You'd be banned pretty quick. There are multiple ways to detect this and I guarantee your competition would not let this slide.
yeah, right on. that's what i meant, new food for thought.
the competition of course. sure they would get pissed as hell and probably be more of an adcopy-nazi than google could ever be.
Plus it's not worth it because some people click on a lot of ads on a page.
yeah, and that is, what i would love to have the numbers for.
If you're talking about conversions of your landing page, I would think the position of your ad would have no bearing on whether the visitor eventually converted or not.
i tend to think so too. but then again, i am not too sure about this.
what makes me think like this, is the following scenario: let's say you got an ad position of like slot 10 or 11. next page that is.
someone clicking that link surely hasn't come to buy in the first place, has he? he was probably been worked up by all the other advertisments on the page before until he finally clicks yours. but is he a quality-click? a converting click?
this has of course to do with a lot of factors, but i really have a feeling, that the adposition has an influence too. my hypothesis: the lower the ad-position, the lower the conversion rate to get the customer to buy, sign-up or whatever.
but i need proof, numbers
All the spots? I haven't seen that. But most of the spots, certainly. It was even featured in a Google Techtalk. Of course different domains but with almost identical websites and IIRW, same whois. It was 2-3 years ago.
oh cool, i will google this, thanks
