Are you interested in earning money from your website or app through direct ads? Selling advertising space on your digital platform can be highly lucrative. This guide will take you through the steps to sell banner ads on your website and attract advertisers for your app.
Direct advertising sales is arguably the best method to monetize a website. Finding advertisers for your site and actually closing the deals, however, is not as straight forward. Over the past 6 months I had more than 10 high profile companies sponsoring Daily Blog Tips, and through out this article I will share what I have learned along the way.
Planning and Marketing
Finding buyers for your advertising space requires strategic planning and effective marketing techniques. Start by identifying where you can effectively advertise your website, such as online marketplaces, social media, and industry-specific forums.
To broaden your reach, consider networking with local businesses and joining advertising associations.
Using Ad Networks
One option is to use popular ad networks like Google AdSense, Media.net, and Adversal. These networks connect you with a wide range of advertisers and often provide code snippets for easy integration into your website. However, it’s important to keep in mind that they may take a percentage of your earnings as a commission.
Direct Advertising
Alternatively, you can directly approach potential advertisers. Create a compelling media kit showcasing your website’s reach, demographics, and engagement metrics. This will attract advertisers aligned with your target audience. Effective methods for connecting with potential buyers and negotiating advertising deals include cold emailing, attending industry conferences, or utilizing LinkedIn.
The Pros
- More money: The first advantage of selling your own ads is the fact that you will cut the middlemen out, increasing your revenue potential. Suppose you sell text link ads on your sidebar through a certain company, and the text links sell for $50 monthly. Since you are using the company network to sell the ads, they will eat 50% of the price, and you will end up earning only $25 monthly for each text link. If someone is willing to pay $50 for a text link on your site, though, it means that they are getting $50 of value out of it. Why, then, should you share that with someone else?
- Independence: Sure, large advertising networks have access to a wider pool of advertisers, and they have more credibility to close the deals. But if you have all the requirements in place (see the section below) and spend some time looking at the right places, I am sure that you will be able to sell your own ads just as efficiently as the larger networks.
- Flexibility: The third advantage of selling direct advertising is that you will have much more control over where and how the ads will be displayed (i.e., you can avoid intrusive advertising). Google Adsense is nice, but unless you blend it with the content — annoying some of the readers — you will get terribly low click-through rates.
- Credibility: Finally, having sponsors and direct advertisers on your blog might help your credibility. Even small and poorly crafted blogs can stick some Adsense units here and there. Having established companies that are willing to partnership with your site, on other hand, can signal that your content has quality and that the site is somewhat professional.
The Cons
- Time consuming: While selling your own ads has many advantages, it is no panacea. The first drawback of this monetization option is the time that it will consume. This time will be spent optimizing your website for the ads, finding potential advertisers, negotiating with them, and handling the administrative matters (e.g., making payments, tracking statistics, delivering reports and so on).
- Many requirements: Selling direct adverting is not as easy as making money from Google Adsense. As you can see from the section below, you will need to have a popular blog, a professional looking design, special software and the like.
- Unstable: Unless you close deals for very long periods, which is unlikely, you will find your self looking for new advertisers or optimizing your website to attract new ones every other month. The opposite is true for most advertising networks, where you just need to plug some code and they will do the rest of the work. (If your site or blog is just a hobby, therefore, direct advertising might not be the best option)
What You Need to Have in Place
- A popular website: Before landing direct advertising deals you will need to have a good amount of traffic on your site. There is no “magical” number here, but a good rule of thumb would be 1000 daily unique visitors. If you are below that mark you should focus on building traffic instead of looking for advertisers. Other factors like Google Pagerank, RSS subscribers and Alexa rank might also help. (Notice that small websites might also be able to sell direct advertising, but usually the time spent on that will not justify the results)
- A clear focus: You might have the most popular site on the Internet (well, not as extreme as that, but you get the point), but unless your site also has a very clear niche and a defined audience, advertisers will not find it very attractive. This means that you should avoid rambling about 100 different topics on the website. Advertisers want to deliver a message to specific people, and the more specific the better.
- A professional looking design: If you are planning to monetize your website through sponsors, you probably should invest some money into a professional looking design. Advertisers will be associating their product or service with your website, and not too many of them would be willing to get mixed with an ugly, MySpace looking site.
- Give visibility to the sponsors: This point is connected to the previous one. Not all templates and themes will be suitable for selling direct advertising. Preferably you want to have an idea of what kind of advertising you will sell (e.g., 468×60 banners, 125×125 banners, text links) and design your website according to those objectives. Advertisers want visibility, so reserve a good spot for them.
- Adserver software: In order to serve your ads, rotate banners and track statistics you will need to install an Adserver. If you are looking for a simple solution you should try WP-Ads. This WordPress plugin will serve ads for specific ad zones that you create. The only drawback is that it does not count clicks (only impressions). If you need a more sophisticated solution check OpenAds. You will need to spend some time learning how to use it, but it offers virtually all the features you will ever need.
- “Advertise Here” page: It is very important to have an “Advertise Here” page. On this page you want to give some details about the website, like audience, traffic and any other factor that might be of the interest of potential advertisers. Secondly, make sure that you have some link to that page on the navigation bar and if possible close to the zone where the ads will be displayed. You can see a perfect example of such layout on Copyblogger.com.
- Standard letter to approach advertisers: While some advertisers will contact you after reading your “Advertise Here” page, the rest of them will need to be directly approached by you. In that case, it is a good idea to create a standard letter to contact the advertisers. There is no “one size fits all” solution here, but you can follow some general guidelines:1. Introduce yourself and quickly explain what the email is about
2. Explain why you decided to contact them and what they have to gain
3. Give details about your site (traffic, subscribers, topic, audience)
4. Give details about the advertising options (location on the site, max number of advertisers, monthly price)That is it, after that information the advertisers should be able to decide if they are interested or not. If they reply, then you will fix the details. Bear in mind that all the info I mentioned should be contained in 2 or 3 paragraphs. If you send an essay to potential advertisers they will just skip it altogether. - Accepting payments: You might have everything in place, but if you are not able to cash payments — or more importantly, if advertisers are not able to pay easily — you will end up losing deals. PayPal is the best option here. Notice, however, that a personal account will not suffice. You will need at least a premier account to be able to accept credit cards.
Where to Find the Advertisers
Once you have your direct advertising program established, you will start to receive inquiries from people. On the beginning, however, you will need to hunt advertisers down. Do not get discouraged if get turned down initially, provided you have all the aforementioned requirements, sooner or later you will find someone willing to take a shot on your site.
- People linking to your site or articles: If a company is willing to link to your articles or to add your website under its “Links” or “Resources” section, it is also probably willing to discuss about advertising on your site. Keep track of those incoming links.
- People leaving comments/e-mails: The same principle applies to people leaving comments on your blog or sending you e-mails. If among them you see an employee or the owner of a company that could be interested on your website, bingo! Contact him or her and get the conversation going.
- AdWords advertisers: Through out your search for advertisers you will notice that most of the established companies are not aware of the benefits of online advertising. If a certain company is already spending money on Google AdWords, however, it is very likely that it would also be open to other forms of online advertising. Think about some keywords that are related to your topic and Google them. Check the sponsored links that will appear and contact them. (You can also check the advertisers that appear on the Adsense units of related websites)
- Other advertising networks: While Google AdWords is by far the largest advertising network on the Internet, there are many others that could be useful. Check the companies that are spending money on AdBrite, Text-Link-Ads, BlogAds, SponsoredReviews and so on.
- Banner advertisers on similar sites: Check out popular websites on your niche and see what companies are advertising there. Provided you offer them an interesting deal (i.e., a reasonable price for your size), I am pretty sure they will be interested.
- Create a “Potential Sponsors” bookmark folder: This technique produced outstanding results for me. I have a bookmark folder on my browser called “Potential Sponsors.” Every time I come across a company or website that could be interested in sponsoring my website, I bookmark it. Currently I have over 100 bookmarked sites on that folder, and I have not approached half of them yet.
How Much to Charge
- You need to provide value: It is all about value. A potential sponsor or advertiser will want to see some returns for the money he will be spending on your site, and this can be seen as visibility (impressions) and leads (clicks and possible sales). Make sure, therefore, that your advertising deals will deliver.
- The numbers: Remember that there are some pretty cheap advertising options out there (e.g., Google AdWords), and you will need to be competitive. Provided you reserved a good spot for the sponsors (sidebar or header, preferably) you could start charging a $0,5 CPM (cost per 1000 impressions). If your blog is generating 100,000 monthly page views, therefore, a banner spot on your sidebar should cost around $50. Start low and build your way upwards. Popular blogs (e.g., TechCrunch) have a higher CPM, sometimes as high as $10, but you will need a huge credibility to arrive there.
- Cross-check: You can easily check if you are charging a suitable rate by using Adsense units on the places where you will sell direct advertising. Analyze how much you would gain with Adsense, and adjust your rates accordingly. Secondly, you can also check similar sites that are already selling direct ads.
- Be flexible regarding the terms: Flexibility is key. First of all make advertising agreements on a month-to-month basis. People don’t like to commit to something they are not completely sure about. If someone proposes you a longer deal, offer a discount in exchange.
- Offer test periods: Unless you have a very popular website, you will find potential advertisers reluctant to spend real money. If you are confident that the deal will create value for both parties, however, you can use that on your favor. Offer a free test period whenever needed. Some of the times the advertiser will turn you down after it, but other times they will confirm the deal. Either way you have nothing to lose.
Yes I want to do this eventually. First I plan on increasing my page rank then I will try and sell. I just wonder what I will charge.
I have only recently started investigating getting paid advertisers. It can certainly be an advantageous income avenue, it also one that is a little more difficult.
Nice article. Thanks. How much to charge is always a doubt. Mainly when you are beginning.
Thanks for the tips. I hope to eventually start selling direct advertising on my website and I found your article very helpful. Also, ejoyed your Adsense Optiization session at Blogworld last week.
I learned a lot through this article. However I am more interested in engaging people online and creating a large viral readership so that important messages and causes can be passed on.
Can anyone recommend any resources that provide a little tech-savvy-tactical off site explanation as to how to draw a community to a site?
Thanks for the information.
I’d like to add some ads on my blog as the traffic is better nowadays.
I’m just using adsense and maybe adding some affiliates banner would be great..
My company is about to launch a second website and plans to support it with revenue from potential advertisers. Our products will not be listed on this new website. Since this is a new website (no track history), I’m trying to put together a written “pitch” re why they should advertise their products on our new website — what’s in it for them, etc.
Thanks for the info. I have been curious about how this works out for others.
Thanks Daniel for a very helpful post! I have a niche blog which is not yet a year old so I really did get some very good ideas from you. I think good content is important but the blog still needs to be found by the right traffic and for that I guess SEO is really important. And all that leads to good ads.
Thank you for this article…I would like to try many of the tips you mentioned.
A great read. Thanks.
its the best post i read today on net. Most informative and i had an eye on how to find advertiser for my site. Thanks any way it will surely help me a lot.
Ok…now I can’t help but notice that this article was written in 2007 (great information by the way!)…But I’m noticing the ads & advertising platform you’re currently using. Have you found these to be more effective than what’s written about in the post?
Wow! That was very helpful. Great advice and I learned a lot about online advertising from just reading your post.
I’ll definitely focus on getting more traffic first.
Hi Daniel
Thank you for this post. I have really been wondering how to go about looking for sponsors for my blog. After reading this, I will definitely focus on getting the traffic I need first before anything else. Cheers!
Thanks, I too love the “potential sponsors” bookmarking idea. I do come upon sites that I feel may be a good fit and then never get around to contacting them or forgetting where I visited.
Great post! This is the best article that I have seen on “how to get paid advertisers to your site”! I’m curious, how long did it take you to obtain 1000 unique visitors a day?
great article… i will start sell your own advertising space…
As a biginner i found this article to be the best tips i can ever get. thanks for the tips.
I have a question about charging for advertising on a blog. If you’re not charging for memberships or access to your site and your only income is from the advertisers that pay for space on your site how are you reporting this income? Are you registering as a business / sole proprieter? Do you just claim that you’re self employed? I have been considering this for a while but haven’t been able to find answers to this question. Thanks for any info you can provide! This is all pretty new to me.
wow… its very helping me for making money in my web, thanks
Excellent advice, just what I was looking for. Love the bookmark folder for potential clients. Do you use a pdf rate card, or a html one on the site?
your site is one of the best site i have ever seen on the net,every content is a buster.
Thanks for your information