I dont think so. Yahoo charges minimum of 10 cents on content, and on search the lowest min bid I've seen was 5 cents and that does not happen often. usually min bids are higher.
I dont think they will be paying such a low amount for 1000 clicks when they charge more than $0.10 per click.
Even for 10 cents a click unless the niche is music or entertainment it is hard to get enough traffic to do that.
Not with Yahoo or Google, they charge a minimum of $0.10 per click, even though that is difficult in a competitive niche. You may have better luck with Adbrite at your price point, Adbrite's minimum per click bid is $0.01, although you'll need to target the correct keywords to get clicks that low fusionxls78
i tried yahoo and its minimum bid upon signup is more than 10c. How about yahoo content network? Is it possible to get a 1-2 cents click?
Yahoos content doesn't convert that well into clicks, good luck getting that many clicks for anything.....The click traffic you do get is good though.
Yes it is possible for you to work with Yahoo. this time, the minimum bid for Content Match ad groups remains $.10. Check http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/ysm/sps/screenref/61206.html for more details.
I have had 1 cent clicks on Google for certain unpopular keywords but as far as I know, Yahoo won't let you pay less than 10 cents a click.
yes it is possible to get 2 and 3 cent clicks. They seem to drop to that level every quarter just before earnings. Then rpc goes up after earnings.
Minimum bids of 0.78 are they nuts? If not using the minimum bids they make that keyword inactive.I just started on SM and I think it`s a bit crazy. Is any one more experienced on Yahoo SM to give me some advice? I dropped google adwords and not really sure if it was a good idea.
interesting observation about tying the quarterly earnings report to the price of bids... I too have thought Yahoo's minimum bid was far too high and one of the primary reasons they've been totally unable to wrest any meaningful share from Google where, for the most part, the market sets the price, high AND low.