#Google adsense PIN
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
galaxyonknowledg · 1 month ago
Text
What is Google AdSense and How to Make Money
In today’s digital age, making money online has become a popular way for people to earn extra income or even a full-time living. One of the most common methods of monetizing a website or blog is through Google AdSense. But what exactly is Google AdSense, and how can you make money with it? In this article, we will explore the ins and outs of Google AdSense, including how it works, how to get…
0 notes
manasukablog · 2 years ago
Text
Kenapa PIN Adsense Tidak Kunjung Datang?
Hari ini, 11 Maret 2023 saya mencoba ke Kantor POS di kota saya untuk menanyakan apakah ada surat dari Google Adsense yang berisi PIN (Personal Identification Number) untuk mengaktifkan pembayaran iklan adsense. Saya mengajukan PIN, setelah memenuhi syarat, yaitu pada bulan November 2022. Karena PIN adsense tidak kunjung datang ke rumah, maka saya ajukan kembali pada Januari 2023. PIN Adsense…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
azeeyfinance · 17 days ago
Text
Making money through blogging involves a combination of creating high-quality content, growing an audience, and monetizing your blog effectively.
Making money through blogging involves a combination of creating high-quality content, growing an audience, and monetizing your blog effectively. Here are some strategies to help you get started:
1. Choose a Profitable Niche
Pick a niche that you're passionate about but also has a potential audience interested in it. Popular niches include:
Personal finance
Health and fitness
Travel
Lifestyle
Technology
Food
Fashion
Ensure there's enough demand for content in that area and that you can create consistent, valuable content.
2. Build Your Audience
Consistent Content: Publish regularly and ensure your content is high quality. Write blog posts that address your audience’s problems or needs.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization): Optimize your content to rank in search engines like Google. Research keywords relevant to your niche and use them strategically in your posts.
Social Media: Promote your blog on social platforms like Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter, and Facebook to reach more people and drive traffic to your blog.
Email Marketing: Create an email list to nurture a dedicated audience. You can offer free resources like eBooks or checklists in exchange for email sign-ups.
3. Monetize Your Blog
There are several ways to make money from your blog:
a) Affiliate Marketing
Join affiliate programs where you promote other people's products and earn a commission for each sale made through your referral link.
Some popular affiliate programs include Amazon Associates, ShareASale, and CJ Affiliate.
Write reviews, how-to guides, or round-up lists with affiliate links.
b) Display Ads
You can make money by displaying ads on your blog. Google AdSense is a popular network that places ads on your site and pays you based on impressions or clicks.
The more traffic you have, the higher your potential earnings.
c) Sponsored Posts
Companies might pay you to write blog posts about their products or services.
Build a strong enough readership, and brands will reach out to you directly, or you can pitch to them.
d) Sell Products or Services
Digital Products: Create and sell eBooks, printables, courses, or guides.
Physical Products: If relevant to your niche, you can sell physical goods or branded merchandise.
Services: Offer services such as consulting, coaching, or freelance writing if you have expertise in your niche.
e) Membership or Subscription
Offer premium content to your audience for a monthly or yearly fee. You can create a membership area on your blog where subscribers get access to exclusive resources.
Examples include Patreon or building a private community for paid members.
f) Freelance Blogging
If you have good writing skills, offer freelance blogging services to other businesses. Many companies hire freelance bloggers to write for their websites, and you can earn by working with them.
g) Create a Course or Webinar
If you have expertise in your niche, create a course or webinar and sell it on platforms like Teachable, Udemy, or directly on your blog.
4. Grow Your Traffic
Collaborate with Others: Guest post on other blogs, collaborate with influencers in your niche, or participate in blogger round-ups.
Use Pinterest: For niches like lifestyle, food, fashion, and travel, Pinterest is a powerful tool to drive traffic. Design eye-catching pins that link to your blog.
Paid Advertising: Once you’ve optimized your content and built some organic traffic, consider investing in paid ads (Google Ads, Facebook Ads) to boost traffic further.
5. Optimize for Conversion
Clear Call-to-Action: Whether it's signing up for an email list, buying a product, or clicking an affiliate link, make sure your blog has clear CTAs (calls to action) to guide your audience toward the next step.
A/B Testing: Experiment with different designs, headlines, and strategies to see what resonates best with your audience and leads to higher conversions.
6. Track and Scale
Use analytics tools (like Google Analytics) to track your traffic, identify top-performing content, and make data-driven decisions.
As your blog grows, consider outsourcing tasks (e.g., content writing, social media management) to focus on scaling your income.
Summary of Monetization Methods:
Affiliate Marketing
Display Ads (e.g., Google AdSense)
Sponsored Posts
Selling Products/Services (Digital or Physical)
Membership or Subscription
Freelance Blogging
Creating and Selling Courses/Webinars
By combining these methods, consistently producing valuable content, and growing your audience, you can turn blogging into a profitable venture.
2 notes · View notes
benmehlos · 8 months ago
Text
Valedictus
Next Town Over was supposed to take five years. It took thirteen and change, and it is not an exaggeration to say when I started it I was, figuratively and literally, a different person. 
When I wrote Next Town Over I worked part time in a print shop and part time at a small game developer in what was essentially an intern level copywriting role. I was nearing 30; a perfect storm of residual 20s naivete about paying for the future and a third-life crisis about the fact that I was incredibly dissatisfied with where I was at. I didn���t intend to do Next Town Over as a webcomic; I intended it for an independent press because at the time my ideas around the legitimacy of art hinged [incorrectly] on compensation and traditional publication. I drew the first 10ish pages as part of a pitch to shop around to probably five differently small publishers, and had one taker: a brand new small press that wanted to publish it online, own 50% of it, and give me a page rate of $100/page. (A sidebar for context and transparency: these days I work quite a bit with creator-owned small publishers and in the year of our Lord 2024 I’m lucky to command $100/page; NTO less its supplementals would have paid me $41,000+ in page rates before any royalties or sales, and while $41k is a pittance it’s also probably more than I’ve made off the comic in 13 years.) But I was incredibly naive and ridiculously optimistic about its appeal and my ability to find it an audience – and in my partial defense the creative economy was in a drastically different place than it is today – and I decided that if this publisher could make enough in ad revenue, etc., publishing it as a webcomic, I could surely do it myself while retaining full ownership.
Neither of my then-jobs paid very much but at the time I lived with the person I’d marry a year later, whose job was good money and moreover good insurance.  In the shelter of that headspace I asked that then-partner what he thought of me quitting the print job to focus on cranking out Next Town Over, as a webcomic, since we were sufficiently set financially to take the risk and anyway look at all the money creatives are making off Google AdSense (put a pin in that).
He agreed to this; I slapped together a Wordpress-with-Comicpress website and scheduled those first 10 pages to drop weekly. That seemed like a more-than-doable rate at which to buffer a bunch of pages (it was; NTO’s buffer was, for awhile, a now unimaginable 20 pages). This first website did indeed have AdSense advertising (and Project Wonderful ads; remember those?), and it did indeed appear encouragingly lucrative in the early months given its newness. The comic got a few enthusiastic write ups. Kris Straub shouted it out on Chainsawsuit. I became internet friends with a bunch of other creators of similarly-scoped comics (almost none of which ultimately survived). I quit my other job, at the game studio, which didn’t seem to be going anywhere anyway.  (In the glow of this era I like to think fear I helped inspire friends to attempt their own longform comic projects in web form.)
I no longer remember or particularly care how many months into this enterprise Google killed my AdSense account for “invalid click activity”, a ruling I unsuccessfully attempted to appeal about 4 times over the years – a ruling which eventually affected almost every single creator of those similarly-scoped comics. This not only killed most of the revenue on NTO but also locked me out of earning money via Google in perpetuity; I’d go on to have YouTube videos with 750k views I could never monetize, etc.. Project Wonderful earned, but not like AdSense. Patreon was two years away. Next Town Over was now making me basically nothing.  I’d quit my Jobs for Adults because I felt called to make art and it was going about how they warn you it will, and in the absence of any kind of financial validation I was honestly feeling pretty bad about it. Full time comics was supposed to have solved the aimlessness and ennui I’d felt my whole life and it had decisively not. 
In 2011 I had a near-fatal health crisis I’ll decline to get into, but mention because the existential scare forced me to reexamine once again what I was doing, what I wanted to do, what was important to me. The answer to all of these seemed to just be “I don’t know”; I had never had a plan for or even a vision of what my future could look like. But at 30 I felt like doors were closing, and doing something was better than doing nothing. So in rapid succession I asked my partner to marry me, we had a child, and I ran a Kickstarter to collect the first four books of Next Town Over into a print edition.
With a new child it just made sense for me to continue staying home and taking care of him and the house with my ultimately flexible independent artist schedule and relatively terrible earning potential – terrible earning potential that would ultimately compound itself over a decade out of the traditional work force. 
Having a family and focusing on being a stay-at-home parent didn’t fix the ennui, the sense of estrangement from my own life. It made it worse. I assumed because I wasn’t contributing to our household financially in any kind of significant way, an item of increasing friction and resentment in my marriage. I was taking freelance work here and there, but never consistently enough to replace a real job, and of course I kept puttering away at drawing Next Town Over. 
In 2013 Patreon launched, a new paradigm in supporting creators. I was incredibly hopeful I could make enough on this new platform to meaningfully supplement our earnings and, in my thinking, thereby feel validated in what I was doing with my life. At the beginning I shared a lot of sketch and conceptual materials from NTO, a lot of worldbuilding extras and a few process videos. NTO stalwarts were quick to support me on Patreon – many of whom are still supporting me an unthinkable 10 years later, a fact I’m constantly aware of/grateful for – but my monthly support never went gangbusters in the manner promised by the early optimism of the platform (to this day my Patreon is an amount that’s been immensely helpful and allowed me to purchase, among other things, the iPad Pro that transformed my art workflow – I’ll talk about this in a Patron-exclusive, process-focused postmortem that’s yet to come – but I generally make more off a single commission or item of work for hire than I do in a month’s worth of Patreon pledges.)
I continued like this for years, mostly focused on my kid but sidelining comics and occasional work for hire. I thought for awhile maybe independent publishing was my thing, and in addition to a second crowdfunded Next Town Over collection, I curated, edited, and did two stories for a frontier fantasy anthology with some of my friends: Poor Wayfaring Strangers. It funded successfully and my friends’ contributions to it are lovely so I don’t regret making it for an instant, but it proved remarkably sales proof post-Kickstarter. 
From about 2015 onwards I was convinced the great misstep in my life was leaving the little intern level job at the game developer, because my prime hobby and favorite storytelling medium was perennially videogames, not comics, and I really was drawn to making those. I started doing more and more hobbyist game development, mostly with a partner. We did a few game jams, embarked on several too-big projects that were never completed. I became about 70% of a 2D technical artist, and started thinking maybe that was my real calling, the thing I’d neglected all this time. I started thinking when NTO wrapped, and my kid was older, that would be what I’d try to focus on before I was dead. 
In fall of 2018 I started feeling minor numbness in my fingers, which progressed pretty quickly to worse numbness, radiating up my arms and into my neck and head, eventually becoming tingling and then worsening pain. Working in a desk chair became nearly unbearable and NTO started experiencing the first chronic disruptions to its previously clockwork update schedule in almost 8 years of drawing and posting it. We spent thousands on neurologists and rheumatologists, physical therapists and acupuncturists. I had autoimmune disease symptoms including abnormal bloodwork but I was never formally diagnosed with anything. A sports medicine provider told me I had thoracic outlet syndrome and I muddled through the suggested courses of PT but saw very little improvement. My chronic low grade depression worsened tremendously; I felt like shit and moreover I felt crazy without any concrete diagnosis. I didn’t want to move and not moving made it worse. 
I made a bunch of adjustments to how I work, including overhauling my desk geometry and starting to do art more seriously on an iPad Pro (thanks Patrons!), which allowed for more flexibility in work configurations. Over a period of about 2 years the symptoms lessened and I also just got used to a baseline level of low grade neck and back pain; anyone with chronic pain can probably attest that at some point you just sort of acclimate to some background level of it and soldier on but it’s always there like a rock in your shoe, making you irritable, making you exhausted. I’d always felt like that though: irritable, exhausted, an indefinable rock in my shoe. In a way this was nothing new. It was more of the same.  
Heading into the dread 2020 I wasn’t in the best place but I was fairly comfortable, had just started a solo Unity game, was looking forward to Next Town Over’s homestretch so I could focus on my true calling. I resumed working on Patron-only comic Cutter and Ironwood, and started thinking about returning to trying to stream. I was doing more lucrative freelance work. 
But you know what 2020 was like.  
My kid and my spouse came home from school and work. My kid’s schooling was virtual for a year and change. I was banished from the office where my work/dev/streaming setup was as my spouse [needfully] took it over to work from home. Approaching its 10th anniversary, Next Town Over, which I expected to be concluding, was so decisively backburnered the usually 52-updates-a-year comic updated 21 times in 2020. Then 11 times in 2021.  As the comic slid, so did my mood. I had been almost 30 when I quit my day jobs to do NTO. Now I was almost 40. I had an 8 year old. And nothing I’d done in the intervening decade had moved the needle on my creeping discontent. If anything it was worse. 
And after the years of cloistered introspection COVID forced on everyone, at the beginning of 2022 it went critical. 
This could be its own 2500 word memoir, but the cliff notes version is at the start of 2022 I was forced to confront, agonizingly, over the course of a couple traumatic life events, some therapy, and writing the first draft of Every Hole, that The Problem With Me was that I was a trans man. It is now practically a cliché to have understood yourself as trans because of the pandemic, but annoyingly it was the Cinderella slipper that slid with irrefutable ease over the shape of my lifetime of depression and alienation. 
The good news is pretty much the moment I stopped pruning off any new growth to fit in the comfortable, unchallenging container of my previous existence, things started to turn around for me mentally. Over the course of 3 months I wrote the 115,000 word rough draft for Every Hole – a comic (a comic I’ll be eternally grateful to for its role in the Figuring Out) after years of certainty I was done with comics the second I put down Next Town Over. Unbottling my identity simultaneously uncorked my energy reservoirs for making shit – and also my functionally unexplored sexuality, and by July I’d successfully pitched an erotica short to Filthy Figments, to start running that October. Throughout 2022 I transitioned my ass off along with working on Every Hole, on Positive Feedback, on freelance art, and yes: on Next Town Over. It didn’t hit 52 updates that year but it did hit 24, the most I’d managed in years, and alongside over 60 pages of comics work elsewhere.  60 is also roughly how many pounds I lost in the process of becoming Ben; I’m now over 40 but I am also in generally the best shape I’ve been in since my 20s. This has had the knock-on effect of diminishing the still-there neck and back pain to a whisper I can almost always ignore – still more fuel for the accelerating engine of my want to make art again. 
But it did cost me my partner.
In many ways my marriage ran perfectly parallel to Next Town Over. In a tidy bookend to marrying the year after starting NTO – a comic at its core about a dysfunctional marriage – I’m divorcing in the year following finishing it. My marriage was built on a fault line, its dissolution an inevitability, but it has been slow-motion, and largely amicable. 
My future feels precarious in a way I’m not sure it ever has. But I have to admit the precarity is exciting, and unlike the first half of my life where I just sort of drifted on the current and couldn’t picture any kind of future, I can now envision not one but any number of futures for myself. I have been, and am, both Vane, riding off into the wilderness to find and forget, and John, tirelessly chasing his passion at any cost. 
When I started Next Town Over I was an aimless, childless single straight girl who could ride a horse. 13 years later I’m a middle-aged queer man and father with chronic pain and a 12 year marriage in my rearview. (I assume I can still ride a horse, but it’s been awhile.) Next Town Over was the backdrop to such an unbelievable amount of change in my life that when I think about the sum of the change that has inevitably happened in the combined lives of all of you, its readers, in that same span of time, it is nothing short of overwhelming. 
Thanks for reading, thanks for listening, for commenting, for buying the books or supporting the Patreon, for creating fan works, for retweeting updates or talking in the Discord when the Discord was active because we were all locked up hiding together from a global pandemic. Thanks for coming along. 
For many of us this will likely be where we part ways. My gratitude for those of you is undiminished; if you want a final fix of frontier fantasy and you aren’t a Patron, check out Cutter and Ironwood 0; I intended to do more with these characters and I haven’t ruled it out but it’s unlikely to happen any time soon as I am headed elsewhere, at least for awhile. Watch this space (wherever you’re reading this) if you want to know when I crowdfund a print edition of NTO #9-13, which will be the chunkiest NTO book by far.  
If you’d like to stay on, follow or subscribe to my Patreon if you aren’t already; I have just started Every Hole Book 2; Patrons of all levels get Book 1 for free or you can catch up standalone buying it off my itch.  If NTO was a comic about marriage, Every Hole is a comic about rekindling your power in midlife. I hope to not be working on it for 13 years but if I am I guess that’s fine, too. 
I hope you’re looking forward to or already living in one of any number of futures you envisioned for yourself. 
Happy trails.
Ben May 2024
5 notes · View notes
altinbilgiler · 3 months ago
Text
Adsense Pin Nasıl Alınır ?
Google AdSense PIN (Kişisel Kimlik Numarası), AdSense hesap sahiplerinin adreslerini doğrulaması için Google tarafından gönderilen bir koddur. Gelir elde etmeye başladığında ve ödeme eşiğini geçtiğinde, Google, kullanıcıya bu PIN’i posta yoluyla iletir. Adres doğrulama işlemi tamamlanmadan, AdSense ödemeleri yapılmaz. PIN almanın adımları şunlardır: 1. AdSense Hesabında Yeterli Gelir Elde…
0 notes
muzammilelahi · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
For Sale: pin verify AdSense aprove Website! 🚀
🌐 original content
🌐 Domain: .com
📅 Age: 1.5 years
🚫 Never Ad Limitations
📝 WordPress Platform
💹 Ad manger ok
✅ Google News aproved
🔍 Traffic: Organic
🏆 Domain Quality: Excellent
🤝 Deal via Admin
Tags ignore,
Admin Muzammil Bhakkar Wala
#muzammilbhakkarwala
Approved website buy online
Adsense approved website buy
Adsense approved website for sale in Pakistan
Approved website buy free
Adsense approved website price
0 notes
enobintech · 4 months ago
Video
youtube
Google AdSense PIN Verification How to Verify Google AdSense PIN in 2024
0 notes
yaomiid · 6 months ago
Text
Akhirnya! Coba Cara Ini jika PIN Verifikasi Alamat Google AdSense Tak Kunjung Datang
Alhamdulillah, akhirnya setelah sekian lama menunggu PIN verifikasi alamat Google AdSense yang penuh rasa putus asa, cemas dan waswas. Bagaimana tidak, mendaftarkan salah satu situs yang saya kelola di bulan Maret 2024 lalu tepatnya tanggal 24. Sampai akhir bulan Juni kemarin PIN verifikasi alamat tersebut tak kunjung tiba. Batas akhir verifikasi sampai 19 Agustus 2024 nanti. Setelah tanggal…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
kenhmua · 8 months ago
Video
youtube
Nhận mã PIN Google Adsense sau 1 ngày xác minh địa chỉ thành công 100%
0 notes
ansiandyou · 10 months ago
Text
Navigating the Digital Landscape: The Best Platforms for Bloggers to Share Their Work
Tumblr media
Content is fire; social media is gasoline.- Jay Baer In the ever-evolving world of content creation, the quest for the perfect platform to share blog articles is akin to finding a needle in a digital haystack. With countless options at their fingertips, bloggers are often left wondering where their writing will thrive and reach the eyes and hearts of readers who will truly value it. This guide delves into the myriad of platforms available, aiming to illuminate the path for bloggers seeking to make their mark in the digital sphere. Understanding Your Audience Before embarking on this journey, starting with a compass is crucial—knowing your audience. Understanding who your readers are, their online behaviors, and what they seek in content can significantly influence your choice of platform. Whether they crave in-depth analyses, quick reads, or visual stories, aligning your platform choice with your audience's preferences is the first step toward blogging success.
Overview of Popular Blog Sharing Platforms
Medium A haven for writers seeking a diverse audience, Medium offers a sleek interface and an engaged community. Its curation system and publications can catapult your articles into the spotlight, providing visibility beyond your immediate followers. WordPress.com vs. WordPress.org WordPress presents two flavors: the hosted .com for those desiring simplicity and the self-hosted .org for the tech-savvy blogger seeking total control. Your choice hinges on your willingness to manage the back end and your desire for customization. Blogger Google’s Blogger is a straightforward platform for those taking their first steps into blogging. Its integration with Google’s ecosystem offers perks like easy AdSense addition but might lack the customization depth seasoned bloggers seek. LinkedIn Articles LinkedIn Articles serve as a prime spot for professionals aiming to share industry insights. Leveraging LinkedIn's vast professional network can propel your articles into the feeds of industry peers and potential collaborators. Substack Merging blogging with email newsletters, Substack has emerged as a powerful platform for writers focused on building a dedicated readership. It’s particularly appealing for those exploring monetization through subscriptions.
Niche Platforms for Specific Interests
Diving into niche platforms can yield fruitful connections with audiences sharing specific interests. Platforms like Dev.to for developers, Behance for designers, and ResearchGate for academics cater to communities eager for specialized content.
Maximizing Engagement on Each Platform
Success on any platform requires more than just publishing; it demands engagement. Tailor your SEO strategy for platforms like WordPress, engage with Medium’s commenting community, and utilize LinkedIn’s networking potential to foster discussions.
Integrating Social Media for Wider Distribution
Social media platforms are indispensable allies in the quest for broader article distribution. Share snippets on Twitter, create pin-worthy graphics for Pinterest, and tap into Facebook groups aligned with your blog's theme to drive traffic to your articles.
Analytics and Measuring Success
Harness the power of analytics tools these platforms provide to gauge your blog's performance. Tracking views, engagement rates, and follower growth can offer insights into your content's impact, guiding future strategy refinements.
Conclusion
The journey to finding the best platform for sharing blog articles is profoundly personal and reflective of your unique voice and audience. Experimentation is key. By exploring various platforms and measuring their impact, you can discover the digital home where your writing will be seen and cherished. Now, we turn the floor over to you, dear bloggers. Share your experiences, triumphs, and trials in navigating the digital landscape. Which platforms have elevated your work, and how have you connected with your readership meaningfully? Let’s cultivate a community of shared knowledge and uplift each other in our digital publishing endeavors. Read the full article
0 notes
amfahhtech · 11 months ago
Video
youtube
How To Apply for Google Adsense Pin 2024 | Google Adsense Verify Your Id...
0 notes
youthinfohindi · 1 year ago
Video
youtube
Google Adsense Pin Verification | How to Verify Adsense Pin | Google Ads...
0 notes
sparklywobblerangelrebel · 1 year ago
Video
youtube
How to Create Ad Blocking Recovery Message in Google Ads Account
After you’ve set up your site, you can create a message that's only displayed to users who have ad blocking or script blocking software installed. Ensure you've added the ad blocking tag to your site.
1. Sign in to your AdSense account.
2. Click Privacy & messaging.
3. Click Ad blocking recovery.
4. Click Create message.The “Edit message” page opens.
5. Select the sites where this message will be displayed:
     a. Click Select sites.
     b. Select the desired sites.
     c. Click Confirm.
6. (Optional) To include or exclude certain pages in the ad blocking recovery message, click Add URLs. You can add up to 5 total inclusions or exclusions per domain.
7. Select the languages in which this message will be displayed.
8. Optional) Turn on Custom choice to offer your visitors a choice between allowing ads or a custom alternative solution to allowing ads. For example, you might ask users to either allow ads or subscribe to your site, where subscribing to your site is the custom choice.
9. In the "Message name" field, enter a descriptive message name that will help you identify the message later. The name is shown only in the Privacy & messaging page and won't be visible to users.
10. In the "Placement" area, decide how and where you'd like the message to be displayed on your site:
        (a). Centered modal (dismiss): The message is centered on your page with a dark background that partly obscures page content. Users can close the message.
        (b). Centered modal (non-dismissible): The message is centered on your page with a dark background that partly obscures page content. Users cannot close the message. Not available for the "Allow ads or dismiss" message type.
       (c). Bottom pinned (dismiss): The message is fixed to the bottom of the page to allow site visitors to view the page's content. The message stretches to fit the full width of the device screen. Users can close the message.
11. (Optional) Edit and format the message to match your site's editorial and visual standards.
12. Click Publish to publish the message, or click Save draft to save without publishing.
#google #googleadsense #googleads #adblocking #adblockingrecovery #adsensesetting #website #earning #blogger #message #adsencemessage #connections #scriptblocking #adblocking #Youtube  #bloggingadsense
0 notes
codeflarepost · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
Cerita Singkat : Mencari PIN Google AdSense di Kantor Pos http://dlvr.it/SsxbXm
0 notes
rohitsingh9984 · 2 years ago
Text
Google Adsense Pin Verification Process
In this youtube video , I have shown you how to verify your Google Adsense Address Verification. Google Adsense Pin Verification Letter Verified in Just 2 minutes. Google Adsense Address Verification Letter Process Google Adsense Pin Verification Letter Google Adsense Pin Verification Process Google Adsense Address Verification Pin Google Adsense Pin verify kaise kare Hope you like the…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
jollyentertainmentblogs · 2 years ago
Text
Google Adsense Pin Verification Process
In this youtube video , I have shown you how to verify your Google Adsense Address Verification. Google Adsense Pin Verification Letter Verified in Just 2 minutes. Google Adsense Address Verification Letter Process Google Adsense Pin Verification Letter Google Adsense Pin Verification Process Google Adsense Address Verification Pin Google Adsense Pin verify kaise kare Hope you like the…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note