AdSense is one of the best ways to monetize your  web traffic. People see those little “Ads by Gooogle” tidbits and they  click like crazy. Or at least that’s the plan. But have you ever given  though to where those ads are coming from? That would be AdWords, the  Pay-Per-Click program for people who want to advertise their products on  Google.  
They are the fine men and women who are willing to part with some  coin of the realm every time a visitor to your web site chooses to click  on an AdSense ad. Google grabs the cash from the AdWords' member’s  account, keeps some of it for themselves, and gives the rest to you. How  much they keep and how much give away is a State secret, but who cares;  just as long as we’re getting ours each month. 
How AdWords Works 
AdWords provides pay-per-click advertising to merchants who are  willing to shell out anywhere from a minimum 05 .05 per click all the  way up to a maximum of $100 per click. Can you imagine anyone paying  $100 just to have someone click on an ad? 
Anyway, the advertiser joins the AdWords program and gets a control  panel similar to the one that we AdSense users get. They can write their  ads, pick their keywords, and establish an advertising budget. They get  tools to track performance as well as to help them pick keywords. There  are no monthly minimum spends required and they can turn their ads on  and off at will. 
Once an advertiser is happy with their ad, it gets released to the  network and shows up on web sites like yours and mine. That’s if the  keywords on your site match the keyword requirements of the brand  spanking new ad, of course. 
They can’t “buy” their way to the top 
Google doesn’t simply push the people with the highest paying ads to  the top of the SERP (Search Engine Results Page). They use a rather  fair methodology that takes into consideration not only the maximum CPC  (cost per click), but also includes a secret recipe for determining an  ad’s placement based upon the number of clicks the ad receives. So, at  least in theory, an ad paying .05 per click could rise above one paying  $5.00 per click if it’s more popular with Google’s audience. 
I say “in theory” because if the owner of the $5 ad is paying  attention then he or she will see that they are being bested by a lowly  nickel ad and do some serious rewriting to get back up to the top where  they belong. 
Personally, I’m not sure that I have the guts to invest a lot of  money into hoping that people who click on my ad will actually buy  something, since I still have to pay Google whether I make a sale or  not. But, as a dedicated AdSense user, I’m sure glad that my AdWords  brothers and sisters have more nerve than I do. And you should be  thankful as well.  
 
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