If you want to make money with Adwords, you will need to keep up to date with the new strategies that are constantly appearing, as well as keeping pace with the changes that
Google makes to its Adwords policies.
In 2007 it was 'kill your competitors' with Day Job Killer and then the many and varied spy systems that tracked your competitors' ads so that you could copy them and blast them out of the water. Some of these systems were on a hugely expensive membership plan.
In the wake of that, people who could not afford such memberships or did not want to spend their whole lives tracking, tweaking and testing Adwords ads began to look around for new ideas. So in early 2008,
internet marketers rediscovered something that was long considered dead - the content network.
If you have come to Adwords in the last couple of years, you may not know that the search and
content networks were once united. Google separated them to give advertisers more control in the days when click fraud was common. Most advertisers immediately (and rightly) turned off the content network for their ads.
However, times have changed and click fraud is no longer a serious problem. Google now shuts down any Adsense account suspected of 'invalid clicks'. This is bad news for the Adsense site owners who can now be put out of business by any bored visitor who repeatedly clicks on their ads. But for Adwords advertisers, it means that the content network is up for grabs again.
Advantages of advertising on the content network instead of the search network include a cheaper cost per click, and a lot more control. You can actually pick the exact sites that you want your ad to appear on.
The last of these points is vitally important. When you are advertising on the content network, always specify target sites for all of your ads. In fact you should go even further and specify the exact pages of the site where you want your ad to appear.
Just like advertising on the search network, you want to make sure that the people who see your ad are very interested in your product. You don't want untargeted clicks. So for example if you are promoting an exercise treadmill, you want your ad on a fitness site, but not on pages about weight training.
It is also better to pick out sites that have their Adsense ads 'above the fold' so that people see them as soon as the page is opened, without having to scroll down. Ads in the 'hot' area toward the top left of the screen will usually do best.
http://www.bestnichearticles.com
For more information visit
Advertising category