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| | #1 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Mar 2011
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If you have a blog roll with post snippets (excerpts from posts) in it, over the time as you add more and more posts with AdSense in them, your blogroll starts to look like a long page that has many AdSense block-containing snippets in it. AdSense allows no more than 3 ad blocks per page. But what if your blog roll page contains, say, 10 snippets from different posts? I know that AdSense will show only the first three blocks but it will detect that you are trying to show much more than that. Will you get your ass banned because of this WordPress glitch? Also, if you set up your blog/site in a way that shows only 1 snippet on the blogroll page, could this be a problem too because snippets are short? They rarely have more than 80-100 words in them. Isn't this also against the AdSense rules? Isn't it prohibited to place AdSense blocks on pages that have almost no content in them? And finally: do snippets create Duplicate Content and drag your site down in the SERPs because they are excerpts from your posts and if yes, how do you deal with this? |
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| | #2 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Mar 2011
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Anyone? This is an important topic. Would be nice to see some replies. |
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| | #3 | |||
| SEO Strategist War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2010
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| Quote:
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Your the webmaster, keep the snippet very short (one sentence) & interesting. | |||
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| | #4 | |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Mar 2011
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However, about 90% of all people who run blogs or Wordpress-based sites, have no clue about all of this, and they just use whatever default settings are there in their Wordpress theme. The ordinary bloggers / site owner just slap an AdSense block or two in their articles, just for good measures, and call it a day. This is why I consider the WordPress blogroll page a "glitch" - by default it creates a bunch of contradictions with the AdSense rules. I understand that the majority of WordPress themes are not created for use with AdSense, but in the end of the day, even an ordinary blogger who doesn't give a damn about SEO would like to place an ad or two on his blog to get a few bucks monthly. And if blogroll pages are indeed against the AdSense rules, the guy may end up banned from AdSense just because he relied on the default WordPress settings and didn't optimize them. | |
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| | #5 |
| WordPress Addict! Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Dubai, UAE
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There's a maximum number of AdSense blocks you can display. If you exceed that limit, the ads would simply not show up. It's not like you go to jail or anything...
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| | #6 | |
| SEO Strategist War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2010
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So put the blogroll in the WP-Sidebar (like most sites do). Quote:
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| Tags |
| adsense, rules, snippets, wordpress |
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