Posts Tagged ‘Web Design’

Increase Your Website Ad Revenue with the Google Heat Map

If you’re running a free website (one that doesn’t require a reader subscription), then the odds are pretty good that you’re probably depending on ad revenue to support your operating costs (and hopefully some form of profit). In addition to using effective SEO techniques to attract as many visitors to your website as possible, another element of increasing your website’s ad revenue is by getting your visitors “converted” into revenue.

How do you convert visitors? As I mentioned recently in the 4 A’s of Marketing - you convert them into profit by driving them to take action that’s profitable for both the reader, and for you. It’s profitable for the reader because you’ve chosen products and services to advertise that you know are high quality and valuable, and it’s profitable to you because those companies pay you based on referred sales.

website ad revenue

Google Adsense is one of the best ways for new bloggers to learn what ad placement techniques work on a website and which methods don’t work. On one of my blogs, for the longest time I couldn’t manage to generate any clickthroughs to my Google ads. On the one hand, I don’t like introducing large and obtrusive ads into my articles or on my website, but on the other hand I could tell that my visitors weren’t recognizing the value of those ads and taking advantage of those links.

After doing a little bit of research about website “heat maps,” I figured out what I was doing wrong, fixed it, and increased my ad revenue by over 600 percent. In this article I’ll quickly review what I learned so that you can put it to use on your own blog or website.

The Website Advertising Heat Map

As I mentioned, Google Adsense is one of the best learning tools for a new blogger that’s looking to get into earning decent revenue through advertising. Google is extremely helpful in that effort, because they actually provide a very valuable ad heat map on their Adsense help pages that shows you exactly where you should place ads on your website for the highest clickthrough percentages.


website ad revenue

As you can see from the heat map, according to Google that most effective areas for advertising on a website are first and foremost at the very top of your content area. Now, there’s a tradeoff here. Personally I feel that placing a huge Google ad at the top of your content is very tacky and a major turnoff - it doesn’t look very professional. On the other hand, I’ve seen plenty of websites that do it, and they retain their readership - so proceed carefully.

The areas of any blog that I recommend concentrating on (if your template design allows for it) is the menu bar on the left and the menu at the top. These aren’t in the reddish-orange area, but they are still in the hot spots that generate the most action from visitors. The website where I tested this heat map concept was TopSecretWriters. I decided to place a large Google ad at the top of the left menu bar.


website ad revenue

I did have to slide some of my favorite graphical content down below this ad, and it did involve tweaking some of the template code itself, but in the end it was a smart move because it transformed the almost non-existent ad revenue on TopSecretWriters into a very healthy stream of clickthroughs and profit.

The moral of the story is this - the Google Adsense heat map is accurate, and I would highly recommend taking the time to become familiar with it and then redesigning how you structure the ads on your blog or website so that you are taking advantage of those hot spots.

Introduction to Web Page Design

Are you brand new to this whole website thing, and looking for an easy introductioni to web page design?

An Introduction to Web Page Design

This month I was tasked with the job of writing an article titled Web Page Design for Dummies. In the process of writing the article, I realized that there are very few resources available out there for people who have absolutely zero skills in webs design or HTML programming background, but who want to have their own website. Technological advances of the internet have made it absolutely possible for such a person to have a well designed and highly-functional web page. The only difficulty for such a person is knowing where to start.

The article above describes basic web page formatting and the general structure of a page that you’ll want to understand before you dive too deeply into putting together your first website. But even with that information available, it can still feel overwhelming for non-computer users who just want a simple web page. Where do you start?

Basic Elements of an Introduction to Web Page Design

Learning how to create and publish your own web page, without relying on some arrogant programmer to do it for you, is not impossible. The following steps are the stages you’ll need to go through to become successful.

  1. Learn how and where web pages are published on the Internet
  2. Learn how to create your own main web page called index.html
  3. Step through transferring your file to your web host
  4. If you don’t have a web host, learn how to set one up
  5. Develop or buy website content to add information and articles to your website

Once your first page is up and running, creating your entire website is just a matter of creating additional HTML files, linking them to your already existing web pages, and publishing those new pages on your web host.

Trust me, it’s not at all as complicated as it sounds…and we’ll walk you through it in coming weeks.

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