Every person in Australia sees an average of 1500 ads per day, which is about 1 per minute!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Too many
An average Australian speaks one word every second. If he talked non-stop for eleven and a half days, that would be one million words. Giving him half a day for eating and sleeping would make it: * 23 days: one million words The average Australian lives 70 years. That's 25567 days. Divide 25567 by 23... So in one lifetime an average Australian would speak 1,111,608,000 words. Blimey!
Simple question, complex answer. Some TV channels have few if any ads (government run), some channels have more ads at the time of day that more people are watching, some programs on tv are on ads
The average interest rates of banks that are located in the country of Australia vary from day to day and from account type to account type and even bank to bank as well.
They will see around 4,000.
Neobux has daily ads with good payment, and across the week one can see a great many of them making it a profitable site of which to be a member. Additionally, the ads are refreshed during the day so one should log in frequently for more ads.
Australian day
Australia does not have a Thanksgiving day.
With your personal phone verified CL account from home you can post about 3 ADs per day without seeing flagging/ghosting. If you are trying to post multiple ADs in multiple categories you need to hire a service. Average about $.60 per post cost to you. If you can't afford this then you need to use google to research how to change IP addresses and how to create image ADs.
The same as the rest of us and it depends on whether they are male, female, how active they are and how quickly they burn calories off.
There are many tricks that one can use to maximize the benefits of using Google Adwords. It is a good idea to rotate the ads displayed on your website to see which garner the most traffic. If you have had ads running for some time you can determine what times of the day the ads are most effective and schedule the ads to run at these times.
Australia Day is not referred to as 'Australian Day.' It falls on January 26 and marks the landing of the First Fleet, under the command of Captain Arthur Phillip, on Australian soil. It is always called "Australia Day".