Use the Adsense feature called SECTION TARGETING wherein you let Adsense know what sections to focus on so it will read only those sections and provide more targeted ads for you.
Adsense can be flaky with blogs – oftentimes you see ads for blog software or other blog providers, but not ads on the actual content of your blog. With section targeting, you can put codes before and after the section you want the keywords to be based on. So you need to put the section targeting codes in the main body of your blog, excluding the navigation.
Here’s what Google Adsense help says:
“Section targeting allows you to suggest sections of your text and HTML content that you’d like us to emphasize or downplay when matching ads to your site’s content. By providing us with your suggestions, you can assist us in improving your ad targeting. We recommend that only those familiar with HTML attempt to implement section targeting.”
October 14th, 2007 at 7:48 am
You visit adsense blog at Google, you will get answers easily and technically.
October 17th, 2007 at 4:35 am
Use the Adsense feature called SECTION TARGETING wherein you let Adsense know what sections to focus on so it will read only those sections and provide more targeted ads for you.
Adsense can be flaky with blogs – oftentimes you see ads for blog software or other blog providers, but not ads on the actual content of your blog. With section targeting, you can put codes before and after the section you want the keywords to be based on. So you need to put the section targeting codes in the main body of your blog, excluding the navigation.
Here’s what Google Adsense help says:
“Section targeting allows you to suggest sections of your text and HTML content that you’d like us to emphasize or downplay when matching ads to your site’s content. By providing us with your suggestions, you can assist us in improving your ad targeting. We recommend that only those familiar with HTML attempt to implement section targeting.”