Why Removing AdSense May Help You Earn More Money

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Why Removing AdSense May Help You Earn More Money

Building websites and turning them into profitable businesses is hard work. However, the freedom they offer me is what motivates me to stay focused and work diligently to build an even more successful business.Jill from sftourismtips.com

15 Takeaways that Take You From “Initial Success” to “Grow as Big as You Like”

It’s been two years since I wrote about My Best Month Ever. At the time, I was ecstatic about my first $5k+ of revenue in only one month and wanted to share how I got there. I also gave you my ideas on how I planned to continue to build traffic and generate revenue from my e-business.

Since then, my online business is continuing to grow every day. Just like most people who run their own businesses, I’ve had some great successes and some failures. Not everything works and that’s OK.  I keep what works and drop the rest.

My niche, San Francisco tourism, has great potential. It’s also a hot-competitive niche. With my 7+ years of experience as a solopreneur I now have a much clearer vision about what I need to do to keep driving my online business…

Hot Air Balloons
Jill’s online business keeps soaring… just like these hot air balloons in Cappadocia

6 Actions That Helped Me Grow My Online Business in the Past 2 Years

Like I said, I keep what works. Here is what I’ve been doing and will be doing more of.  These key strategies have been proven in the crucible of the real world, so I’m confident that the steady growth of SF Tourism Tips will continue for years to come…

Action Plan #1: Adding Content-Rich Pages

With a competitive niche like mine, I add several keyword-focused, content-rich pages each week. I’m guided by SBI!’s Master Keyword List, so “keyword” merely means “high-quality topic that will be of genuine value to your visitor.”

I also have a list of about 600 more pages that are scheduled to be added in the next year or two. I’m always looking for new content ideas, which I get through keyword research, visitor requests, and travel forum questions.

TAKEAWAY #1: An online business is never “done.” There’s always more content to be added, or existing content to be updated. As a smart solopreneur, Jill has an excellent system in place to collect new content ideas…

Adding two pages of high quality content per week is a lot of work for one person, so we asked Jill if she writes all of her content herself. She explained…

I used to write it all myself, but I don’t anymore. It’s not possible to write that much content and manage the rest of the pieces on my own. I now have one person who works with me 15 hours a week. She helps me write the content and my fiancé helps edit.Jill Loeffler

That leads us to…

TAKEAWAY #2: Every solopreneur is, by definition, limited by the number of hours in the day. Sooner or later, you either decide to accept the limit or outsource to leverage your business growth and income. Leveraging content-writing is THE most delicate task. Be rigorous and ruthless, insisting on quality and voice that is at least as good as yours. Getting the most out key third parties is an important topic we cover in SBI!.

Action Plan #2: Creating Two Ebooks

In the last two years, I wrote and self-published two ebooks for my site. One is a general San Francisco guide and one is specific to those traveling with kids.

My first book took me several weeks to complete. The second one, focused on family visits, was much quicker to write, as I had pinned down the basics already. Both sell well and continue to be a great source of passive income for me.

TAKEAWAY #3: Selling ebooks and other digital products is an excellent way to monetize your audience. You created a lot of the content already when you researched and published the information you’re giving away for free on your website.

Why not repurpose that content, format it nicely, add some in-depth, added-value material that’s not yet on your site, and sell it as an ebook?

SBI! members have access to a comprehensive help section about creating and selling e-goods, whether it’s books, audio files or a video course. We consider it “passive income” because once you have set it up, including your sales funnel, you can pretty much forget it (aside from the occasional promotion through your social media). There is little or no customer support if you do it right.

Jill's first ebook
Part of the sales page for Jill’s first ebook.

Action Plan #3: Optimizing My Monetization

For the past two years, this has been my main focus area. My SBI! site generates high traffic.  That’s critical if you want to monetize, obviously.

But I owe it to my hard work (that built that traffic) to monetize it to the max.  So I try various things and test, test, and retest the options to see what works best.

For example, I’ve tested almost every hotel booking site with an affiliate program that I could find. I wanted to make sure that I didn’t leave money on the table by using an underperforming vendor.

While I lost some money in the short term during these tests, I’m now confident that I’m using the right affiliate programs for my site. That being said, I still test every so often just to make sure I’m using the best hotel booking sites for my and my visitors’ needs.

TAKEAWAY #4: Too few solopreneurs build high traffic. And of those who do, too many take it for granted with “AAA” (“Automatic AdSense and Affiliates”).  We love Jill’s respect for the work that she’s done to create the content that drives the traffic. That drives all of her actions…

“Test, test and retest.”  Jill nails this all-important advice for the smart solopreneur. Whether it’s your newsletter open rate, the bounce rate on your home page, the click-through rate of your ads, or the conversion rate of your sales page, constantly test what works best; if you don’t, you’ll leave money on the table.

Think about it… let’s say you sell an ebook for $20. Your sales page gets 1000 visitors per day. Your current conversion rate is 1%. In one year, this ebook generates $73,000 of income (10 ebooks x $20 x 365 days).  

Happy? Sure! But are you satisfied? We hope not. Instead, ask…

How can I double that income?

Either try to increase your daily visitors to 2000 or increase your conversion rate to 2%. Or hey! Do both!

While doubling your traffic is doable, it takes more effort and time than A/B testing your sales page to optimize its conversion rate. Google Content Experiments is an effective, simple and free tool to test and optimize your sales.

Action Plan #4: Removing AdSense

This was a big one for me. In 2014, I made quite a bit of money each month from AdSense. It was my second largest revenue stream for almost two years. As ad blockers became more and more popular, my AdSense revenue started to fall.

That’s why, after about 5 months of this downward trend, I decided it was time to drop AdSense and come up with a plan to replace this income. I spent about a week removing it all from my site. I made a few adjustments with my affiliate programs and my ebooks over the next few weeks.

Overall, this change increased the revenue from my site. Even though it was a risk for me, and it was scary to think of losing this income, it turned out to be a valuable change in my strategy.  

TAKEAWAY #5: This one’s a biggie indeed. It’s intimidating to remove AdSense completely from your site; especially when, in Jill’s case, this was her second largest income source. And heck.. “It’s Google! What if they don’t love me anymore?”

However, it’s simple logic that replacing under-monetizing ad space for higher-earning models will generate more income. No contest if you think it through and then have the courage of your convictions.

There are other reasons too, but the bottom line is that Google pays too little for Jill’s precious traffic. They don’t deserve her business. Period, simple.

Are you frustrated about decreasing AdSense income, too? Follow Jill’s example. Have a plan in place to fill the income gap. Then take a deep breath and make the change.

We asked Jill to elaborate on the adjustments she made. Here’s what she said…

I’ve increased the use of some of my affiliates that offer discounts. This helped me quickly fill the gap. I also added a new banner in the upper right hand corner of my site to promote my ebooks better.

I replaced the AdSense banners with large images on the top of my pages, so my visitors are now greeted with an image about the place they will be visiting instead of an ad.

Jill focused on increasing the revenue from the other two income streams she already had: affiliate marketing and selling her ebooks. That’s the fastest strategy. But you could also develop completely new ways to monetize, e.g., negotiating site sponsorships or offering services.

Jill and her fiancé enjoying life in Costa Rica
Jill and her fiancé enjoying life in Costa Rica during one of their many travels.

Action Plan #5: Sending Weekly Emails

When I first started with email marketing, I sent emails only once a month. In August 2015, I moved over to AWeber and started sending my emails weekly. This has been a profitable change for me and my site.

My emails are neither fancy nor sophisticated, but my overall open and click-through, rates remain high. My revenue is also usually 3 times higher on email days vs. other days of the week.

TAKEAWAY #6: “The final frontier for marketers everywhere is the email list,” says Wade Harman, renowned relationship marketer, author and Star Wars fan, in his article about how to ignite your email marketing strategy.

Every SBI! subscription comes with an integrated MailOut Manager included. You can build an email list, create a template, schedule and publish newsletters, or send marketing emails to your list.

For more advanced features, like segmenting your email list or split-testing subject lines, you can easily integrate SBI! with two of the most popular email management systems, MailChimp and Aweber.

TAKEAWAY #7: If you are just starting out, this may all sound very intimidating. Who has the time?  Even some SBIers skip this step in the CTPM process, figuring that they’ll never need to sell a thing through email. That’s a mistake…

It only takes an hour per month to send your fans an attractive summary of what’s new on your website. They’re happy to get it. Then, one day, it happens…

You have a monetization model (ex., selling your own ebooks or services, etc.) that is perfect for email marketing.  Wouldn’t you be delighted that you already had a list of 7,000 subscribers who WANT to hear from you?  

You’ll progress from the super-simple to the sophisticated when the income warrants it, trust us on that!  That’s exactly what Jill did.

Action Plan #6: Moving to a Responsive Design

In the summer of 2015, I decided it was time to move to a more up-to-date, responsive design. I spent a few months working on and implementing the new design.

At the time, I was using an older template and uploaded my own pages, so this took quite a bit of effort. It was a lot of hard work, but it was worth it to me to have a cleaner, mobile-friendly, easy-to-navigate site.

SF Tourism Tips' home page before the re-design.
SF Tourism Tips’ home page before the re-design.
SF Tourism Tips' new modern and responsive look and feel.
SF Tourism Tips’ new modern and responsive look and feel.

TAKEAWAY #8: Clean, easy to navigate and responsive… these were Jill’s goals when she redesigned her site. Her reasons align perfectly well with our own philosophy regarding design: don’t follow the newest design fads just to “look modern.”

Phenomenal design may please your ego, but your visitor is task-focused. Yes, your design needs to be good enough to make you look credible and to get your visitors to hang around until they read your opening headline (5 seconds).

From there on, it’s all about your outstanding content, presented in a unique voice, that keeps them on your site, not your design.

In some industries it may even be an advantage to have a less slick-looking website. Want proof? Head over to Steve Kazella’s story… he built a 7-figure income with a template that is anything but modern.

We don’t recommend going that far but hey… whatever works, right?

TAKEAWAY #9: You could almost miss Jill’s comment…

At the time, I was using an older template and uploaded my own pages.

When we first started SBI!, the #1 wish was to enable folks to upload their own HTML pages (created by HTML editors such as DreamWeaver). That feature is used less and less often, especially since we launched the world-class BlockBuilder 2.

You can customize to your heart’s content and deliver a top-notch, responsive website (i.e., mobile-friendly) in a fraction of the time of “do it yourself” HTML. It’s the overwhelming favorite of new SBI! members, while die-hard “UYOHers” (“Upload Your Own HTML”) are slowly realizing the future is now.

Where I’m Headed in the Next Few Years

The six actions above are just a small piece of what I do daily, weekly and monthly to grow my business.  What does the future hold?

TAKEAWAY #10: Have a roadmap for the future. We start SBIers off with one that will take you all the way to Jill’s level.  By that time, folks have the discipline and business sense to always have an ever-changing plan.  Without one, how do you know where you’re going?

The hard work I’ve put into my site is finally paying off. I see so much potential as I continue to build and explore my niche market. I have dozens of items on my “to do” list.  Here is a sneak peek into my plan for the next few years…

1) Stay Focused on Content Creation

This is a big one for me. As I mentioned above, I have more than 600 pages on my list to write in the next few years. I will continue to focus on creating new and interesting pages for my visitors as a way to increase my traffic and revenue.

TAKEAWAY #11: Jill trusts SBI! to track and transmit whatever is new and important. As noted above, we’re acutely aware that the #1 limitation of solopreneurs is TIME.⏱

By monitoring the blogosphere, we enable Jill to focus totally on what matters, her business.  In a sense, one of the biggest things you “get” when you start SBI! Is “free hours per week.”

2) Create Additional Products

I plan to add more of my own products to my site. This includes a few more eBooks. It also includes some additional ideas that I’m working on finalizing. I’ll give updates as I work through the details and begin to sell them to my visitors.

TAKEAWAY #12: This is the solopreneur big-step into serious business-building. More and more SBIers are ready for it. So we created the ultimate resource for them. Called “Make It!,” it covers everything you need, from conception/creation/development, to sourcing/outsourcing/manufacturing, to sales/distribution/customer support.

This is way ahead of you now, most likely.  But you’d be amazed at how quickly you reach the stage where you have to make the pleasant decision…

“How big do I want to get?”  If you think the answer is easy “bigger,” it’s not. You have to weigh it against what you need in terms of life balance. Nothing comes free. We’re there to help you with this, too.

3) Continue to Network With Local Businesses

I’m working with and talking to local businesses including hotels, attractions, event companies, and conferences every single day. My plan is to continue to work closely with them to help them build their business as well as my own. It takes time, which we all know is money, but it has a very large return on my investment.

4) Increase My Marketing Efforts

Email marketing and social media have been a great source of traffic for me over the last couple of years. I’ll continue to look at new ways to drive traffic and reach those coming to visit SF.

5) Build a Second Online Business

In March of this year, I decided to start my second online business with SBI!. It’s another travel site and, after 9 months, already has almost 100 pages. It’s a very different market, but will allow me to use what I’ve learned from my SF site to start driving traffic and revenue faster.

TAKEAWAY #13:  We chuckle a little when our advisors get the question, “how many sites do I get with SBI!?”  It’s a symptom of much of what’s wrong with solopreneurism.  Think about it this way… No one wants to build 3 OFFline businesses at the same time.

SBI! builds businesses. It’s not a “make money” opportunity.  A site is just part of a serious process that builds a real business with income and equity.

SBI! teaches folks not to start a 2nd business, probably forever. But if you do, it should ideally be related in some way to the first and it should only be attempted when you have the time to devote to a new business.

 

6) Outsourcing

One of the ways I built two large sites at one time is by outsourcing some of my work. I still do all the high-level site-building but I can save time by outsourcing copy and editing.

This costs more, in the short term, but in the long term it pays off since I have more pages, more quickly, and it saves me from doing the grunt work each and every day. Again, time is money, and I’d rather spend the money now, to have even more time now, and a lot more money, later.

TAKEAWAY #14: At a certain point, every solopreneur has the problem of handling the extra work that success brings.  It’s a “pleasant problem” to have, but can turn ugly, if not addressed well.

Jill decided to outsource part of her content creation. She still does the keyword research and outlines the page structure, but a freelance writer fills in the gaps.

We cover this topic, including where to find good freelancers or part-time employees. For some niches, and depending on the role you hope to fill, your best employee will likely be among the visitors to your site, subscribers to your newsletter, social media fans/followers, etc. That’s how Carl, The Disney Dad, grew his team.

Others, like Jill, find their helpers at places like UpWork (a freelance marketplace) or in their personal circle. We asked Jill about her experiences with outsourcing. She said…

Outsourcing is the one piece I’ve really increased over the last year, and it’s helped me move my businesses along much faster. I used to work every day and couldn’t keep up with it. By outsourcing, I’m able to take off a day or two each week in addition to growing my businesses much faster. Jill Loeffler


Building websites and turning them into profitable businesses is hard work. However, the freedom they offer me is what motivates me to stay focused and work diligently to build an even more successful business.

The freedom to travel… one of the solopreneur perks that Jill enjoys to the fullest.
This time in Istanbul.

I also enjoy the feedback that customers give me after they have used my site and I have helped them make their dream trip come true.

Of course, there are always the few negative responses that I receive. These help me see my content gaps; I then build a new page that meets that unmet need. Even though these responses can hurt, when I first see them, I figure out a way to turn them into something positive, and ultimately they help me to make more money.

TAKEAWAY#15:  Jill is really ready to hit the big-time – outsourcing, planning her own products, a 2nd business. That’s a ton of progress since her initial report of just 2 years ago. How big she gets will be limited only by her lifestyle choices – and that’s a lovely spot to be in.

Does this seem impossible to you?  Feeling overwhelmed?  How did she do it? It’s not easy, but it is DO-ABLE.

She followed the Action Guide. She proceeded one step at a time, like every other SBIer. We love seeing how folks grow over time, not just financially, but in terms of genuine, personal growth.

We can’t say it without bragging, so what the heck…

We’re incredibly proud of these stories, of how SBI! enables good people with “BAM” to get what they deserve out of life.

Key Takeaways

  1. Know that an online business is never done. Have a system in place to collect ideas for new content and ways to monetize.
  2. Respect/maximize the value in your traffic. Test, test, test. And then test some more. 😉
  3. Be bold. Notice that a monetization method doesn’t work well anymore? Make a plan how to replace it and then go for it! And test, test, test again.
  4. Know what you want out of your business. There are key decisions both early and late. Choosing/refining the niche is a critical early one. Outsourcing is a big decision later. Know how big you want to be and balance work-life.
  5. Find these stories and their real-world takeaways useful? Subscribe to our free newsletter.  Or subscribe to the blog via RSS.  

You know, there’s no reason that you can’t succeed like Jill and thousands of other SBI! members.  There is no “close 2nd-place” product in terms of enabling your success. Read more about it, starting here.

Why Removing AdSense May Help You Earn More Money
Jill Loeffler
Jill Loeffler started her site, www.sftourismtips.com, in July of 2009. After living in San Francisco for more than a decade, she wanted to share her passion about the city with other visitors. When she is not out exploring the streets of SF, Jill enjoys traveling around the world, sampling wine, running, reading, and spending time with her friends and family.
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