want to take one more step, so that you can get statistics about AdSense on your blog from the Analytics tools.


Installing the extra code


After you have created a profile in Analytics, and installed the Analytic settings into your blog, go back to the Analytics Settings tab in Google Analytics.

If you have left the profile, find it and click Edit Profile (currently this is on the right of the screen).

The Profile screen that opens has sections for
  • Main Website Profile Information
  • Goals
  • Filters Applied to Profile
  • Users with Access to Profile
Currently the edit action for each section is in the right hand corner of the heading for the section.   

Click Edit in the title for the Main Website Profile Information section.

At the bottom of the screen, tick Yes, this profile should receive AdSense data

When you tick the button, a window with some code opens.   Copy the code.

Press the Save Changes button  (currently bottom left of the screen.

Install the code you into your blog either in the header or in a HTML/Javascript gadget.

What you and your readers will see


Installing this script has no effect on what your readers see.

But when you go into Analytics and look at any detailed report page, you will find that the AdSense Revenue tab will start to have data in it.   Currently the statistics that are reported are (even if there was no revenue) are:
  • AdSense Revenue
  • The number of AdSense ads that were clicked.
  • AdSense Page Impressions ie the count of of pages displaying AdSense ads that were viewed
  • AdSense CTR, ie the ratio of AdSense ads clicked to ad pages viewed.
  • AdSense eCPM, ie the estimated revenue from AdSense per thousand ad page views (assuming that future viewers and advertisers behave in a similar way to the previous one).

Data is only collected from the time that you installed the code into your blog:  Google does not collect it (at least not in a form that's accessible to you) until you ask them to.

Detailed advertising performance data is only available through Analytics for AdSense:  it's not available for the Google Affiliate Network and most certainly not for competing ad-services like Chitika.



Related Articles:




Installing Google Analytics for your blog

Advertising on your Blog:  some things to consider

AdSense and AdWords - understanding the difference

Putting Chitika ads into your blog

Understanding Google accounts

Adsense: how to stop malicious use of your AdSense account

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, 22 March 2010

Blocking categories of AdSense ads from your Blog

This article is about how to restrict the types of advertisements that AdSense places on your blog.  
 
If you don't have an adult-content warning flag on your blog, then doing this is almost essential for AdSense users, so that you comply with Blogger's Terms and Conditions and ban ads about sex / sexuality.


Overview:

Previously, I've written about setting up Adsense in Blogger, and explained how easy the this is, thanks to the features in the Monetize tab.

Unfortunately, there are a few things that you cannot do in the Monetize tab, and which I believe are essential for every Blogger user who displays AdSense ads.

One step that I strong recommend is stopping malicious use of your AdSense account ID.

Another is restricting the categories of AdSense ads that are displayed - and in particular stopping sexually explicit ads from appearing.

This is because Blogger's Terms and Conditions say that you will only show adult material if it's placed behind an adult-only warning flag - so if you don't stop the ads from showing, you could potentially be breaking the rules.

And depending on the content and audience of your blog, there may be other categories of AdSense ads that you also want to block.


How to block certain categories of advertisements: 

  1. Log in to AdSense (http://www.google.com/adsense)

  2. Go into the Allow and Block Ads tab
  3. Make sure that the Product drop-down (centre of the screen) has Content selected.
  4. Go into the Sensitive Categories tab, and click on the right-hand button beside each category you want to not show on your blog.
    For Blogger, this should include at least Sexually Suggestive, unless your blog has an Adult-content flag
    .
  5. Go into the General categories tab, and do the same.
  6. Go back to step 3, and choose Mobile Content from the Product drop-down.  Then repeat 4 & 5.
    You need to do this even if you don't have a mobile template for your blog:  AdSense's mobile ad-units are being displayed when such blogs are looked at using a Smartphone or similar mobile device.  (They were on one of my sites yesterday, anyway.)
  7. If you use AdSense for feeds, then  go back to step 3, and choose Feeds from the Product drop-down,  then repeat 4 & 5
Once a category is blocked, there will be small red cross-circle and the word "blocked" beside it.


There is no need to press Save, your choices are saved automatically.  


You can turn a category on again by clicking on the left-hand button, ie the one beside the banned symbol.

new adsense interface screen for disallowing certain advertising categories fro all your websites
Yes, the numbers don't make sense:  I used MS Paint to mix them up, so Google cannot say that I'm revealing confidential details about my AdSense performance.


What your readers see:

As far as I know, the changes take place pretty much straight away:  AdSense takes ads from the blocked categories out of the pool of ads that are able to be shown on your site.   (If you have examples where it has taken longer, please leave a comment below.)



Choosing what categories to block:

Google kindly tell you what percentage of recent revenue you would not have got, if you had each category blocked.   You may find this useful in deciding whether to block any other categories.

Personally, I don't:  blocking categories is about making sure that I get ads that are appropriate for my site, not about making revenue.

But it comes down to your blog, and what's the best thing to do in your area.


Blocking just for a specific blog:

Currently, it's only possible to block categories at AdSense account level, not at web-site / blog level.  This is annoying because it may mean that you need to block some profitable categories from some web-sites in order to stop them going on any of your sites.  Hopefully Google will change this feature in the future.



Related Articles: 



Stopping malicious use of your AdSense account ID.

Putting AdSense ads right inside your posts.

Advertising and Blogger - things to consider 

Showing image-only AdSense ads in Blogger

Using Google Analytics to get information about your AdSense performance

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.

    Wednesday, 3 March 2010

    Chitika | Select - expanding beyond search-traffic

    On Mon 8 March, Chitika are introducing Chitika Select, a new advertising product that displays ads to some additional readers.  This article is an initial overview of the implications for Blogger users.


    Background:

    Previously I've given an overview of Chitika.

    At the time I wrote it, ads were only shown to visitors from the US and Canada (based on their IP address) who got to the website by searching.   That has now changed.


    What's Changing?
    From Mon 8 March 2010, Chitika are introducing a new product called Chitika | Select, which they're describing as an upgrade to Chitkia | Premium.  Under this new approach, ads will be displayed to readers who get to your site by search AND to others who some statistical techniques have predicted are more likely to click on ads.


    Impact for Blogger users and readers.
    On Mon 8 March 2010, all existing Chitka | Premium ads will be upgraded to Chitika | Select - unless you opt-out of this by logging in to your account, going in to the My Account tab, and ticking the option(s) at the very bottom of the page.

    Chitika account settings - options for not showing ads to non-search traffic, and not showing banner or image ads


    Your US and Canada readers may start to see more ads:
    • Whether or not the do depends on their behaviour (and I'm guessing it will take a while to work out what sort of factors mean that people are predicted by be ad-clickers).
    • Worst-case, seeing more ads could convince more readers to install ad-blocker software.

    Some ads (but not all of them) may look different - we don't have any details about this yet, and I'd guess won't until 8 March at least.

    The announcements say that Chitika | Select ads will include both pay-per-click and pay-per-impression (CPM) banner and image ads, but they don't actually say whether the latter are a new feature being introduced with Select or not.  The way that the opt-out feature is presented makes me think that they're probably new, though.


    What's not changing:

    Readers who
    • didn't get to the blog by searching, and 
    • who also aren't included in the group that Select ads are shown to
    will continue to not see any Chitika ads:   the ad-space simply collapses, without showing anything else or displaying alternative ads

    The alternative-ads feature will continue to work for Chitika Premium ads, but it wont' be there for Select.

    There are some other Chitika products apart from Premium, but they're more focussed to shopping sites, so probably not used by Blog-spot users, and they don't appear to be affected.

    For now, Chitika Select is only available for US/Canada readers.   They say that the technology introduced behind Select will let them change this in the future, but it's not changing for now.


    Related Articles:



    Chitika Overview

    Putting Chitika ads into your Blog

    Extra customization of Chitkia ads

    And from Chitika:

    Thursday, 18 February 2010

    Setting up AdSense on your Blog

    This article is about the issues involved with using AdSense ads on Blogger blogs.  It discusses some things you should do (using the AdSense application), even though Blogger doesn't currently enforce them.



    Blogger have made it very easy for you to put AdSense ads onto your Blog: you simply go into the Earnings tab, and go through an apparently simple sign-up process.

    But there are a few things that you should be aware of, and they're not all obvious from the information that you are given initially.

    There's a two-step sign-up process - and if you are successful, there are things that you a really should to to protect yourself from people who might do things to damage your account.

    Read on for more details.


    Getting Started


    Go into Blogger's Earning's tab, and say where you want the ads to appear

    (Initially, just accept the recommended option:  you can choose the ad positions again later, and when you do, you will be able to customise various ad-features, eg colors, as well.)



    Either choose an existing account, or apply for a new one by filling out the form they give you.

    Each person is only allowed one AdSense account so you must  always use an existing account if you have one.

    If you don't already have an AdSense account, think carefully about what Google account it should be associated with.   (I made a mistake initially, and almost set mine up on an account that I want to give away one day - luckily I got help from Google to sort it out, but it could have been a major mistake.



    At the bottom of the form, you agree to some terms and conditions, including the AdSense program policies and a summarised list, which currently says that you
    • won't click Google ads on your own pages.
    • won't put ads on sites that have incentives to click on ads.
    • won't put ads on sites involved in distribution of copyrighted materials.
    • won't put ads on sites that include pornographic content.
    • don't already have an approved AdSense account.
    and
    • have read the AdSense Program Policies.
    • can get cheques made out to the name you've given.

    From the Blogger side you may think that this is all that is needed.   But that's not quite true:  Bloggers who apply to AdSense needs to go through the same application and approval process as anyone else, they just have a simpler way than most of providing the necessary information to Google.   And completing that form is just the first step.


    Approval Process


    Update @ January 2013:

    If your blog uses a .blogspot domain, there is now an updated one-step approval process for hosted-publishers.

    But if you use a custom domain, the following information about the two-step process still applies.

    And I suspect - but have not yet confirmed - that if you switch your blog from blogspot to a custom domain after you have signed up via the one-step process, then you will have to go through the two-step process on the new domain.


    Original information:

    Google do a two step process, beginning with preliminary checks on the site and the submitted details.   If the application passes through this first stage, Google
    • Notify you by email, 
    • Give you "account access", and 
    • Give you some ad code to place on the submitted site. 

    You must put the ad code on your site, as the review process can’t be completed until the ad code is implemented.

    Real advertisements don't appear once the initial ad-code is put onto the site.   Instead, temporary "blank ads" are placed that blend in with the background.    And if you log in to your AdSense account at this stage, you'll see a note saying that you are still under review.

    After you've placed the review code, Google look at your site again, and decide whether or not to accept you as a publisher.    Then they send you an email, telling you the decision.


    Note:  that is what Google say for all AdSense signups (ref:   New Publisher Application Process).   It's possible that it is automated for prospective AdSense publishers who sign up via Blogger.   (And I cannot check it out myself, because I now have an account!)

    All going well, your application will be approved and you get an email notifying you of your publisher ID,  and this ID is saved to your Blog as well.

    However sometimes it's not quite so straightforward.   Advice from the AdSense help forums is that what is required to get approved varies between countries and even applications:  as time has gone on the requirements have become tougher, because so many people think they can get rich from Adsense by setting up a blog with a single post that they copied from somewhere.  It's always a good idea to have 10+ pages of original content on your blog before applying for an AdSense account - and be aware that for people from some countries, the blog needs to have been running for at least six months.


    References:


    You need to have a Privacy Policy


    One of the Terms and Conditions that you agree to is that any site where you display AdSense Ads will have a privacy policy.

    You didn't need this in place when I applied to AdSense, although I've heard of cases when prospective publishers were to do one before their account is approved.

    But you do need to have it when you start having AdSense ads on your blog.

    As an example, see the privacy policy for this site, which is found at the very bottom left corner of the page.   You might like to make your policy similar - but you must not just copy it:   you need to think about the privacy issues that apply to your site, and also about the laws that apply in your country (since you may be storing some off-line information too).


    Customizing your Ads


    Once your AdSense account is approved, you can change to the ad-position options using the Earnings tab.

    OR

    you can go to the Layout tab, and to add AdSense gadgets to the sidebar, header or footer (depending on what your template allows). 

    Also, you control whether ads are shown between posts from the Layout > Blog Posts (edit) tab:  if you do this, you need to be aware of the limits on the number of ads per page.


    OR you may want to put ads right into your blog posts, rather than having them on the sidebar etc where many readers will miss them.





    All that said, my own preference is to get the ad-code from AdSense, and install it like I would install any other 3rd party HTML code:   this lets me access the latest ad-sizes and have better control over colour-schemes and showing image-only ads.


    Next steps:


    Blogger makes this whole process very easy, and you don't have to log in to the AdSense application at all. 

    However there there are some reasons why Blogger users should get to know the AdSense application, and do some things in it.  These include:
    Also, at the moment you need to use it to monitor your income because there are some problems with the data in the Monetize tab.

    And once you have an AdSense account, you may like to consider setting up a custom-search-engine for your blog, instead of the standard search-widget, so that you can display your ads instead of Google's ads on the search-results page.

    If you need to troubleshoot why your ads are not showing properly, use this Google-provided tool:   https://support.google.com/adsense/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1208336



    Related Articles:




    Securing your AdSense account against malicious use

    Fiiltering the categories of ads that you show

    Showing image-only AdSense ads

    Putt AdSense ads into your blog posts

    How many AdSense ads to show on each screen.

    Putting HTML from a 3rd party into your blog

    Transferring a blog from one Google account to another

    Giving your blog a search-widget

    Setting up AdSense on your Blog

    Showing image-only AdSense ads in your Blog

    Tuesday, 9 February 2010

    Advertising Programmes

    This article introduces some of the different advertising programmes that are available to "publishers" - which includes people who write blogs.


    Advertising and Affiliate Marketing

    Google's AdSense is the best-known, but actually there are number of advertising programmes that you could use on your blog.  There are also a number of affiliate marketing programmes - these are similar (you are advertising the programme), but also different in that you are actively trying to generate sales for them.

    Every programme has different terms and conditions.  You need to know about them in detail, to make sure you're not at risk of getting barred from the program:  for most, once you're banned, you're out for life  (so far anyway:  it will be interesting to see if the same rules still apply in 20 years time).


    Some Advertising Programmes:

    This list is a work-in-progress of programmes that I know about so far.   It has brief notes about what I know about them, and where to find more info.


    Google AdSense Every Blogger user's first option - and rightly so, because Google gives us great software to use.

    A help-forum article about putting AdSense and other ads on the same page.

    And a couple articles from me, about things that Google / AdSense forget to tell people who sign up through Blogger.:
    Google Affiliate NetworkUpdate:   This program has now been withdrawn.

    This lets you select ads from specific advertisers (ie affiliates), rather than get served ads based on your sites context.  Payment is "Cost-per-action" (eg commission on sales) rather than per click or per view, and it appears in your AdSense account about a month after the action happens.

    You need to sign up and be approved (though I'm 99.9% certain that you should use the same Google account that you use for AdSense to do this).   The official criteria for joining are that you:
    • Manage a site that attracts a desirable audience.
    • Can test advertising offers and nurture the most productive relationships.
    • Are an expert in driving and converting visitor traffic.
    • Adhere strictly to Google Affiliate Network quality standards and advertiser policies.
    Doubleclick for Publishers (DFP) - Small BusinessAnother part of the google family - targetted at small businesses who've started receiving enquiries about direct advertising on their sites.     Home page.
    Amazon Associates through Amazon.comSome articles about using Amazon Associates on Blogger

    Amazon Associates through amazon.co.ukMost of the articles are relevant for this programme too - just remember to log in to the right Amazon.
    ChitikaInitially this was only good for blogs that got search-traffic from US/Canada.   However they've gone international, and added a new programme that puts ads on pages for some non-search traffic, too.    They've also started to appear stricter about who they'll accept (eg taking 2-3 weeks to review your site to see if they'll accept you for their programme.)   And they're putting a lot of effort into mobile advertising.

    See Chitika overview for more details
    Text-link-adsOnly just found out about them ... need to explore some more
    Vibrant MediaDynamic text-ads, don't know anything more about them, except that there's sound on the home page of their website (don't look at it in the office! - unless your blogging-desk is your office of course.)
    NuffnangDescribes itself as Asia Pacific's first Blog advertising network. Better if you're based in the right part of Asia (payment is in RM).
    Commission Junction Text / Bannner ads - not contextual.
    PubmaticTwo versions: 
    PubMatic Premier for publishers with more than 100 million ad impressions a month

    PubMatic Self-Service Platform for publishers with less than 100 million impressions per month .  This is not an advertising network itself, just a different way to work with advertising networks.   You need to have an account (existing or new) with each network you work with thru PubMatic.
    eBay Partner Network This is an affiliate-marketing programme, a bit like Amazon Associates except you're promoting eBay as a place to buy and sell, rather than specific product that they sell. Here is an article about eBPN
    ViglinkAnother network programme: Viglink aggregates across lots of other affiliate programmes, meaning that you don't have to sign up with each of them.   They say that if you already have affiliated links on your site, no problem they'll leave them alone.  But for all links that aren't coded with affiliate code, they'll see if an affiliate programme applies and if so, ensure it's used.  

    BuySellAdds.com

    An on-line ad exchange, supports bloggers from May 2012

    BlogAds Specialises in letting bloggers sell advertising slots on their blog. Has been in existence since 2002, looks like a good option for blogs that get enough traffic (at least 30,000 impressions per month for niche blogs - certain niches only). Payment monthly through PayPal, $75 threshold applies. Some other options, too.
    Lijit Another ad-slot selling company



    Deal Direct

    You can also sell advertisements directly, not through a programme.

    This can be a lot more work (writing terms-and-conditions, advertising your offer, chasing sales leads, negotiating contracts, preparing invoices, generating monthly reports, following up queries).

    But it may be a good approach for niche blogs, for example ones with a geographical niche ad and therefore a  limited readership who are likely to be highly drawn to local ads.  You might even offer some advertisements for free - eg the way it's done here.



    Related Articles:


    Things to consider about putting advertising on your Blogspot / Blogger blog.

    Putting AdSense ads inside Blogger posts

    Troubleshooting AdSense ads

    Getting Image-only AdSense ads in Blogger

    An introduction to advertising on Chitika

    Putting Chitika ads into your blog

    Amazon Associates and Blogger

    Advertising & Blogger: things to consider

    This article discusses some things to keep in mind when you are putting advertising on your blog.


    Overview:

    If you are considering putting advertising onto your blog, there are some basic things that you need to think about.  These include broader philosophical questions, right down to nuts-and-bolts technical concerns.

    This article is not a definitive guide - see somewhere like ProBlogger for that.   Rather it's a collections of thoughts about the issues specifically related to Google's Blogger and its relationship with advertisers.   And it may include some thoughts about philosophical and policy issues, if I do any deep research or thinkng about these in the future.

    Terms and Conditions:

    There are lots and lots of possible advertising and affiliate marketing programmes.

    Staying within the programme of terms and conditions (often called T&C's) for every programme that you participate in is important.   Every advertising programme has terms and conditions.   You need to find the ones that apply to the programme(s) you are considering.  Read them.  Remember them.  Follow them.   Keep up-to-date.

    Also, keep an eye on Blogger's T&C's and content policy too, in case they have any impact on what advertising you are allowed to carry.


    Advert Co-location:

    Not every type of advertising can be shown on the same web-page as every other type of advertising.  See the point about about terms-and-conditions.   And besides - you need some space on your blog for content, which is what keeps advertisement-viewers coming to you in the first place!

    Blogger doesn't have any automatic support for conditionally showing advertising.  If any programme you have has constraints like this, then you may need to do some programming in order to use that programme.


    Placing ads:

    If you want to use advertising that isn't integrated with Blogger through the Monetize tab, then you're going to have to place blocks of HTML code into gadgets or into pages.

    You don't have to write the code (the advertising network does that), or change it.  You just have to copy and paste it, and put the HTML into your blog, wherever you want the advertising to do.   (Note:  HTML and Javascript are the only types of code you can use.   No SQL.   No php.)

    If you're not comfortable-enough doing this with the Blogger template that you have, then stick to the Blogger-endorsed programmes that can be added through the Monetize tab.




    Experiment, and Track Progress:

    Marketing is an art and science.   So can use scientific techniques for data gathering.   Experiment with altrnative ad-placement.   Maybe even create a 2nd non-public blog where you can test how things look when you set up ads (and other gadgets, for that matter).  Only put them into your real blog when you're happy with how they work.   Once your ad is live, track your progress.

    To effectively track progress, you need to keep a list of the date when you made changes to your site, and then do regular data-analysis to see what effect these changes have on your number of visitors, and their behaviour.    This is tedious - but if you really want to know what works and what doesn't, it needs to be done.


    Watch your ad-contents:

    Make sure you know what types of things the programme you have chosen is advertising.  With Blogger, you (we!) are getting web-hosting for "free" (we have to watch their ads), and domain registration very cheaply.   Make sure that the advertising you use doesn't cause you to violate Blogger's terms and conditions.  I'm thinking especially about Adult/Pornographic content here, but I guess it could apply to other things too.

    If you are using AdSense, it's pretty much essential to manage the categories of ads that AdSense displays.



    Related Articles:



    Managing the categories of ads that AdSense displays.

    Putting HTML from advertisers into your blog

    A short list of advertising and affiliate marketing programmes

    Wednesday, 13 January 2010

    Targeting AdSense ads to a subset of page content

    There are some websites where contextual targetting is not a good idea, because they attract the wrong sort of advertisements.  For AdSense, one  work-around is to target your ad-content to a certain sub-section of the overall post..

    Contextal Advertising 

    Google's AdSense is perhaps one of the best known contextual advertising programmes.

    It works by looking at the page that and advert is to be shown on, and choosing a suitable ad for that page based on the key words shown on the page.

    In many cases, this works well:  a page about losing weight will have lots of words that attract ads from a weight loss company, for example.

    But there are cases when it doesn't work so well:  a blog exposing the "myths" of conventional medicine, and suggesting natural remedies for many problems may well target advertisements from mainstream practitioners and companies.


    To avoid this, use section targetting.


    Section targeing tells Google what sections to take more (and less) notice of when matching ads to page content.

    It can be particularly useful to get some parts of sites ignored.  For example, if you have a paragraph like
    "my site shows blah, blah, blah, excluding foo1, foo2 and foo3"

    and foo1, foo2 and foo3 are things that there are a lot of irrelevant ads for, then using targeting to say "ignore the bit starting with excluding" might be a good idea.



    For instructions how to do section targeting that works with AdSense, see:  https://www.google.com/adsense/support/bin/answer.py?answer=23168





    What your readers see

    Ideally, the only difference that your readers will see is more relevant advertising.



    Related Articles:



    Some alternative advertising programmes.

    Protect your AdSense ID from malicious use.

    Controlling the categories of ads tha tyour blog displays.