The Blogger "Earnings" tab: Why and How?

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Blogger has been stepped into the list of  of the major blogging website, and it is established by Google. In this you can start your own blog with custom/ or domain name with .blogspot.com extension. If you sign in to your blogger dash board you can see many more option which are helping in making of your blog. Among them you can see a Tab called Earnings Clicking on it you will be shown a page containing some descriptions and helpful set up advise to earn money from your blog using Google/s Advertisement named Adsense.

Adsense has been penetrated to the heart of many bloggers and website owners and they are unable to remove it from their website. Because many of the Bloggers are being earned a large amount of income using Adsense  ( Eg: 30 lakh per month = $60000 ).

The Earnings tab in Blogger makes it easy to enable AdSense ads on your blog. Once your account has been approved, Blogger retrieves your earnings data so you don't need to visit the AdSense dashboard to access basic earnings information.
Blogger Earnings tab for new interface
AdSense Report

Once you start generating AdSense impressions, you'll begin earning money when people click on ads that appear on your blog. The earnings report (visible when you click the Earnings tab) includes a drop-down bar with Today, Yesterday, Last 7 Days, This Month, and All time.

Selecting an option will retrieve the relevant report directly from AdSense.

All time

If you're an existing AdSense user, you'll notice that Blogger created a new channel (with the URL of your blog) in your account. If you have had AdSense ads on your blog before using Blogger’s AdSense integration to insert ads into your blog, note that All time will retrieve data only from the time you connected Blogger to your AdSense account.

This does not affect your overall AdSense reporting, available directly from AdSense.

Terminology

The AdSense report visible from the Earnings tab contains basic information about how many ads have run on your blog, how many clicks were generated, and how much revenue you've earned. Each term in the report is defined below:
  • Page views: A page view is generated every time a user views a page displaying Google ads. They will count one page view regardless of the number of ads displayed on that page. For example, if you have a page displaying three ad units and it's viewed twice, you'll generate two page views and six ad unit impressions.
  • Clicks: The number of times the ads were clicked on in the given reporting period.
  • Page CTR (Click-through rate): The number of ad clicks divided by the number of page views.
  • CPC (Cost per click): The average amount paid by the advertisers for each ad click.
  • Page RPM (Revenue per mille): This is revenue per 1,000 page views. RPM = (Page views x CTR x CPC) / 1,000
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