www.dotcomhunter.com How To Avoid Getting Your Adsense Account Terminated Google, being the undisputable leader in search engines from then unt il now, is placing a high importance on the quality and relevancy of its search engines. Most especially now that the company is public pr operty. In order to keep the shareholders and users of its engines ha ppy, the quality of the returned results are given extreme importance . For this same reason, doing the wrong things in the Adsense and oth er forms of advertisements, whether intentionally or unintentionall y, will result in a severe penalty, may get you banned and even hav e your account terminated. Nothing like a good action taken to keep wrongdoers from doing the same things over again. So for those who are thinking of getting a career in Adsense, do not j ust think of the strategies you will be using to generate more earning s. Consider some things first before you actually get involved. Hidden texts. Filling your advertisement page with texts to small to read, has the same color as the background and using css for the sole purpose of loading them with rich keywords content and copy will ear n you a penalty award that is given to those who are hiding links. Page cloaking. There is a common practice of using browser or bot snif fers to serve the bots of a different page other than the page your vi sitors will see. Loading a page with a bot that a human user will neve r see is a definite no-no. This is tricking them to click on something that you want but they may not want to go to. Multiple submissions. Submitting multiple copies of your domain and pages is another thing to stay away from. For example, trying to sub mit a URL of an Adsense as two separate URL’s is the same as invitin g trouble and even termination. Likewise, this is a reason to avoid auto submitters for those who are receiving submissions. Better chec k first if your domain is submitted already an a certain search engi ne before you try to submit to it again. If you see it there, then m ove on. No point contemplating whether to try and submit there again. Link farms. Be wary of who and what are you linking your Adsense to. The search engines know that you cannot control your links in. But you can certainly control what you link to. Link farming has always A gift from www.dotcomhunter.comwww.dotcomhunter.com been a rotten apple in the eyes of search engines, especially Google . That is reason enough to try and avoid them. Having a link higher than 100 on a single page will classify you as a link farm so try an d not to make them higher than that. Page rank for sale. If you have been online for quite some time, you wi ll notice that there are some sites selling their PR links or trading t hem with other sites. If you are doing this, expect a ban anytime in th e future. It is okay to sell ads or gain the link. But doing it on dire ct advertisement of your page rank is a way to get on search engines ba d side. Doorways. This is similar to cloaking pages. The common practice of a page loaded with choice keyword ads aimed at redirecting visitors to another “user-friendly” page is a big issue among search engines. There are many seo firms offering this kind of services. Now that y ou know what they actually are, try to avoid them at all costs. Multiple domains having the same content. In case you are not awar e of it, search engines look at domains IP’s, registry dates and m any others. Having multiple domains having the same exact content is not something you can hide from them. The same goes with conten t multiplied many times on separate pages, sub domains and forward ing multiple domains to the same content. Many of the above techniques apply to most search engines and is not entirely for Google only. By having a mind set that you are buildin g your Adsense together with your pages for the human users and not for bots, you can be assured of the great things for your ads and si tes. Not to mention avoiding the wrath of the search engines and getting your Adsense and site account terminated altogether. A gift from www.dotcomhunter.com
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