.... or via Adwords Site Tool where you can search for sites where you want to advertise. Also there you can see how many impressions are estimated for a site per day.
Great advice on these forums. In barely a day after making 2 small changes I saw significant returns. Traffic is definitely one of the hardest things to get, but the truth of "if you build it they will come" is 100% spot on. On my more niche sites I can get up there on Google searches, and tracking my referrers shows that Google accounts for up to 30% of new users coming in on some days.
Ehe dont complain i have a total of around 5,000 unique visitors and im making $1-$5 a day. People won't click.
maybe it would be possible to buy a proper domain and use a blog program?? I can get you dmains for $9.95 a year if you PM me
Domains for $9.95???? You can get them for $7.2 in a place everyone knows: Godaddy. You just have to use the right promo codes: http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?p=327888
Traffic - Traffic - More traffic And, better ads placing: just use 1/2 add units. ( More adds in a page repells clickers)
I hate godaddy just because of the name. What kind of name is that seriously. namecheap has pretty cheap names and a slick interface!
Definitely correct, telecomm, that more ads repel clicks for many users who have been online longer than a few months. I wonder what Google's research shows on what percentage of the CTR is from newbs. In the long run, you really don't want to trick people into clicks, in my opinion. If you offer good content, Google will offer good advertisements. Good advertisements are from companies that appreciate your work making content and are happy to pay for generating customers for them. Random tricked clicks don't offer the publishers ANYTHING. So you gain 5 cents or 50 cents for a click, but you're also increasing the chance that the publisher won't renew their AdWords subscription. Google must be working with top advertisers on seeing what level of CTR translates to new real customers for the advertiser. I believe in the future we'll see sites with high conversions generate the very best ads -- even if they are not generating 100,000 clicks a month. Look at it this way: a scraper site that generates 100,000 clicks a month but only 50 sales is not as good for business as a site that generates 500 clicks a month but 100 sales. Google is working to make it pay to make worthy content that creates customer interest in a product.
You would get more traffic, and therefore more clicks, if your tutorials had the TITLE of the tutorial in the TITLE tag of the HTML page. Kind of amazed that you've overlooked this, considering the content is about PHP programming. The articles are good and the content is there, but you're missing the number one search engine identifier for EACH and EVERY SINGLE article on your web site. --- Joshua K