As a consultant for online advertising I not only help a lot of websites to grow their revenue, but also learn a lot about how different topics, text types, page structures and traffic sources perform in terms of ad revenue.
There are some types of websites that are not struggling with AdSense because of a bad setup or bad management, but mostly because their topic and visitors are just not good to make serious money.
Even though I like to help everyone, I learned that I have to decline some requests for ad reviews from such websites in order to avoid frustration on both ends.
I have picked 3 types of websites that I regularly see to fail when it comes to generating income with AdSense.
Let me first give you a background about the metrics that matter most for a healthy AdSense account before going into details about the types of pages that are just hard to make money with.
AdSense key metrics
Even though there are different bid types with AdSense, cost per click (cpc) is still the largest one. With cpc a publisher like you earns money if a users clicks on an ad.
Once you understand the key metrics of AdSense you will also see why the page types I mention below are low performers by nature.
CTR
Since you earn on a click basis your visitors must be willing to click on an ad. This behavior is measured in click-through-rate (ctr).
Why should a user click on an ad? Beside accidental clicks, the ad might promises a solution to his problem.
CPC
Your income also depends on click prices. Those are roughly defined by the competition of advertisers on your website.
An advertiser often wants to sell something. The higher the price of his product or service and the higher the probability that a visitor from your site is going to perform the action on the advertiser website, the more he is willing to invest and the higher your income will be.
RPM
To compare websites with a different amount of traffic, ctr and cpc, income performance is often measured in return-per-mile (rpm), which is the income it generates per 1000 page impressions. It is also often referenced as cost-per-mile (cpm).
Websites that fail
The following list of website types with low AdSense potential is neither final nor is the fate of such a site inevitable. You might run a project in these areas successfully for various reasons, but if you are new to online advertising then I would advise against choosing one of these topics.
1. News sites
Before I started to help other publishers to generate more income from ads, I didn’t imagine how many news sites there are out there. I am not talking about the online version of a printed newspapers, but pages who publish any kind of news without a background in journalism.
Most consulting requests I receive are actually from such news sites and so far I only accepted very few of them. This is mainly because I want to spare both of us the disappointment, especially when I am confident that there is no potential in the first place.
Why are news sites not working well with AdSense?
Why are people visiting a news sites? What is their problem? In which mood are they?
Who is a person that comes to a news site and reads an article about an accident on the highway, the latest Oscar winners and funny Super Bowl commercials?
What is the problem you solved for this visitor and how much would he or she spend on it to be solved?
This is the question that advertisers are asking themselves and you should too! The more likely that someone would spend money for something you help him solve, the more likely that there is an ad he clicks on. This not only applies to news sites.
You might have caught up on it, but just to be clear. The problem many news sites suffer from is a lack of focus.
AdSense is easy to implement, but the rules of advertising still apply. If you can’t sell ads to someone directly than it is also hard to monetize your site with AdSense.
The solution: focus
The problems that news sites have can’t always be solved, but there are some suggestions I can give you to at least try to turn around the wheel.
Most news sites have many categories they update, but I bet that only very few of them really drive traffic, engage visitors and generate ad revenue.
Identify these categories and focus on them. Cut the others off. You already lost money on them, why to lose more?
The same can be applied to content types. Maybe visitors (and Google search) only really like your features, local stories, or image galleries. Identify your strengths and cut off the weaknesses.
Final question: when did you last read about a newspaper that successfully transferred its printed version to online by just using display advertisement for monetization?

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