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TC : Google Now Lets You Target Ads At Yourself

March 11th, 2009
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Google is wading into behavioral ad targeting in a big way today. It will start placing cookies on consumer’s browsers to collect information about their interests whenever they visit sites that show AdSense contextual ads. Then it will show ads targeted to those interests to the same person as he or she browses the Web on other sites that also serve AdSense ads (which is a large portion of all commercial sites).

Since Google already knows what each site or page is about, it will use this information to place each user in one of 600 subcategories of interest. If you visit tech blogs often, you are probably interested in technology. If you visit Trulia, you are probably in the market for real estate. Through AdSense, Google can now target ads not only based on the context of the page you are on, but also based on the context of the pages you have visited in the past, even if you are on a site that is completely unrelated. For instance, as a completely hypothetical example, it might show you a real estate ad targeted to the towns you were searching on Trulia when you visit a gadget blog.

Google Now Lets You Target Ads At Yourself

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Advertising

IAC’s Ask.com Acquires Domain Name Monetizer Sendori

January 25th, 2009

Ask Sponsored Listings, a division of Ask.com (itself a subsidiary to IAC) has acquired Sendori, a startup that introduced interesting advertising exchange technology about two years ago that enabled advertisers to purchase direct navigation traffic generated by top tier domain names, bypassing PPC advertising providers like Google and Yahoo when it comes to monetizing parked domains.

Sendori developed the technology, dubbed PureLeads and patent-pending, to enable both search advertisers and domain owners to benefit from typed-in domain traffic based on the highest auction bids. With rates for PPC (Pay-per-click) dramatically dropping the past few months, Sendori was quickly becoming a nice alternative for domain name owners who traditionally looked no further than the usual suspects offering PPC advertising deals.

IAC’s Ask.com Acquires Domain Name Monetizer Sendori

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Advertising

EC : Internet advertising will be relatively unscathed in the downturn

November 30th, 2008

From The Economist

AT THE beginning of the year Jeff Zucker, the boss of NBC Universal, a big television and film company, told an audience of TV executives that their biggest challenge was to ensure “that we do not end up trading analogue dollars for digital pennies”. He meant that audiences were moving online faster than advertisers, thus leaving media companies short-changed. Now, near the end of the year, the situation looks even worse, as the recession threatens to turn even the analogue dollars into pennies. Will this hasten the shift towards internet advertising, or will it decline too?

Advertising rises and falls with the economy, though how much is a matter of debate. Randall Rothenberg, the boss of the Interactive Advertising Bureau, a trade association for digital advertisers, points to the remarkable stability of advertising at about 2% of GDP since 1919, when the data began to be collected. This would suggest that ad budgets will move roughly in line with economic output.

But Mary Meeker, an internet analyst at Morgan Stanley, believes that modern ad budgets rise and fall much more than GDP does. According to her estimates, if the economy stops growing, ad spending is likely to fall by 4%. If the economy shrinks by 2%, overall ad spending may fall by 10%. As for the online segment, recent history is cause for pessimism. Between 2000 and 2002, during the dotcom recession, online ad spending in America fell by 27%.

Yet the web has changed a lot since 2002. Back then, gaudy display “banners” on web portals such as Yahoo! and MSN were the preferred technology. These still exist, but they now account for less than 20% of online ad spending. More than half goes to search advertising on Google and rival search-engines, which place small text ads next to results based on the keyword of the query, and charge only when a user clicks on them. In brand advertising, “rich media” ads are taking over from banners. These allow users to interact by clicking, so their engagement can be tracked.

All this makes spending on advertising much less speculative, so that it starts to be treated instead as a cost of sales. This is one reason why online advertising should suffer less than other sorts. This week eMarketer, a market-research firm, predicted that online-advertising spending in America, which makes up about half the global total, will increase by 8.9% in 2009, rather than the 14.5% it had forecast in August. The firm thinks search advertising will grow by 14.9% and rich-media ads by 7.5%, whereas display ads will grow by 6.6%. In short, online advertising will continue to expand in the recession—just not as quickly as previously expected.

Internet advertising will be relatively unscathed in the downturn | Not ye olde banners | The Economist

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Advertising

BW : Yahoo Is Counting on Apex

September 20th, 2008

John S. Dykes writes …

Slouched in a chair in the Holy Cannoli conference room at Yahoo!’s (YHOO) Silicon Valley headquarters one recent September day, a taciturn Jerry Yang looks every bit the embattled chief executive he is. With profits falling and sales growth slowing, the Internet portal’s stock price has sunk below 19—a five-year low and 40% less than what Microsoft (MSFT) offered before walking away from its $47.5 billion buyout bid in May. Angry shareholders are still calling for his head. Then Yang starts talking about the imminent debut of an ambitious online advertising system. He leans forward, and the words pour out. “This is a big bet,” he says, his voice rising. “It is truly the next generation of advertising.”

Yahoo Is Counting on Apex

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Advertising

TC : Google Tweaks Its AdWords Algorithm

September 17th, 2008

Don Reisinger writes …

A slew of companies rely on Google’s AdWords system to bring users to their sites. But in an attempt to improve the quality of AdWords, Google will unveil a new judging system in the next few days that could have a major impact on current AdWords users.

The most important change the company announced Monday has to do with how it calculates the AdWords Quality Score, which helps determine the order of each ad for a given keyword. Google said that it now calculates quality in real-time as a Google user performs a search, along with its current practice of analyzing click-through rates, and landing page quality is evaluated less frequently.

Google is also eliminating its “inactive for search’ moniker for those keywords that would yield few (if any) impressions. The company said that all keywords are now available on Google.com and although the company said those keywords will probably still yield less than ideal results, they may add some impressions for those sites using them.

Google Tweaks Its AdWords Algorithm

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Advertising, Google, Keywords, PPC

NY : Stuck in Google’s Doghouse

September 13th, 2008

Joe Nocera writes …

A few days ago, Dan Savage had his lawyer send a nine-page, 4,000-word letter to the antitrust division of the Justice Department. Mr. Savage, 59, runs Sourcetool.com, a business-to-business Web site that acts as a directory, listing — and ranking — hundreds of thousands of companies that sell industrial products.

Like many Internet entrepreneurs, Mr. Savage built his business model around Google when he started it in late 2005. Using Google’s AdWords program, he planned to make bids on specific search terms — “ball bearings,” say — that would ensure that a Sourcetool ad would be placed high on the right-hand side of the Google page whenever someone searched for places to buy ball bearings. That’s how paid search works.

Talking Business - Stuck in Google’s Doghouse - NYTimes.com

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Advertising, Google, Site Development

RedFly Marketing - How To Use The Google Content Network To Invest In Domains

August 2nd, 2008

Dave Davis writes …

One thing we have been helping more and more clients with recently is domain acquisition for conversions. We are by no means hard core domain investors and our experience of the domain industry is intermediate at best. However, one of the often overlooked benefits of PPC marketing is the conversion data from the different sources the networks use…

For this example, we’ll use the trusted Google Content Network. For those unfamiliar, Google allows you to advertise using Adwords on three different “networks”. These are “categories” are the Google Search Network, which AdWords advertisers will be most familiar, The Search Partners Network which includes AOL and various other “trusted sources” and the Google Content Network which consists of hundreds of thousands of websites and domains running Google AdSense. For the sake of simplicity, I am leaving out print, audio and TV. What we will be focusing today is the Google Content Network.

How To Use The Google Content Network To Invest In Domains

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PPC

DNWire » Google Parking Changes and Arbitrage

August 2nd, 2008

Andrew writes …

Update: Google Parking Changes and Arbitrage

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

What effect will Google’s changes in domain parking have on domainers?

Over the weekend Julia Mackenzie scooped that Google was planning changes to domain parking.

I reached out to Sedo and DomainSponsor to find out when these changes will be implemented and any details. DomainSponsor declined to comment. Sedo CEO Tim Schumacher said:

“While we cannot discuss the confidential nature of our relationships with partners, Sedo generally welcomes any change which is aimed at increasing the credibility of the domain parking network for advertisers. We also always encourage Google to seek a dialogue with us and other partners in the domain space before any change to the domain parking product is made, in order to ensure that any solution will benefit all parties in the space, meaning domain owners, advertisers and Internet users.”

Domain Name Wire » News » Update: Google Parking Changes and Arbitrage - The Domain Industry’s News Source

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PPC, Parking

Screwgle™ - Google’s new ad revenue model | The Register

July 29th, 2008

Cade Metz writes …

Google’s strict code of secrecy calls for extra silence when the subject is AdWords, the epic money-making machine fueling the company’s drive towards world domination. But sometimes, the truth slips out.Earlier this month, during Google’s all-important quarterly earnings call, a financial analyst outed the company’s plans to squeeze who knows how many extra dollars from the world’s online advertisers. Though no one seems to have noticed, this astute money man mentioned “Automatic Matching.”

Screwgle™ - Google’s new ad revenue model | The Register

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Advertising, Google

Quinthar: Second Collapse of the Internet Economy Underway? (a David Barrett blog)

July 23rd, 2008

David Barrett writes …

The first internet bubble popped largely because all business models failed except for ad selling. Is it possible that the last stalwart hope is itself doomed?

TechCrunch reports that Lookery, a company specializing in selling ad inventory on social networks, is barely breaking even despite selling 3 *billion* ads per month. And rather than raising prices to become profitable, they’re actually in the uncomfortable position of lowering prices 40% — from 12.5 cents to 7.5 CPM. It reminds me of the (often unintentional) joke “We lose money on every transaction, but we make it up in volume!”

All this has made them so gloomy about the prospects of their core business that they’re thinking of switching horses mid-stream and resurrecting that Web 1.0 favorite: selling demographic data. I mean, it worked so well the first time, why won’t it work now?

Quinthar: Second Collapse of the Internet Economy Underway? (a David Barrett blog)

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News, PPC