Up until a couple
of months ago when the Yahoo Publisher Network (YPN)
was launched in its beta form, Google Adsense had a
clear monopoly on the PPC advertising industry. Though
many webmasters did not agree with some of the Adsense
policies, there was no alternatives, that was until
Yahoo released YPN. Now with the beta form being out
for a few months, the question ultimately comes down
to: which program earns its publishers the most revenue?
While YPN is still in its beta stage, the one thing
Adsense still has going for it, is its support of international
publishers. YPN on the other hand, is on an invite only
basis for publishers within the United States. There
is no doubt that YPN will eventually open its doors
for international publishers, but until then they are
still stuck with Adsense. Google also seems to have
an advantage in some of the features found in Adsense,
including image ads, ad links, Adsense for Search, and
referrals. YPN is still in its beta form, yet it does
seem currently that Google is targeting more of a variety
in ad formats, whereas Yahoo would prefer to stay text
based. The one area where Yahoo has beat Google to is
the use of ads within RSS feeds. Google does support
this in a beta form, yet Yahoo already has this feature
completed, with integration into WordPress and Movable
Type. Based on features alone, the advantage has to
be given to Adsense.
Despite the number, or quality of the features of either
program, many publishers are more concerned with the
relevancy of the ads to their site, and how quickly
the relevant ads will appear. With Google Adsense, Public
Service Ads (PSA's), are displayed on a page until the
Google spider has time to visit the website, and determine
the context. While PSA's do not generate any income
for clicks, or impressions, they do generally disappear
fairly quickly. With YPN on the other hand, the initial
ad units are filled with run of the network (RON) ads,
which pay a fairly high CPC, and are untargeted, yet
they have the capability of earning you money from the
second you put the ads on the site. So far within the
beta testing it does seem like the YPN spider is slower
to visit your site, but this speed will most likely
increase as the program comes out of beta, and is released
to the public. Overall, the advantage in relevancy still
has to remain with Adsense.
Since ad relevancy is such a major issue to many publishers,
both programs have taken two different approaches at
allowing a publisher to optimize their site towards
a specific category of ads. For example, a publisher
of a sports website, would most likely like to have
sports related ads upon their website. With Adsense,
they are able to place html code signaling, "the good
content", in which they want the spider to generate
the ads from. This feature has been around for quite
awhile with Google, yet it is not very publicized, and
has produced moderate results at best for most publishers.
This same publisher with YPN, has a more general way
of targeting, in which they have the capability of choosing
one of 132 sub-categories for their site. In the example,
the publisher may choose Recreation & Sports as
a category and then have the system serve up related
ads on their site. While this sounds great in theory,
the results do not always show with many publishers,
who are often better off just letting YPN choosing the
category of the site in its spidering. Though neither
program has come close to perfecting user ad targeting,
so far YPN has the advantage, as they have a good system
set up to handle it, but just need to add some more
specific categories.
Much of the complaints about Google Adsense were related
to their so called "unfair" banning of many publishers
for click fraud, which to them can mean anything from
clicking on your own ad unit, to spamming, to almost
anything that violating the program's terms of service.
While Google simply bans publishers who violate the
TOS often enough, YPN has taken a very different stance
at this issue. If by chance a publisher does click on
their own ad unit, Yahoo simply does not count the click,
and for all practical purposes ignores the infraction.
Now granted, they may take a different stance in the
future if clicking on your own ads becomes a repetitive
event, but in the current beta test it has been just
ignored, to many publishers' delight.
The question is really whether or not Yahoo will be
able to maintain this policy once it opens up to the
public. Click fraud is a major issue on the web today,
and such a lenient policy would lend itself to people
testing the limits of their leniency. From what we've
seen in the beta test, the advantage is leaning towards
YPN on the issue of click fraud, but a lot of this depends
on how this policy is changed when it is released to
the public.
Now, the question you have been waiting for: Will Adsense
or YPN generate more revenue for your website? The answer
is it depends. A lot of publishers have reported increases
in revenue while switching to YPN, while an equal number
have reported decreases in revenue. What has been agreed
on however, is the fact that while YPN will have a much
lower CTR (Click Through Ratio) than Adsense, it will
also pay significantly higher for each click. Most publishers
switching to YPN, report anywhere from 1/8 to 1/2 of
their CTR with Adsense, yet also 1.5 to 8 times larger
EPC. The question of which program will make more money
for your website, really goes back to the question of
relevancy. Every click in YPN is equal to approximately
1.5-8 clicks in Adsense in terms of monetary value,
so if the ads on your website for YPN are relevant,
than that could lead towards big earnings.
Likewise, if they are totally untargeted, you may only
get one click per day, which is less than the 10-12
you may have gotten in Adsense. The only way to find
out for sure, is to test out each program within your
website, use channels to track the statistics, and after
a good testing period of a few months, see which program
earned you more money.
Tom Mar is the owner of retsambew dash klat for charity,
an entry into the Webmaster-Talk SEO contest for the keywords
retsambew dash klat for charity.
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