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The
common prejudices
against using an Adlink
instead of or as well
as the traditional
Ad unit are faltering
as Publishers are
finding more and more
ways to turn these
little units into
high converting Ads.
The
basic assumption goes
something like this:
as the Adlink unit
requires a visitor
to click first on
one of the four or
five topics and then
on one of the ads
they will be clicked
on less as it requires
them to do two things.
In a sense this is
true but the best
way to see Adlinks
is not to compare
them to the traditional
ad unit because basically
they are not the same.
Whereas
the regular ad is
best utilized as additional
content for your website,
the Adlink is best
utilized as additional
navigation. Most navigation
links are solely the
number of words which
prescribe the meaning
of that navigation
and this is what Adlinks
replicate.
They
come in two main formats
- horizontal and square
(each of which has
several variations).
Therefore, they can
be used effectively
in a variety of places:
1.
The favored hot spot
for Adlinks is the
top left of your navigation
where on this site
it says "Make
Money With Adsense".
If you include them
there and match the
link, border and background
color to the colors
you are already using
you will generate
a high ctr.
2.
A 728 x 15 in the
traditional leaderboard
position can work
very well (just underneath
your banner and above
your actual webpage).
This golf
store has done
it well.
3.
A 468 x 15 above or
just below your actual
page title can also
work well. On this
page it would go either
above or below "Adsense
Adlinks - Best Practices".
Bear in mind that
the 468 sometimes
isn't long enough
to cater for the amount
of words that it generates
and will result in
it being squashed
together. You'll have
to test it for your
content.
4.
You can also use one
of the square units
at the bottom of your
articles. WiseGeek
uses this method and
have done so for as
long as I remember
their site being online
suggesting that the
conversion is pretty
good.
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