| FlazX | Categories | Forum | Links | Blog | Login |
|
Section Targeting for AdSense allows you to ignore on-page contentby JenstarArticle was found at www.jensense.com Section Targeting for AdSense allows you to ignore on-page contentA new Google AdSense feature, section targeting, is an extremely useful tool for publishers. Section targeting allows you to essentially declare certain parts of the on-page content as off-limits to the mediapartners bot, effectively allowing you to target the mediabot with only the content you want it to. This will also allow you to set certain sections on a page - such as navigational menus and header/footer areas - as not being considered for ad targeting by the bot.
The section targeting works as follows: The HTML tags to emphasize a page section take the following format:
You can also designate sections you'd like to have ignored by adding a (weight=ignore)
With these tags added to your HTML code, your final code may look like the following:
It would also appear that AdSense has taken into account that this could be used by spammers to target keyword rich areas of the content, even if it isn't the primary content on the page. They state the tags can only be used to "emphasize or downplay" various parts of the page, so it seems that other parts of the page are taken into account to check for further relevancy. I am guessing if a page that has mesothelioma content set for targeting, but content on dogs set to ignore, there will be some relevancy checking to see why there is such differences between the two sections. It could even get flagged for a quality review because of differences, which could reveal that dogs is the true content while mesothelioma was a hidden keyword spamfest. For those with large sites, and hence larger navigation systems, this feature will help those publishers have much more relevant ads. Navigation menus tend to skew ads, meaning publishers have problems with displaying ads that are either focsing on one aspect of the navigation menu, or themed to the site in general, rather than ads targeted specifically to the "true" unique content of the page. I suspect we will see many publisher implementing this new feature soon. Do be aware that the mediabot generally indexes a page once a month or so, although it can be as frequent as every week or two. But chances are you won't see differences in the ads on the first page view after implementing the change, but rather see the difference a couple of weeks after adding the new section targeting. |
Top 100 Search Keywords Last 100 Search Keywords Rapidshare Movies Nokia Themes Free Download Daily Internet Guide EgyDown Share4All FreeBookCity.Com Providings.com DownArchive Allulook4.com eu-warez.net |