Dear Blogger

Waste of Space: Are Ads Good for Your Blog?

Nothing to do with my love for social media, for about 6 months The Social Network (2010) was my favorite movie.

The dialogue is amazing, and I still get goosebumps watching Mark launch theFacebook. Plus, the friend vs friend business rivalry is just timeless.

Much like us bloggers, Mark wanted to create a website that made a difference in people’s lives.

But unlike most bloggers, Mark had a plan for his advertising.

In this post, sorta like when we covered high-standards, I’d like to offer you 6 ways to know when and if ads are the right move for your blog.

As usual, your insight will really help.

1) Not if coolness is your main asset

In the clip below, Sean Parker (Justin Timberlake) explains to Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg) how ads could ruin his most valuable asset at the moment, his only asset.

If your blog is just cool, meaning your blog or website’s concept is new and undefined, don’t post the ads. At this stage, you need 100% of the focus on content.

While I know it is tempting to fill the sidebar space with an Amazon ad, which are free to setup after all, please don’t. You’ll just look like every other new blog.

2) Not if you think blogging is just some party

yolo_dot_com_millions

At a recent pool party, I caught my friend telling folks how he could have made hundreds of thousands off of yolo.com. His plan was actually quite simple:

  1. Buy yolo.com before the phrase blew up
  2. Slap an Adsense unit on it
  3. Get thousands of clicks per day (because people were Googling “yolo”)

This pretty much sums how many folks mistakenly view blog earnings. It must be easy, right? With all that traffic? But blogging isn’t a party. It’s never been easy to earn from blogging, and starting up with this view will only set you up for disappointment later on.

My friend’s idea would have never worked – Google won’t send you traffic for a simple EMD site, and if people arrive they simply won’t click ads. People are smart, at least smart enough to smell out a spam site. Try Googling “yolo” right now, if you’re curious to see how hard this master plan would have played out.

3) Not if you’re just building up pennies

As someone who’s dabbled with Adsense for a couple years now, I know how hard it is to earn the first $5-10.

And while the first paycheck feels pretty good, I don’t like how other advertising guides tell you to start early and build revenue slowly. I think having an ad begging for clicks in your sidebar cheapens your content. And while it may earn a couple cents each day, it’ll hurt your ability to make larger moves down the road.

I know you’ll disagree with me – any form of earnings are good, you might say! I need to eat too! But I recommend waiting. I think you’ll make a larger impact waiting, then delivering a powerful ad campaign you create yourself.

Set yourself some goals, like get 20 comments on an article, or wait 6 months, before the first ad. This will really force you to secure your voice and audience before monetizing, which is a great practice.

4) Yes, if you CAN get clicks

The best part about an ad you put is the clicks, you already know this. Some range from $1-5 or even $10 if your blog has the right profile. If you do have the right audience for your ads, and think you can get enough clicks to justify the real estate cost, then here are two methods you might employ…

DailyBlogTips

With Adsense ads right in the left pocket of a post and direct ads to the right, this blog creates a single column for the reader to focus. What do you think of this strategy?

eHow.com

Using a totally different strategy, eHow laces their version of sponsored links into Search results. Is it wrong to trick readers into thinking ads are your own website’s articles?

5) Yes, if you make sure your ads are relevant

Any good advertiser needs to create relevance; the worst move is to simply slap an ad in your side bar without really reviewing it, as this only does good for the advertiser.

How to know if your ads are relevant

Are your readers talking about the products?
You can always ask readers if they have interest in the things you advertise, and tailor your efforts around that. Or, you can be totally lazy and assume people will just click eagerly.

Would you use them?
If you wouldn’t buy your products or click your ads, chances are readers won’t either. Afterall, they’ve showed up to your blog to listen to you – they will probably follow your lead on these things.

Mini-case study: Adsense relevant or not?
Time to explain the worst case study ever. Well, not entirely, but not exactly productive. A few weeks back, I put up two Adsense units, one in the sidebar and one in my header. The goal wasn’t clicks or views (they got about 15 clicks total) but instead to see if Google would intuitively offer specific blogging related ads for you and I. This blog has been around for several months now, building only blogging related content, so I wanted to see if Google could really dig into their ad database and actually find some useful ads for us. Yes, some ads are useful.

After 3 weeks, there 5 ads appeared the most:

  1. Dreamstime: buy cheap photos
  2. Danny Iny’s guide to making 250k from blogging in 1 year
  3. Get a blogging degree at X university (no free advertising anymore for you, sorry)
  4. Build an easy website with X company (seriously, #$%# them)
  5. Ad words free $50 ad credits

Needless to say, I cancelled the study. While I enjoy Danny Iny’s work, I was underwhelmed by the rest, and I think ultimately this shows how even still Google ads are bit behind what people actually want.

6) Yes, if you understand your niche

Whether you blog about cats or cowboy boots, if you know a bit about your niche, what others are doing, and where eager advertisers are hanging out (hint: they always exist) then you can really start your first ad campaign on the money.

Note: I’m sure I’ve missed some types of blogs here; don’t be shy to yell at me for that in the comments, and I’ll try to help!

Hear from you

I guess I’ll round this post off with a few questions because I’d really like to hear from the Community (especially you newcomers!) on the issue of advertising on your blogs.

Let’s see, post a comment and tell us about your views on blog advertising.

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