So Just What is Google Adsense?
Google Adsense is a fast and absolutely ridiculously easy way
for people with websites of all types and sizes to put up and display
relevant Google ads on the content pages of their site and earn
money.
Because the Google Adsense ads relate to what your visitors
came to your site to read about, or because the ads match up to the
interests and characteristics of the kind of people your content
attracts, you now have a way to improve your content pages AND
make some serious bucks off of them.
Google Adsense is also a way for site owners to provide
Google search capability to visitors and to earn even more money by
putting Google ads on the search results pages. Google Adsense
gives you the ability to earn advertising revenue from every single
page of content on your website—with a minimal investment of
your time
You may also hear references to “Google AdWords” and this
is a bit confusing. You see, AdWords and Adsense are two sides of
the same coin. AdWords is the advertisers interface. It’s where
people go if they want to place ads for their business. Adsense is
where website owners can go to have revenue-producing ads placed
on their site. But both systems deal with the same ads. AdWords is
for advertisers, Adsense is for site owners.So what kind of ads do you have to put up? That’s the good
part—you don’t have to decide. Google does it for you. Adsense
always delivers relevant ads that are precisely targeted—on a pageby-page basis—to the content that people find on your site. For
example, if you have a page that tells the story of your pet fish,
Google will send you ads for that site that are for pet stores, fish
food, fish bowls, aquariums…you get the picture.
If you decide you want to add a Google search box to your
site, then Adsense will deliver relevant ads targeted to the Google
search results pages that your visitors’ search request generated. Here’s the thing you need to know: Google has no strict
criteria for acceptance into the Adsense program, and Adsense
doesn’t hit you with a minimum traffic requirement. The only
criteria they’re really sticky about is the standard “acceptable
content” requirements, and that’s pretty standard almost anywhere.
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