This chapter shows how to find and manage the most essential data you need to evaluate your AdSense performance.
The first thing you see when you log in to your AdSense account is
the Overview page of the Home tab. This is a great place to start, full
of the most essential data you need to evaluate your AdSense performance.
But that’s not all you’ll find on the Home tab. When you want to
monitor and manage your AdSense account, Home is the place to be.
Viewing Key Metrics
If you view only one page on the AdSense site, it should be the
Overview page on the Home tab. This page, which is what you see by
default when you log in to AdSense, displays essential information about
your account’s performance, including earnings generated.
What information is displayed on the Overview page? Let’s take a look.
Earnings Overview
Want to know how much money your AdSense ads are generating? Look at
the earnings overview at the top of the data on the Overview page, shown
in Figure 4.1. Here you can view
- Estimated earnings for today so far, yesterday, this month to date, and last month.
- Finalized earnings, including any unpaid earnings (money you’re owed but haven’t yet been paid) and the most recent payment you’ve received from AdSense.
Note that the estimated earnings displayed here are just
that—estimated. AdSense’s final earnings take into account any invalid
clicks made to ads running on your site, and adjust the earnings amount
accordingly.
Performance Summary
The middle section of the data table on the Overview page, shown in Figure 4.2,
is the performance summary. This data provides a quick overview of your
AdSense performance, broken down by product (Content, Feeds, Video, and
so on).
The performance summary data table contains the following information:
- Product, the specific AdSense product being tracked
- Page views, the number of times pages with ads have been viewed
- Clicks, the number of times ads on your site have been clicked
- Page click-through-rate (CTR), the percentage of times viewed ads have been clicked—calculated by dividing page views by clicks
- Cost per click (CPC), the average amount per click paid by advertisers
- Page revenue per thousand impressions (RPM), the average amount of revenue generated by each 1,000 page views—calculated by dividing estimated total earnings by page views
- Estimated earnings, the total amount of ad earnings generated in the specified time period
By default, this data table is sorted alphabetically by product. You
can, however, sort by any metric just by clicking the column header;
click the header twice to reverse the sort order.
Also by default, the performance section displays results for the
past seven days. To examine another time period, click the Edit link
above the table, and then select from Today, Yesterday, Last 7 Days,
Last 30 Days, This Month, or Last month.
By the way, if you’ve linked your AdSense and Google Analytics
accounts, you can use Google Analytics to track your Google AdSense
performance. Just click the View Performance in Google Analytics link.
Top Channels
If you have AdSense ads on multiple websites or blogs (what Google calls channels), you can view performance by site in the Top Channels section of the Overview data table. As you can see in Figure 4.3,
this section of the data table displays your top performing sites,
along with seven-day earnings for each site. This section also displays
the change in earnings from the previous seven-day period.
To view channel earnings for a different period, click the Last 7
Days link and select from Today, Yesterday, Last 7 Days, Last 30 Days,
This Month, or Last Month. To view the full Custom Channels report (not
just the top channels), click the View Full Report link.
Quick Reports and Saved Reports
In Google AdSense, the most commonly used reports are dubbed quick reports. These include the following reports:
- Overview (this month)
- Overview (last month)
- Custom channels (today)
- Custom channels (yesterday)
- Custom channels (this month)
- Custom channels (last month)
These quick reports, as well as any custom reports you’ve saved, are
available from the Quick Reports section of the Overview page, shown in Figure 4.4. Just click a report to display it onscreen.
Figure 4.4. Accessing quick reports and saved reports.
source: http://www.quepublishing.com/articles/article.aspx?p=1853101
Good info..
ReplyDeleteGoogle Adsense is an easy way to make money from your blog. All you need to do is add a script from Google to your website and start displaying ads.
ReplyDeleteYou will get paid for every time a user clicks on the ad. These are called CPC ads.
What is CPC? CPC stands for “cost per click.” By displaying CPC ads with Google Adsense, you receive a set fee every time an ad on your website is clicked by a visitor. The cost per click is set by the advertiser. (This is in contrast to CPM ads, where you’re paid for ad views instead of clicks. CPM means “cost per thousand impressions,” where M is the roman numeral for 1,000.)
Google Adsense is a good way to start earning money online when you are first starting out.
You can see our guide on how to monetize a WordPress blog with Google AdSense to get started, and this tutorial on how to optimize your AdSense revenue for more tips.
Google Adsense is an easy way to make money from your blog. All you need to do is add a script from Google to your website and start displaying ads.
ReplyDeleteYou will get paid for every time a user clicks on the ad. These are called CPC ads.
What is CPC? CPC stands for “cost per click.” By displaying CPC ads with Google Adsense, you receive a set fee every time an ad on your website is clicked by a visitor. The cost per click is set by the advertiser. (This is in contrast to CPM ads, where you’re paid for ad views instead of clicks. CPM means “cost per thousand impressions,” where M is the roman numeral for 1,000.)
Google Adsense is a good way to start earning money online when you are first starting out.
You can see our guide on how to monetize a WordPress blog with Google AdSense to get started, and this tutorial on how to optimize your AdSense revenue for more tips.
Google Adsense is an easy way to make money from your blog. All you need to do is add a script from Google to your website and start displaying ads.
ReplyDeleteYou will get paid for every time a user clicks on the ad. These are called CPC ads.
What is CPC? CPC stands for “cost per click.” By displaying CPC ads with Google Adsense, you receive a set fee every time an ad on your website is clicked by a visitor. The cost per click is set by the advertiser. (This is in contrast to CPM ads, where you’re paid for ad views instead of clicks. CPM means “cost per thousand impressions,” where M is the roman numeral for 1,000.)
Google Adsense is a good way to start earning money online when you are first starting out.
You can see our guide on how to monetize a WordPress blog with Google AdSense to get started, and this tutorial on how to optimize your AdSense revenue for more tips.
Google Adsense is an easy way to make money from your blog. All you need to do is add a script from Google to your website and start displaying ads.
ReplyDeleteYou will get paid for every time a user clicks on the ad. These are called CPC ads.
What is CPC? CPC stands for “cost per click.” By displaying CPC ads with Google Adsense, you receive a set fee every time an ad on your website is clicked by a visitor. The cost per click is set by the advertiser. (This is in contrast to CPM ads, where you’re paid for ad views instead of clicks. CPM means “cost per thousand impressions,” where M is the roman numeral for 1,000.)
Google Adsense is a good way to start earning money online when you are first starting out.
You can see our guide on how to monetize a WordPress blog with Google AdSense to get started, and this tutorial on how to optimize your AdSense revenue for more tips.