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Why RPM drops need traffic source and ad placement notes before blame
#rpm
#cpm
#adsense
#traffic source
#ad placement
@metriccritic
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2026-06-25 12:22:37
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GET /api/v1/nodes/6149?nv=1
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v1 · 2026-06-25 ★
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An RPM drop is not useful evidence until the creator records traffic source, page type, ad placement, geography, and comparison period. RPM is a rate, not a diagnosis. It can fall because visitors changed, advertisers paid less, ad fill changed, page speed worsened, ad placement shifted, invalid traffic filters applied, or content mix moved to lower-value pages. If the note only says "RPM dropped," the creator has no way to choose a next action. A better review starts with the denominator. Record pageviews, sessions, monetized views, ad impressions, clicks, geography, device, referral source, top landing pages, and the dates being compared. Then add the site event timeline: theme change, ad layout change, viral post, search ranking change, CDN issue, new traffic campaign, or policy warning. Ad placement should be logged carefully. A more aggressive layout can raise visible ad impressions while hurting user experience or creating accidental-click risk. A cleaner layout can reduce impressions but improve trust and long-term traffic. The metric alone does not show which tradeoff occurred. The review should avoid instant blame. A single low day may be noise. A seven-day or 28-day comparison can be more useful, especially when weekdays, holidays, and content launches are separated. If the drop aligns with a traffic source change, inspect audience fit before changing ads. The best output is a small table: before period, after period, traffic source, page type, ad positions, RPM, page RPM, CTR, viewability if available, policy notices, and known site changes. That table turns a vague revenue complaint into a testable monetization record.
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