Articles database
 
 
Web AnyArticles.com
Browse by Category:
  Internet and Businesses Online >
  Subcategories
Affiliate Revenue Affiliate Revenue (725)
Auctions Auctions (490)
Audio Streaming Audio Streaming (59)
Blogging RSS Blogging RSS (535)
Domain Names Domain Names (189)
E Books E Books (244)
Ecommerce Ecommerce (395)
Email Marketing Email Marketing (496)
Forums Forums (81)
Internet Marketing Internet Marketing (1737)
Podcasting Podcasting (59)
PPC Advertising PPC Advertising (461)
Security Security (418)
SEO SEO (1482)
Site Promotion Site Promotion (461)
Spam Blocker Spam Blocker (179)
Traffic Building Traffic Building (621)
Video Streaming Video Streaming (41)
Web Design Web Design (1015)
Web Development Web Development (599)
Web Hosting Web Hosting (413)


  Categories :
 
  Arts and Entertainment
  Automotive
  Business
  Communications
  Computers and Technology
  Finance
  Food and Drink
  Health and Fitness
  Home and Family
  Home Based Business
  Internet and Businesses Online
  Kids and Teens
  Legal
  News and Society
  Recreation and Sports
  Reference and Education
  Self Improvement
  Shopping and Product Reviews
  Travel and Leisure
  Womens Interests
  Writing and Speaking
  Random Category
  Aviation
  Yoga
  Leases Leasing
Affiliate Revenue article : The Adsense Scroll Mouse Theory
 

Internet and Businesses Online > Affiliate Revenue > The Adsense Scroll Mouse Theory

0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Carole Nickerson

Before I start, I was hoping to bring you some figures on the number of users who own a scroll-mouse, or at least some recent sales statistics. While I haven't yet found that data, I can say that I did find that the scroll-mouse (especially optical) are among the most popular because of the ease it offers in scrolling documents.

With that in mind, the "Adsense Scroll Mouse Theory" goes something like this:

People scroll a webpage in mainly two different ways: A) They are browsing quickly and looking for something to catch their eye, or B) They are reading a document where their scrolling is much slower and paced. When a user scrolls the page, there are natural breaks which occur due to limited finger movement. Based on the two kinds of scrolling, finger movements and the fact that eye-level content gets the most visibility, an estimate can be made (in pixels) which determines where the majority of these breaks occur at eye-level.

In this experiment, I recorded results from 10 different scroll-mouse users to measure their scrolls in pixels, based on two different scrolling habits.

A) Fast browsing - the average mouse scroll is 600-700 pixels vertically, meaning when the user pauses, their eye-level falls within the 600-700 pixels range on the page (from the top of the document, not the browser). They scroll and stop, scroll and stop. They have no choice.

B) Slow browsing - the average slow mouse scroll is 400-460 pixels vertically (scrolling in smaller chunks while reading), meaning that they pause at eye level every 400-460 pixels vertically. As they read a section, they usually start to scroll bringing more content up into their immediate eye-level.

Considering these two key mouse scrolling behaviours, it would make sense to place ads exactly at these points, or use an overall average to concentrate ads within every 400-700 vertical pixels on the page. The best fit would be a 336x280 ad block as it catches both ends of the slow & fast scroll.

You might be wondering about people using a browser's scrollbar instead of a scroll-mouse. With a browser's scrollbar, fast scrolling habits either stopped at around the 2000 pixel mark (for very long pages equal to just slightly more than half-way down a page) or the bottom of the page. For slow scrolling habits, the pauses occurred at eye-level about every 400-460 pixels, just as with a scroll-mouse.

The consistency in slow mouse & slow browser scrolling habits would leave you to assume that Adsense ads placed around the 400-460 mark might be something worth testing on your own website.

But consider this too: Initial eye-level on a webpage is somewhere around the 200-231 pixel mark. You could try placing ads at this point, the 400-460 mark, and then at the 600-700 mark. This way you are getting immediate visibility with the top ads first presented when the page loads, caching slow readers as they scroll, and catching fast scrollers too. The only group you'd have a problem slowing down are the ones using browser scrollbars. Images used next to Adsense ads can help catch their attention, especially if the page has a lot of text.

Now it's very likely someone else has already thought of this and it's already been discussed to death. I haven't found anything related to it. Everything here is really just theory, but something I plan to test myself using live test subjects (it sounds cooler than 'search users') and will post results as they come.

I would love to hear if you tested this out and what your results were.

Carole Nickerson has been a web developer and internet marketer since 1998. She now spends her days actively filling up her new blog with all she has learned. To find more Adsense tips and tricks, or post a comment, visit: http://www.CaroleNickerson.com


0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Carole Nickerson
Rate this story : and read/post review(s)


Article reviews



Post your review
[ Note : no HTML/URLs - will removed automatically ]
Your name
Your comments


More articles from Internet and Businesses Online > Affiliate Revenue

Add article | Manage Articles | Top Rated articles | Most Reviewed articles | Contact us | Links