Ad Placement: Where To Put Your Ads?
Location is everything. The world's best ad won't deliver if it isn't visible in the first place. But after much experimentation with Google AdSense, I know that the most visible ads aren't always the most effective. In fact, they're likely to get ignored as 'blatant advertising'.
What does work is wise placement. Put them where your content is most likely to interest and engage your visitors.
You can create several 'points of interest' with the wise use of graphics, tables and other layout techniques.
Once you have your visitor's attention with engaging and meaningful content, they are most likely to read and click on relevant ads. And that is precisely what Google wants "educated" clicks from real prospects, not random visits from bored people.
Here are a few simple tips to make your ads 'click'!
Go With The 'Flow'
Identify the reading patterns of your visitors. What draws their attention first? What makes them 'click'?
Like I said, you want to put your ads in areas that draw your visitors in with interesting content. There's no point in putting your ads in some out of the way place where no one ever looks.
Your users will follow your content, so you need to make sure that your ads follow th at content too.
Look at the design and layout of your webpage, identify the places that you think most of your users look and mark each of them as a likely spot to put your ads.
Google actually offers a pretty neat tool to help you identify where your users are most likely to look. Their heat map at https://www.google.com/support/adsense/bin/static.py?page= tips.html sums up the options pretty well:
Google says that certain areas are more effective than others. Researchers have also found that when people look at a website, their eyes start in the top left hand corner and then travel down the page from left to right.
All of this is true but the hottest areas can vary from site to site. You will need to experiment to find the very best places for you.
Above The Fold
One general rule on the Internet is that people spend most of their time on a site above the fold.
The first thing people do when they reach a website is to absorb as much information as possible before they start scrolling. The part of the page that they can see without scrolling is called above the fold.
That's where you want your ads.
The number of links that appear above the fold affect how likely people are to click on your AdSense ads. That's why more ads doesn't always mean more money!
Google always puts the top-paying ads on the top and the lowest-paying ones at the bottom. If you have a stack with three or more ads, the cheaper ads might steal attention away from high-paying ads and clutter up your website.
You don't want ads and links competing against each other. If you want to increase your earnings per click, remember: Less is More! An d that s particularly true above the fold.
Using Tables
I've already mentioned that one of the principles of a high click-through rate is to make your sites blend into the page. The more you position your sites to blend into the page, the better your clickthrough rate will be.
One very neat way to help your ads blend in to the site is to place them in tables.
In the example below, Chris Pirillo again skillfully drops his AdSense into a table for a clean and attractive look that turns AdSense into a new focal point. See how he does it at www.lockergnome.com.
Want to get the same results with your web page?
Dave Taylor (www.intuitive.com) shares this simple code to create a left-aligned table containing AdSense. Just paste this code where you want AdSense to appear.
Easy!
Complementing Your Ads
Everything I've discussed so far has been about placing your ads where your users will be looking. That's pretty easy. Bu t there s an alternative strategy, which can be very powerful: bringing your users to your ads.
Now, you have to be careful here. Google forbids you from saying to users. Look over here and click on the ads... I want the money. And that's reasonable. But with some clever design work, you can still guide your users to look in that direction.
The rule to remember here is that images attract eyes. When a user loads a Web page, he's always going to look at the pictures. It doesn't matter how interesting the text, how many pictures you've used or how few you can be confident that by the time the u ser clicks away, he ll have looked at all the pictures.
He might not have read all the text. But he will have seen all the pictures.
If you're thinking, Great, then I'll load up on image ads, think again. There's a difference between seeing the ads and clicking them. Google isn't going to pay you every time a user sees your ad, not even for CPM ads (Google will pay you when the page is loaded, whether the user sees the ad or not.)
Users will see image ads. But they won't click on them.
What you can do though is to place images near your ads.
People are always going to look at the icon. When they look at the icon, they'll see the ads.
There are all sorts of ways you can do this, but probably the best method is to first place you r ads and then think about which images you can place near them.
Of course, you don't just have to use images. You could also use a Submit button , a next link or anything else that users will have to look at on your page.
A search box for example is an excellent spot. You know your users are about to look for something and click away. Why not offer them some of your own options.
There's a good chance that pulling your users eyes in this way will in crease your click-through rates.

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