Google Advertising Tools: Cashing in with Adsense, Adwords, and the Google APIs
6.2. Making Money with Advertising
In principle, making money with advertising related to adult content isn't all that different from making money with vanilla content. The good news for operators of sites related to adult content is that the willingness of users to pay for content creates opportunities. Site visitors are happy to be able to purchase adult content privately, and instantly, without a (potentially embarrassing) trip to a video or adult store. As with other kinds of affiliate programs, adult sponsors work by providing you with an identification code that you embed in the links you place on your site (see Chapter 4 for more information about the general process of affiliate linking). The steps involved in adding a sponsor link to your sitethe same as with a vanilla affiliate programare:
6.2.1. Types of Programs
For the most part, adult advertising is for sponsorsthe kind of relationship known as an affiliate program in the vanilla world (see Chapter 4 for information about non-adult affiliate programs) in which the sponsor is called a merchant. Within the adult-content world, "types of programs" means the offering of the sponsor. The major categories, or types, of programs which in almost all cases are segmented by niche (see "The Taxonomy of Desire," earlier in this chapter, for more information about adult niches), include:
In addition, some sponsors provide a classic merchant offering: online stores provide merchandise for shipment such as sex toys and adult DVDs. Figure 6-3. This well-known sponsor offers for-pay access to sites built around individual porn stars
6.2.2. Payment Plans
Adult sponsors pay commissions to sponsored sites carrying their ads in a number of different ways, including:
It's hard to know in advance which arrangement will work best for you. Obviously, if you knew that your visitors would click and not buy, you'd go for CPC; if you knew that they'd subscribe and not renew, you'd go for "pay per sale"; and if your average site viewer subscribed forever, you'd want to revenue share. If you believe in the sponsor's offering, and think that it works for your traffic, you are probably best off going along with a revenue-sharing arrangement. The best approach is trial and error. For example, suppose you work with two sponsors. You could try one on a pay-for-sale basis, and the other on a revenue-sharing basis, and see which does best. Eventually, you could switch the lower-yielding program over.
6.2.3. Webmaster Programs
Webmaster programs allow you to refer other webmasters to your adult-site sponsor. Not only do you get a payout when the other webmaster enrolls in the sponsor's affiliate program, you also get an override commission on anything the other webmaster brings in. In a sense, a webmaster program is a great deal like a multi-level marketing (MLM) scheme: it is possible to make a great deal of money at the early phases of a webmaster program (or MLM), but the good times, even in theory, cannot go on forever; there are only so many webmasters to enroll.
Ads intended for webmaster traffic tend to have a different look and feel than ads for site visitors: more about metrics and profitability, and less about sex (Figure 6-4). Figure 6-4. Ads targeted at webmasters, like this one from a leading adult classified site Eroticy, tend to emphasize dollars and cents at the expense of sex
6.2.4. Finding Sponsors
Experience is the best teacher, and the best way to know the right sponsors for a given niche in the adult market is to have an in-depth understanding of the category. You may have a good gut-level idea of the kind of content your site visitors will pay for. If you are unfamiliar with adult sites, you can find listings of sponsor programs on these web sites:
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