For over a year and a half, I have been blogging on medical topics at healthlifeandstuff.com. The articles, which are written to be friendly and accesible, with the help of SEO, now reach 60-70,000 visitors a month.<p>I was running Adsense on it, and making up to $1,000 a month, but was removed from the program with no explanation. I was in full compliance, of course.<p>Now I have the site but don't know what to do with it. I tried other ad programs, but they were either poor quality or had ads for online drugstores which I could not remove and was not comfortable with.<p>What should I do with the site? I'd love to sell it or something but don't know how/what is normal in these situations.
The standard answer to "I have a high traffic site in a vertical which is awash in cash and AdSense is not an option" is affiliate ads. In particular, if your site is trusted, you can bolt on a section with more commercially oriented content (such as, e.g., reviews of exercise- or diet-related info products) and rank on the strength of trust built through your non-commercial content.<p>You can do more or less of this depending on how comfortable you are with slinging snake oil. For example, I note you have content like <a href="http://healthlifeandstuff.com/2010/07/acai-berry-and-weight-loss/" rel="nofollow">http://healthlifeandstuff.com/2010/07/acai-berry-and-weight-...</a> Presumably if you've looked into that you understand, yep, snake oil. Now previously, what was happening with your AdWords ads was you were a) ranking for snake oil and b) referring people to advertisers of snake oil who then c) did rebill fraud on them.<p>Another option is to use one of the numerous Wordpress plugins to do your own self-hosted ad system, and either a) let people buy ads on your site (they'll mostly be affiliates) at whatever rates you specify or b) either use provided creatives or make your own for affiliate products which you are comfortable selling.
Have you tried Amazon affiliate links? If you're willing to put in some manual effort in selecting books, you could put a "further reading" type link at the bottom of articles that'd actually be relevant.<p>One thing I like about that approach is that in addition to the money, I get to promote books that I actually think people should read, which I consider a non-monetary benefit of having a site with some traffic. Unfortunately the two benefits aren't in perfect harmony, since snake-oil is often the easiest to sell--- you may want to link people to a serious medical book, but your most <i>profitable</i> approach may be to link fad-dieting books. I suppose the right balance depends on how much you value the money v. soapbox aspects of having readers.