May 09

I like Google Adsense. It contributes a nice little chunk of change to my income each and every month.That said, I don’t and won’t follow the lead of those whose sites earn only through Google Adsense.

What happens when their Adsense accounts are shut down by Google? It does happen, and they’re left scrambling to replace lost income!

Don’t believe me?

Try clicking on your own site’s Google Adsense links once or twice and see how fast Google shuts down your Adsense account. (No, don’t really do that!)

Does it make sense to build an entire site around financial products to make a few bucks on Adsense clicks, when you can earn up to $40 for a completed credit card application?

Not to me, it doesn’t.

I use Google Adsense to supplement my affiliate income, not replace it.

Basically, it comes down to value. Value for you, and value for your visitors.

Sites that monetize only with Adsense aren’t getting real value from their site’s real estate.

Too, it’s important to me that my visitors find information of value to them on my sites, and I do that by offering balanced product reviews and articles on the related topic.

If after reading my material, they’re not interested in the product offerings, then perhaps they’ll see an Adwords ad that captures their interest.

Placing Google Adsense on your site is a strategy that will put money in your pockets even if your visitors don’t buy.

However, in the same way you need to be smart about choosing lucrative affiliate programs, you also want to do your homework when monetizing topics with Adsense.

For example, I was recently re-reading some information about under-represented niche topics with huge markets.

One of the topics suggested as a winner was ’snakes’.

I found that hard to believe, so I did my own research.

The term ’snakes’ had 152,857 searches at Overture and its partners in January, so yes, that’s a pretty sizeable interest in ’snakes’.

OK, but who’s your market? Kids looking for snake pictures for a school project? People who want to buy snakes? Someone who wants to visit Snake River?

What are you going to sell? Snakes? The game, ‘Snake’? A $10 book on which you make a 15% commission? A $60 poster from allposters.com on which you earn a 30% commission seemed to be the best bet, but how many people want to pay $60 for snake posters?

To me, that’s not enough interest or commission potential to build a site around ’snakes’.

So, what about incorporating Adsense to boost potential profitability?

Well, search Google for ’snakes’. See what comes up in the Google Adwords column?

NOTHING!

If you want to monetize with Adsense, you have to pick topics whose Adwords advertisers spend mega-bucks per click.

How do you figure out what those topics are?

Easy!

If you haven’t already done so, open up a Google Adwords account and create a new campaign. Add a list of keywords (one niche topic at a time), then click on ‘estimate traffic’. The resulting page will show you the average cost per click for each keyword.

Make note of the most expensive words in that list and optimize your pages for those phrases.

THAT’s how you’ll really profit with Google Adsense.

Warning! Warning! Warning!

Once you find a lucrative topic that is projected to cost you $36,987.57 per day, don’t forget to pause that campaign, or delete it altogether! :-)

Article by Rosalind Gardner

posted by Deron Dohanich \\ tags:

Feb 20

On the cover of the Super Affiliate Handbook is a graphic that says “If I Can Do It, You Can TOO!” - meaning if I can succeed at affiliate marketing, you can too!

That is SO true, especially when I look back on events of the past week.

Let’s begin with the fact that I am NOT a geek. If something merely hints at being software - I run the other way or I break it.

Those seem to be my only options.

So, when I set up an update order process for the Handbook, I used Paypal, without bothering to check if my usual system, DLGuard, offered that option.

And because we needed to confirm original receipt numbers before sending download information, I elected to process orders manually.

So, Joel and I processed each order by hand.

Aargh. Time consuming, finnicky business.

Thank goodness for glucosamine with chondroitin which helps me avoid surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome.

NOT doing order processing, is in my humble opinion, still one of the best reasons to be an affiliate marketer!

Of course I killed the autoresponder message on my server just before we started, so everyone received useless truncated messages.

Then poor Joel (my virtual assistant) had a family emergency that took him away from home for a few days. But true to form, when Joel wasn’t on the road and had Internet access he was right back in there, processing orders. (Thanks Joel!)

That’s another great benefit to doing business on the ‘Net - you can do it from anywhere with Internet access, and there’s no shortage of that in the world. I even found a good connection in Agua Calientes, the little village that serves Machu Picchu a few years ago.

About a week after we started the upgrade project, it occurred to me that DLGuard does indeed offer a PayPal option. (Actually, DLGuard will process ClickBank, PayPal, 2Checkout, StormPay, eBay, PayDotCom, e-Gold, JVManager, EA script and other merchant account products.)

Cool.

But then, I managed to mess things up again by making an uncalled-for change to my PayPal account.

In a panic I emailed Sam Stephens, the DLGuard developer, with the Subject line “Waaaaaa!”.

Sam is in Australia, so the time difference can slow the problem-solving process somewhat - especially if one fails to clearly express the problem, ie. “Waaaaaa!”

Sam however quickly deciphered my cryptic message, got us set up with DLGuard again and we were back in business.

This week I’m trying to break a new piece of polling software.

At the end of the day and despite the hassles (that I create for myself), Internet Marketing, and especially affiliate marketing still beat the heck out of working for a living.

Rosalind Gardner is the non-geek author of “The Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797 in One Year Selling Other People’s Stuff Online”. Learn more about her success (and foibles) at http://netprofitstoday.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rosalind_Gardner

posted by Deron Dohanich