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Adsense Top Paying Keywords PDF Print E-mail

 

1

loan consolidation student loans$53.64
2cheap life assurance quote$52.77
4dui phoenix arizona$52.59
5get auto insurance online$52.58
6bakersfield car insurance$52.48
7public liability insurance online$52.18
8bank student loan consolidation$51.95
9claim solicitors$51.91
10education student loan consolidation$51.91
11la quinta inn airport$51.66
12san diego dui defense$51.58
13mesothelioma attorneys san diego$51.11
14structured settlement sale$51.02
15remortgage with adverse credit$50.83
16endowments sell$50.81
17texas mesothelioma lawyer$50.78
18secured loans calculator$50.69
19free quote auto insurance$50.55
20california lemon law lawyer$50.51
21best loans secured$50.49
22 bad credit loan remortgage$50.47
23car insurance fort lauderdale$50.40
24online car insurance rates$50.37
25san diego criminal attorneys$50.37
26home loan remortgage$50.36
27lemon law attorneys california$50.33
28tempe dui lawyer$50.32
29san diego dui defense lawyer$50.29
30buy structured settlements$50.29
31buy car insurance on line$50.28
32car insurance in hawaii$50.27
33mesothelioma patient$50.23
34no win no fee accident claims$50.22
35structured settlement investment$50.22
36accident attorney chicago$50.18
37purchase car insurance online$50.15
38life and critical illness cover$50.14
39fort worth dwi attorney$50.10
40dui lawyer phoenix$50.07
41accident no win no fee$50.07
42personal injury attorney pennsylvania$50.07
43los angeles criminal defense attorneys $50.07
44remortgage with bad credit$50.06
45structured settlement buyers$50.06
46dui attorney phoenix$50.05
47 phoenix arizona dui attorney$50.04
48austin texas dwi lawyer$50.03
49phoenix dui lawyers$50.01
50phoenix dui attorney

$50.00

 

 source of adsensedot.com

 

 

 

 
Where To Use Your Keyword Phrases PDF Print E-mail
Keyword stuffing – overuse of keywords - creates copy that turns people off and may even bring a penalty from the search engines.

So how can keyword phrases be incorporated seamlessly into website copy so that it pleases both your visitors and the search engines?

In his article, Nick Usborne gives some very good advice – be aware of your keyword phrases and then forget about them. Let your subconscious take over and concentrate on writing for the people that visit your site.

But of course the subconscious can always do with a little help and you should educate yourself on where you can place keyword phrases to good effect.

Here is a checklist that covers three areas:

  • Where you must use keyword phrases
  • Where you can use additional keyword phrases without artificial stuffing, and
  • How you can get external sites to link to you using keyword-rich linking text.

It’s also important to remember that a web page can’t be optimized effectively for multiple keyword phrases. If you try to optimize for too many, your efforts will be diluted and you’ll end up not ranking well for any. It’s much better to focus your optimization efforts on just a primary and a secondary keyword phrase for each web page.

Where you must use keyword phrases

These are the standard features of an optimized web page:

The title tag. The title is particularly important and should include your primary keyword phrase and if possible your secondary phrase.

The description tag. If your description contains the search term people enter, and it is the first text that the Googlebot comes across, then you’ve a good chance that Google will display your description in the results.

Headings and subheadings. The tags that are used throughout an article should contain keywords. So a heading of "Our new product range" is poor; "Our new range of vegetarian dog food" is better.

Body copy. The writer should understand what the keyword phrases are and use them in natural language on the page.

Links on the page. The words used in live links tell the search engine what "this page" is about and also what the "linked-to page" is about.

Alt text. For every image, write an alt attribute tag, good for both accessibility and optimization.

Additional ideas

Here are some ideas for working additional keywords into your copy but use these ideas sparingly:

Bulleted lists within the body copy. Another opportunity to repeat keyword phrases so that they don’t interfere with the reader’s enjoyment of the article.

Quotations and interviews. Quotations or pull quotes are short meaningful quotes from key individuals and you can have about 1 to 3 in a standard article of 1,000 words. Interviews, where you report both the question and the answer, give you an opportunity to easily repeat keyword phrases.

References at the bottom of the article. A resource box at the bottom of an article is a good way to mention all the links and resources mentioned in the body copy.

Add a takeaway box. Usually a summary that says, "The main points in this article are ..."

Link title. Using the link title attribute in writing a link also gives an opportunity to repeat keyword phrases. In HTML code, this looks like:

<href="http://www.wordtracker.com" title="Wordtracker - the leading keyword research service">

Testimonials from satisfied customers. These are mostly used in sales pages but can also be incorporated into article templates.

Signature box at the end of the article. This presents the opportunity for the author to present his or her company and what he/she does for clients.

External linking text

While you can’t always control external linking text, there are instances where you can. These include:

Listing on subsidiary and partner sites. Often the easiest way to get keyword-rich external linking text.

Directory listings. You usually have editorial input and can specify the exact linking text that points to your site.

Press releases. You can certainly write the linking text at the bottom of your press releases, and on occasions within the body itself.

In by-lines to articles that you publish. Many sites will allow you to specify not only the linking text but the text that surrounds the link.

Reciprocal links. When you swap links you can ask for specific linking text to be used.

Paid-for links. Links that you buy will always allow you to specify linking text and perhaps allow extra descriptive text.

Writing, by its very nature, is creative and thrives when the imagination takes over. Don’t stifle your writing by adhering to a rigid keyword formula. Educate yourself in keyword strategies, immerse yourself in your subject, and above all enjoy yourself as you write.

by Ken McGaffin

on wordtracker.com

 

 
AdSense Secrets: Choosing the Best Keywords for AdSense PDF Print E-mail

Ever wondered how to select the best keywords for your Adsense websites? Your focus is earning money as well as attracting organic traffic towards your website. Here is what you need to know while choosing a keyword, a scientific study that maps the ideal keywords for your next upcoming adsense website.

We shall first study how to choose keywords that lead to more Adsense money.

CPC - Advantages and Drawbacks

What does CPC indicate?

When we think of high paying keywords, the first thing that pops up in our mind is CPC. CPC (Cost Per Click) is the maximum amount of money an advertiser is willing to pay for a click. Higher the CPC of a particular keyword, more will be the payouts you can expect by targeting that keyword in your AdSense websites. You can get the most accurate CPC from the source itself - Google.

However, CPC is not the only factor that tells the profitability of a keyword. There are many other factors that you should consider.

Drawbacks of CPC

- What if there are no advertisers bidding on a keyword having high CPC? Obviously, it means no one is going to pay you that high for a click.
- What if the traffic on the keyword is technical enough and does not click on ads (banner blindness)?
- What if Google gets loads of traffic on that keyword, enough to fulfill the desires of high paying advertisers? In this case, Google will only throw remaining peanuts towards you.

Obviously, Google will like to keep all the high paying ads within its own pages. So you see, CPC just shows you a small part of the entire picture. We shall explore the rest part of the picture...

Number of Sponsors - The Most Important Figure

Keywords with high CPC do not always come with high number of advertisers. There are many keywords in Google's Adwords system that have a high price, but almost no or very less number of advertisers. Now, if you build a web page or website around a keyword on which no one is bidding, Google will try to fill the ad blocks with ads of the related keywords rather than the high paying keyword you were initially targeting. There is no guarantee that ads of the related keywords will be good converters. Therefore, there is every likelihood that your clicks will be passed through SmartPricing Filter, eventually resulting in lesser payouts.

Hence, it is important to see the number of sponsors bidding on the keyword in question. If there are more the advertisers, there will be more competition among them to get the top position. This means that there will be more revenue per click that they are willing to share with you. In other words, more sponsors mean more people fighting against one another other to pay you more Adsense money.

Number of clicks on an Ad

It refers to the number of clicks an advertiser gets when his ad appears on the top. If the number of clicks and number of advertisers is less, just ignore those keywords, no matter what their CPC is. However, if the clicks per month are lower than expected, but the number of advertisers is a good one - it's the right choice for you. Such keywords are called "Niche AdSense' keywords." Here the word 'niche' is used in commercial context. This means that Google is not able to generate traffic on such keyword ads. This makes it difficult for it to exhaust the advertising budgets of the advertisers. Therefore, in order to meet its targets, Google happily shares high paying ads with you, resulting in more payouts. Try to find such "Niche AdSense' keywords."

Coming to Higher number of clicks - It indicates:

Either the traffic segment is ignorant about the online advertising concepts, and click on these ads unknowingly. This means you will experience higher CTR on your ads when placed at appropriate place. You don't have to put in much efforts to fight banner blindness.

Or, the traffic is highly commercial and willing to purchase the advertised product over internet. This means that there are very little chances of your facing the SmartPricing phenomenon.

Number of clicks along with the other stats like Number of sponsors and CPC, can enable you to make more wise decisions while choosing keywords for your AdSense content.

Bidding Quality

It's important to see the pattern in which people are bidding on a keyword. Suppose there are 400 advertisers bidding on a keyword. The top 20 of these are paying something like $15 per click, while the rest of them pay somewhere between $2 and $0.05. Now you might have found some decent tools that give you the average of top 3 or top 5 positions which is good, but not good enough. The point is that although the top 20 advertisers are paying higher, but the rest 380 advertisers are paying quite low. There is a high probability of your getting the ads of those 380 sponsors. Therefore, the average of the top 20 advertises can be really misleading. The solution to this problem is discussed in the later part of this page.

We have enough Adsense money now. Let's build some traffic on your website.

Traffic Building for AdSense:

Choosing Niche Keywords

Niche keywords are the keywords that are highly searched by the web surfers, and are rarely used by your competitors. Less competition means more traffic to your website. Targeting ten niche keywords is easier and more fruitful that targeting a highly competitive keyword. Traffic from niche keywords when directed to a relevant page increases your CTR and conversion ratio.

Determining Competition

People generally take the number of results returned by search engines as the number of pages competing on a keyword. But it is wrong. The Search Engine Results get irrelevant after 10 - 15 pages. Irrelevancy further increases with the depth. The pages that have the keyword dumped in a corner are not competing against you, but search engines will still list them. In fact they have to.

It is assumed that if a webmaster is targeting a web page with a particular keyword, the keyword is used in the title as well as in the anchor text linking to that webpage. Such a page is listed higher by the search engines as it is dedicated to what you searched for. So how to filter out the most relevant results? Check it out!

Inanchor intitle and Its Precision - The Solution

In Google, you can easily determine the EXACT number of pages that are competing against you. You can precisely list out the pages that are using a particular keyword in their page titles or in the anchor texts linking to them.

The query can be applied as follows: intitle:keyword inanchor:keyword.

For example, if the keyword is "hair treatment", the formula will be used in the following manner: intitle:hair inanchor: hair intitle: treatment inanchor: treatment. This figure gives you the exact number of pages that are ACTUALLY Targeting with these keywords, and not those that have just created a page or a small paragraph on the same topic. Google emphasizes on Anchors and Page titles. That's the reason, it supports such a search query.

We shall now discuss some other traditional ways to determine competition.

R/S Ratio

Here, R refers the number of competitor websites for a particular keyword as per the search result of the search engine. And S refers the number of searchers using that keyword while searching their queries. This means that for better results, you have to choose the keywords with lower R/S ratio.

R/S ratio becomes polluted when someone uses the number of results as the number of competing websites. As explained above, counting the number of results as the number of competing pages is the biggest mistake one can make while choosing a keyword. However, the figure becomes quite useful when inanchor intitle is used to create R/S.

KEI Analysis

KEI (Keyword Effectiveness Index) is a formula for measuring the effectiveness of a keyword. The formula was devised by Sumantra Roy. However, this figure also depends upon the number of searches and competition, but with a difference. This formula analyzes the number of searches and competition in such a way that if the searches increase, KEI increases; and if the competition increases, KEI decreases. Higher the KEI, more profitable will be the keyword. However, it becomes polluted when the number of search results are used as the number of competitors.

Determining Traffic

Determining traffic for a keyword is quite important before targeting it. Along with the competition stats, it lets you make out the niches present in any industry. Besides, it lets you predict (to some extent) how much traffic you can expect if you promote a website around a particular keyword. There are two known sources for determining traffic. Overture Keyword Suggestion Tool (now a part of Yahoo Search Engine) and WordTracker. When talking about accuracy, Wordtracker monitors the queries on some meta search engines that actually render it inaccurate . Reason? There is no known stat about how much of the community you are targeting is searching on those meta search engines. However, it's a good tool to make out the niches.

In my opinion, Yahoo owned Overture gives you more accurate stats than Wordtracker. This is for the reason that Overture is a PPC engine. It can show you how many people are searching for a particular term on its vast network. A network which is bigger than any Meta Search Engine. Still, it is not that accurate, but at least better than Wordtracker. The tools that are predicting Google Searches for you are just doing guess work. No one knows the algorithm they use.

Summing It Up

Profitability of a keyword depends more on the number of sponsors than CPC. Number of clicks and bidding quality can't be determined by just monitoring the first 3 or 8 places. It can be rightly assessed by taking out the average of all the 400 sponsors bidding on a keyword. Sounds very tiring for keyword research, right? Well, Keyword Country (http://www.keywordcountry.com) gives you not only the average of all the sponsors bidding on a keyword, but also the Max CPC from Google, Clicks per month from Google, No. of Advertisers present in Google Adwords system for a keyword, Competitors through inanchor intitle, R/S ratio and KEI with inanchor intitle, Traffic through Overture, and much more. All this enables you to make a wise decision while choosing the keywords.

source of keywordcountry.com

http://www.keywordcountry.com/choosing-best-adsense-keywords/