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    Think Like Google with AdSense
    Author: Mark Meshulam
    Website: http://www.poingo.com
    Added: Sat, 19 Nov 2005 11:13:02 -0500
    Category: Sales & Marketing Online
    Printable version | Email | Bookmark

    Copyright 2006 Mark Meshulam

    A conversation with my son Matt confirmed my suspicion. The Google AdSense ads I recently installed on my website www.poingo.com are actually giving me an insight into what the Google search engine spider cherry-picks from of my web page content.

    It's not hard to imagine: AdSense ads are context sensitive. They exist as scripts on the web page. In order to be context sensitive, the script must initiate an indexing when the page is opened and refreshed.

    Is there any reason to think that the indexing process performed by Google AdSense would be different from the process used by Google the search engine? None I can think of. Both indexing processes need to do the same job: extract core meaning from a page and compare it to a database.

    In AdSense, the database contains paid ads waiting for a relevancy match. In search, the database holds keywords. But the meaning extracted from the web page could easily be identical.

    Therefore, one might get a peek into the Google indexing algorithm by reviewing a series of web pages which display AdSense ads, and studying the ad content.

    I studied the 30 or so pages on my site at www.poingo.com and checked the AdSense ads on each page for relevancy to the page content. Results were quite interesting.

    The site contains a number of pages which present the features of various software or service offerings. Verbiage on these pages tends to be sparse and oriented toward key concepts.

    On these product presentation pages, AdSense did a great job of extracting meaning.

    For example, the page offering Poingo Email Printer, software which creates PDFs, was accompanied by AdSense ads which all pertained to PDF conversion. Text on the page was minimal, but the page title contained "create PDF", there were 3 keywords metatags containing "PDF", and the first paragraph contained "convert PDF" in bold.

    From an indexing standpoint the page spoon-fed meaning to Google, and obviously there was a wellspring of PDF software advertisers for Google to find in its database. A match (or five matches to be exact) made in heaven!

    Similarly, pages offering FTP software and an Outlook add-in received highly relevant companion ads. Again, words on the page were sparse, but page title and paragraph text contained the obvious words FTP and Outlook respectively, and Google AdSense took the bait.

    The three pages mentioned above offered essentially single concept offerings. PDF. FTP. Outlook. No confusing multiple choices.

    When analyzing the page which offers Lightning Navigator, a hotkey shortcut software with multiple features, AdSense picked one feature, screen capture, to orient 3 of the 5 the companion ads. Interestingly, screen capture is listed seventh on the list of product features. It follows six other features which were all keyword-optimized but ignored by AdSense.

    From previous research, I recall that keywords pertaining to screen capture such as "print screen", "screen shot", and "screen grab" receive many more clicks per day than other features such as "automatically create email" and "internet shortcut".

    Apparently in this example, AdSense was quickly able to select the key concept for which it had the most ads to apply, and then threw most of its ad eggs in this basket. The interaction between page and AdSense now becomes more interesting. Inventory of relevant advertisers becomes a factor in selecting key concept. That makes sense. You can't post an ad if it's not in the queue.

    The non-screen capture ads on the Lightning Navigator page are as follows: 1 for shortcuts (highly relevant) 1 for surveillance equipment (huh??)

    I have no doubt that there is a reason the surveillance equipment ad appeared, but it was not visible to me in the text of my page, the ad itself, or the page which the ad linked to. Mystery abounds on this one.

    If your eyes are not bleary yet, stick around. There is more to tell.

    A sizeable portion of the Poingo website is the article section. Here I publish articles about small business and people, processes and technology in the workplace.

    The articles were written without use of a keyword suggestion tool. They are written in 100% non keyword optimized English. What did Adsense do with these verbose index-elusive rants?

    To appear scientific - after all, somebody might actually read this - I developed a down-and-dirty rating scale. First I counted the number of relevant ads (of 5 total) per page, then I multiplied it by a subjective relevancy score scaled 1 through 5, where 5 is "frickin' good" and 1 is "obscure at best."

    Therefore a page score of 25 (5 ads x relevancy score of 5) would be a top score ("AdSense, you're seeing into my very soul") and 0 would be ("We never talk anymore, You don't even know me(sniff)"). Here is the scoring: Chart showing AdSense Ad Relevancy for Articles AdSense scored an average of 10.5 out of a possible 25 on these wordy, interesting but non optimized articles. Yet in 7 articles out of 20, Google scored the coveted "frickin' good" appellation. 35% of the articles were "understood" with high accuracy.

    Beyond that, there was a chasm of irreconcilable differences leading ultimately to the vacuum of deep space. What does it mean to us little folk waving our flags and trying to get noticed on the web?

    Keep your message simple and clean, boiled down to one or two key concepts on a page. The spiders want to understand us but they are kinda dumb. At least that's what Matt says.

    For charts and data: http://www.poingo.com/ART-think-like-google-with-adsense.htm


    View all Mark Meshulam's articles


    About the Author:
    Chief Poingologist Mark Meshulam brings 30 years of front-line business experience to his articles which cover people, processes and productivity in the workplace. http://www.poingo.com

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