I'm just setting up an arbi test that I hope will do good and I was playing around with some adsense targeting and I noticed something a bit fucked up and thats adsense puts a shit load of weight on your main URL when targeting your ads.
You see late last night I set up a quick arbi page and didn't buy a URL for it because I had one lying around that I thought I'd use for a quick test to see what kind of ads would be targeted with that page, so the url contained medical in it and the arbi page is about something else.
When I uploaded the page it only shows me those old medical ads, which has nothing to do with this new template, I've included section targeting last night, refreshed the page a wack load of time and did everything I knew how to do when dealing with adsense targeting and it got a bit better but still nothing close.
You see its half assed targeted, it has medical ads (I.E. the main URL), and then it has content ads, for instance lets say the main URL is medicaltreatment.com and my arbi test is about say mountain bike, what its doing is seeing medical in the URL and seeing a bunch of mountain bike keywords in the content so it'll display ads like medical treatment for mountain bikes.
Anyone else ever experiment with how much weight is placed upon the URL for targeting adsense?.....now when I actually do the arbi test it will have its own URL based upon the keywords I'm targeting so after that I should have the ads I want.
Its interesting because thats not a very effective way to pull off ad targeting, say you've got a personal website with a url of mypersonalwebsite.com and you have a page about astronomy or something not related to "my personal website", Google is going to take into account your main url mypersonalwebsite.com and your pages content which is about astronomy and then return ads similar to amateur astronomy, beginner astronomy, personal astronomy and shit like that.
Whats the moral of this story?
When building your arbi pages around certain keywords, do your best to include those certain keywords in your main URL so that your main URL keywords are the same as the keywords on your page, this will then show ads much more targeted towards your targeted keyword, it would really suck if you've found a keywords which pays say $10 bucks per click and you cannot exactly target those ads because your URL is holding more weight then your content is.
You see late last night I set up a quick arbi page and didn't buy a URL for it because I had one lying around that I thought I'd use for a quick test to see what kind of ads would be targeted with that page, so the url contained medical in it and the arbi page is about something else.
When I uploaded the page it only shows me those old medical ads, which has nothing to do with this new template, I've included section targeting last night, refreshed the page a wack load of time and did everything I knew how to do when dealing with adsense targeting and it got a bit better but still nothing close.
You see its half assed targeted, it has medical ads (I.E. the main URL), and then it has content ads, for instance lets say the main URL is medicaltreatment.com and my arbi test is about say mountain bike, what its doing is seeing medical in the URL and seeing a bunch of mountain bike keywords in the content so it'll display ads like medical treatment for mountain bikes.
Anyone else ever experiment with how much weight is placed upon the URL for targeting adsense?.....now when I actually do the arbi test it will have its own URL based upon the keywords I'm targeting so after that I should have the ads I want.
Its interesting because thats not a very effective way to pull off ad targeting, say you've got a personal website with a url of mypersonalwebsite.com and you have a page about astronomy or something not related to "my personal website", Google is going to take into account your main url mypersonalwebsite.com and your pages content which is about astronomy and then return ads similar to amateur astronomy, beginner astronomy, personal astronomy and shit like that.
Whats the moral of this story?
When building your arbi pages around certain keywords, do your best to include those certain keywords in your main URL so that your main URL keywords are the same as the keywords on your page, this will then show ads much more targeted towards your targeted keyword, it would really suck if you've found a keywords which pays say $10 bucks per click and you cannot exactly target those ads because your URL is holding more weight then your content is.