5.8K Cross-site ad monetization data is hard to obtain, because unless you work for an ad network, it is almost impossible to gain the access to detailed statistics. For anyone from the outside looking at the online advertising, I would venture to say that CPMs would seem like a big black hole.
Too long? Ask AI to summarize
5 important factors of your CPMs
What is affecting your CPM rates? One of the important things is to keep an eye on the website and estimate the CPMs. Below are the 5 factors/questions you should initially ask yourself:- Is the website “sticky” or simply a one-hit wonder (E.g. a reference site)?
- Who is using this website? Just people in the US or a more global scale?
- Is the website generic, or does it have its own niche or category (E.g. pets or Fords)?
- What is the dependency on Google SEO to bring visitors vs. the dependency of a community site to bring people back?
- How many page views does the website have? Just a few? Or a lot?
Simple or difficult to monetize
The simplest way you can monetize: One-hit wonder websites in a specific niche are USA based and have lots of search traffic. It’s likely that your website has high CTRs because visitors are in a transactional mode. If you are one of these and have lots of page views, then it means you are going to make lots of cash! What is difficult to monetize? Websites that are highly sticky are generally 100% based outside of the US and Europe with huge amount of page views. In this type of setup, people are actually unlikely to have a desire to buy anything, and even if they do, there’s no real possibility for you to be able to make money off of this group.Category examples
As a rule of thumb, here are some statistics just to show you the approximate rates:- Largely international sites have <$0.50 CPM
- Social sites that do not have a direct ad sales teams have <$0.25 CPM
- Websites that are medium using banner ad networks have <$1 CPM
- Niche reference sites have >$5 CPM or sometimes much higher, depending on what the niche is