January 18, 2012

Google launches AdSense Toolbar for Chrome – one click access to reports

Filed under: advertising,google — Tags: , , , , — jeetu @ 12:31 am

Google Launches an AdSense Toolbar for Chrome

Google today released a new extension for Google Chrome that will help you quickly access your AdSense earning reports without leaving the page you are currently reading.

Google AdSense Publisher Toolbar for Chrome

The extension, known as the AdSense Publisher Toolbar, offers a summary of your AdSense earnings for the current day, the previous day, the current month and the previous month. In addition to daily earnings data, it also show revenue data for top channels that you have created in your AdSense account.

There’s an interesting “lifetime revenue” section in the report that shows your total AdSense earnings from the day your account was approved for AdSense.

Once you install the extension, it connects to your Google AdSense account using OAuth and then uses AdSense APIs to fetch your earnings data. You need to authorize only once and thus, if you enjoy checking your AdSense report every hour, this extension could save you plenty of time.

I have multiple Google Accounts (for security reasons) and my AdSense account uses an email address that is different from my primary Gmail address. Earlier, I had to log out of Gmail to check my AdSense reports but with the AdSense Publisher Toolbar now available, I can get my basic earnings data without having to switch accounts.

On a different note, I have no idea why the Google team is calling this extensions the AdSense Publisher Toolbar when it only adds a button near your Chrome address bar and there are no toolbars anywhere. You click the AdSense button and your earnings report are almost instantly display in an overlay.

And if you activate the AdSense extension while you are on your website (that is running AdSense ads), you can turn on the “site overlay” mode and it will display a quick summary of each ad unit’s earnings that are available on that page. Channel names are confusing, especially when you have tons of them, so this visual mode will come very handy.

via The Official Google AdSense Toolbar for Chrome is Available.

December 28, 2009

Bus Constrictor

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , — jeetu @ 7:45 am

Posted at Neatorama

by Miss Cellania

This may look like a snake attack, but it’s actually an ad on a bus inviting everyone to the Copenhagen Zoo. Link -via J-Walk Blog

September 25, 2009

Let’s Kill The CPM

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , — jeetu @ 12:25 pm

Posted at TechCrunch

by Guest Author

Editor’s note: This guest post is written by Shelby Bonnie, the CEO of Whiskey Media. He co-founded CNET in 1993 and was the Chairman and CEO from 2000 to 2006. He served as Chairman of the IAB from 2001 to 2003. Whiskey Media is a content platform with three sites, giantbomb.com, comicvine.com, and animevice.com lots more to come.

OK, Advertising Week just ended… does anyone else feel like the online advertising industry is the orchestra, playing on while the Titanic is sinking?

We have a problem, folks. And I, for one, think we should start to fix it by killing off the CPM, once and for all.

I have been in the Internet media space for 16 years and will start by stating the obvious: The CPM has done more to stunt innovation and drag down quality products than any single thing on the Internet. Maybe it works in other mediums, but it sure as hell doesn’t work on the Internet. Having been both a small and big publisher (now small again), it’s been my experience that the collective focus on CPMs and counting eyeballs by marketers, agencies, and publishers has led to a whole mess of unintended consequences that have produced a series of “solutions” that work for none of those parties. And perhaps more importantly, it’s been terrible for users.

All campaigns start with the best of intentions: “let’s do something creative, engaging, and unique!” But unless someone really senior from the agency or client side intervenes, the road for a campaign always leads to the media buyer and the dreaded spreadsheet, where the two most important columns are impressions and cost. Ironically, there’s usually some good stuff in campaigns, but they are thrown in for free as “value adds.” At some point, publishers decide that if all clients care about is impressions, then OK, we’ll give them impressions. The output is an industry that overproduces shallow, superficial, commoditized impressions. Why do we have so many bad sites that republish the same junky content–content that’s often made by machines or $1-per-post contractors? Why do sites intentionally try to get us to turn lots of pages with tons of top 10 lists, photo galleries, or single-paragraph summaries of someone else’s story?

In 2002, my first full year as Chairman of the IAB, we made a decision as an industry to kill the original small banner (468×60). Though it was the only unit that many of our partners accepted, if we didn’t kill it, the industry would have had a very difficult time moving past it. We had to be bold and take some risk, but at that time we ushered in the move towards larger ad units, a move that all agree was a big improvement. We are at a similar point today. The focus on CPM is causing a bunch of behavior that is bad for publishers, marketers, and users. Only by killing it do we have the opportunity to invent our new future.

Why is the CPM such a problem?

  • You always get what you pay for. I believe in basic economics. If you pay for impressions, you get impressions. Is that, in the end, what marketers really want? How about engagement? How about impact? How about actually selling product? A glut of impressions has helped no one.
  • All impressions are not created equally. There’s a big difference between seeing an ad on a page of content that contains one uninteresting paragraph and twelve ads, and seeing a single ad on a page that is relevant to the ad and covers a topic for which the user is highly passionate and engaged. The differences between social network and content inventory is another example–how do you put those items on the same spreadsheet?
  • There is no natural constraint . TV, print, and radio can only put so many ads within their product. But on the Internet, that is not the case. We can continually increase the number of ads per page or manipulate users’ behavior to goose our impression numbers. Can’t you see some publisher saying “if they just want impressions, why don’t we go from four ads on a page to eight” or “couldn’t we turn a new ad every time someone loaded up a new e-mail?”
  • It doesn’t mean anything anymore. With such a glut of impressions from all media and the number of impressions with which people are bombarded with every day, it just doesn’t matter anymore. It’s an arcane notion that’s a holdover from a time when there wasn’t as much media. As I said, TV, radio, and print had natural constraints and there was a lot less of it. So just seeing an ad was, by definition, unique and impactful. Those days are no longer.
  • Senior marketers get it, but there is a whole infrastructure built around the CPM. The process is built up around how ads are bought and sold, based around a media plan, and asked for in RFPs. All the good, creative thoughts get boiled down into spreadsheets, that are for the most part owned by folks that are not that far removed from their last college class. Even senior folks have to try to fight their own system to keep the ideas that they like.
  • This is not a win for marketers. In a world of over-produced impressions, even great work by marketers is ignored at best and more commonly not even seen.
  • The ultimate losers are the users. They get a lot of bad content and bad ads.  They are literally overrun by ads all day.

What will a new solution need?

  • Simple. In the end, I realize that to make the business of marketing work it can’t all be art. You have to have a way to create a streamlined process. Everyone wants and needs a way to compare campaigns and metrics to determine success. Simplicity can lead to scalability, which allows for more efficiency for publishers, agencies, and marketers. Having said that, the simplicity we now have has led to a model that doesn’t work.
  • The metrics should be more closely aligned with what you want. Whatever you pay for is what publishers will start mass producing. If you want engagement, pay for engagement. It is unclear whether there is one metric or many. A starting point might be to start with uniques, actions (like sharing, contributing, and engaging), and time.

What about the CPA or CPC?

  • CPA and CPC have their appropriate time and place, but let’s recognize that those situations are limited. Yes, they work great when people know exactly what they are looking for, but how do you convince them to buy something they don’t know they need? Pure click performance just emphasizes the status quo of what I already know and already buy. Yes, it’s an action… but so is a video view, a wiki contribution, a contest sign up, a tweet about a product, and so on. We also know that a singular focus on these items would create as crazy a set of unintended consequences as we’re currently dealing with today.

Where do we start?

  • First, just stop using the CPM. Yes, it will break every model and process that the industry holds dear, but we need to get rid of the crutch. The ensuing turmoil will bring creative thinking, new ideas, and entrepreneurial passion.
  • Let it be a movement, not a task force or sub-committee. Create room and dollars for entrepreneurs to experiment and try new things. They all might not work, but we will collectively learn. A bunch of task forces by industry associations will only make it worse.
  • Think open source. This should not be proprietary or an individual company’s technology, it needs to be an effort on everyone’s part to do this together with the benefit accruing to us all.
  • Realize that we all share a common need to fix this. The fight is with the system, not each other.

I certainly don’t have all the answers myself, but as a veteran of this space and someone who deeply cares about the medium, it is about time we all make a concerted effort to change our direction. I would love to hear your thoughts (shelbyb [at] whiskeymedia [dot] com).

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February 16, 2009

Should Twitter go the SmsGupShup route?

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , — jeetu @ 1:06 am

Would Twitter have survived if it was an Indian company? I seriously doubt it. I mentioned this at a talk which I gave at Startup Saturday too. In India, a business is pretty much considered a failure if it is not making money.

I’m sure the guys at twitter have some really good plans because they’ve been raising a decent amount of money off late. The popular techblogs, TechCrunch and Mashable love talking about twitter. In fact TechCrunch even gave a justification a few days back.

Here is what SmsGupShup.com is doing to monetize their business….

SmsGupShup launched back in May 2007 and WATblog was one of the first to review them. They went on to become pretty huge. They raised around $10 million in funding and is one company which proves to you that ‘Mobile’ is going to be huger than ‘Internet’ in India.

I have the group cricket on SmsGupShup.com and as you might guess, it has quite a few members in it. Last count it had around 28,500 followers. So these guys from SmsGupShup.com call me today and notify me that they are going to spam my group with an ad. It wasn’t a request! They were just letting me know that they are going to be sending an advertising message.

So I ask them, ‘Do I get a share of the profits?’
Which I feel is a pretty valid question. Its my group, I’ve built it. If you are going to monetize it, why don’t you share profits with me? To which the person on the other line says, ‘Of course not. You’ve been using a free service for this long.

I get their point. Thats the difference between an Indian co. and maybe a US based co. They need to make money. But I don’t like the approach. I use SmsGupShup.com because its free. They are already authorised to send a 20 character ad with every msg I send! They’ve lost a member today who used to be an evangelist for their product.

What do you feel? Would you continue using a free service like Twitter, which sends advertising messages to all your followers?

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December 28, 2008

Exclusive: Microsoft Launching Its Ad Network DRIVEpm In India

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , , — jeetu @ 8:42 pm

We have confirmed from various sources that Microsoft is launching its ad network Drivepm in India. Infact it has also started hiring for the Drivepm division in India. Drivepm was a part of aQuantive (An online advertising firm) that was acquired by Microsoft last year for a whopping 6 billion dollars.

drivepm_logo

Microsoft launched Drivepm in Canada earlier this year and I think they are gearing up for a early 2009 launch in India. We have confirmed news that they have hired people in India to start their India centric operations. Though there has been no official launch or word from Microsoft on their India launch.

The ad network space in India is one that refuses to die down even though the ad dollars are seeing a slowdown the world over. And if homegrown ad networks weren’t enough international ad networks like fox networks have launched in India.

The count of ad networks operating and catering to the Indian market has easily gone above a dozen and it continues to grow. The question still remains as to how they differentiate themselves from each other as most of them promise low cost inventory and highest reach. I expect a few to shut shop and a few to be acquired in the next 2 years. Ultimately only half a dozen networks would survive the next 3-5 years in India. Whats your take??

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November 24, 2008

Komli Ties Up With Brand Ad Measurement Firm Vizu

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , , — jeetu @ 10:43 pm

Komli Media the adnetwork funded by VC’s like DFJ, Helion and Nexus Capital has tied up with an international online brand advertising measurement system provider Vizu.  According to this tie up Komli Media will exclusively deliver Vizu’s Ad Catalyst technology in India.

komli-vizu

Vizu serves brands like Burger King, Polaroid, Warner Bros and Hilton in the US. The Ad Catalyst product provides brand advertising data that measures advertising induced changes in key customer perceptions and intentions. This data is delivered real-time through their online dashboard.

Im not sure this is the right time given that brand advertisers would be cutting budgets and ad networks are known for ROI more than branding. Though Komli has always tried to differentiate itself through its technology I feel advertisers in India aren’t too sold only on technology and are rather looking for results at a cheaper cost. It will be interesting to see if this core focus of building or tying up with great technology gets Komli an audience with the larger brand advertisers.

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November 16, 2008

Exclusive: Google Working On Ad Platform Exclusively For Orkut

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , , , — jeetu @ 10:34 pm

Exclusive: Well we have confirmed news from multiple sources that Google is working on a Ad platform exclusively for Orkut.com and has already started testing the same with a few beta advertisers.

orkut ads

Here is what we know of this new ad platform:

1) Its separate from Adwords infact it uses Double Click technology which was acquired by Google

2) It is only for Display Ads and for CPM buys

3) Its for increasing premium advertising on Orkut

4) This new ad platform wont be used in Open Social or any other site as of yet except orkut

5) The official rollout may happen in the next 3 months

The platform has no name as yet as per our sources as its still being tested with a few advertisers. If anyone else knows anything more do drop us a line on info(at)watblog(dot)com. Annonymity is guaranteed.

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September 15, 2008

Why Are Publishers Creating Their Own Ad Networks? And Which Publishers In India Can Join The AdNetwork Game?

LinkedIn is soon to launch its own adnetwork ofcourse in collaboration with ad network Collective Media (which targets high-end media sites) reports Techcrunch. This isn’t the first time a large publisher in the US has gone into launching its own ad network. Recently even technorati had launched its own ad network for blogs in the US.

Whats interesting is that as soon as a publisher sees good traction and becomes considerably large they prefer to launch their own ad networks rather than rely on standalone networks to monetize their inventory. Given this trend a huge number of ad networks have come up. This trend was started by Google via adwords and extended to Yahoo acquiring overture and MSN announcing adcentre. Then the stanalone popular sites in the US like Technorati, Glam which have a focussed audience and a network of sites. There was also facebook and myspace that announced an adnetwork like model late last year but beacon got a lot of flak and myspace platform is still to see the light of the day. But nonetheless the intentions to start a network are still there.

And its no surprise why because the ad network market is set to boom if the stats given below are to be believed:

Question is why are popular sites choosing to launch their own ad networks?

1) Older models like CPC, CPM dont work – Most of these newer sites are built more around user engagement than impressions and therefore impressions isn’t a great metric to just ad roi by and hence these sites are better creating their own ad networks to highlight the best models for advertisers.

2) Niche/Premium Audience/Targetting - Many of these standalone sites have either niche or premium segment which cannot be price by clicks or impressions because is not how many clicks but who is the person who is clicking. They provide a focussed TG and can also target better as they know their audience.

3) Control on Ad Technology/Advertisers & Revenue – Recently rediff got some flak for a indecent ad on one of its pages and thats what happens when you choose an adnetwork and forget to monitor it. Having your own ad network means better control on technology, advertisers and revenue.

4) Better Understanding of Advertisers - Given your own ad network on can analyse not only self traffic but also other similar site traffic for understanding what may work best for an advertiser.

5) Better/Customized ad models for other Publishers – Being a publisher yourself you can provide better ad models for other publishers as you know your space well and have understood what works.

India has also been part of this trend. Just recently Games2win launched an adnetwork for gamers called inviziads.com. But otherwise most adnetworks are coming from the media buyers stable i.e. the online advertising agencies like Webchutney (which launched 2 ad networks), Interactive avenues Admagnet, Ishir Digital’s TonicTag, PerceptKnorigin’s Adchakra, Quasar’s Tyroo. There are also only ad network companies like Komli (which owns a property in loanraja.com) and Ozone (which was funded by IDG). There are also international players like AOL’s advertising.com which plan to enter the Indian Market.

So though quite a few publishers are still to launch their own ad networks.

Which are the Indian Publishers that can launch their own adnetworks?

The Big Three in Classified Space and the seem to be in an Ideal position:

1) The Naukri group with sites like naukri.com, 99acres.com, jeevansaathi.com, brijj.com, studyplaces.com and shiksha.com is well placed to either acquire or build its own ad network which can further extend to other publishers as well.

2) The Shaadi group with Shaadi.com, makaan.com, fropper.com and astrolife.com looks in a good position as well.

3) The BharatMatrimony group (Consim Info) which has sites like bharatmatrimony.com, indiapropety.com, loanwala.com, indialist.com, indiautomobile.com.

4) Rediff.com – Which had P4C but which did not extend itself to other publishers beyond the rediff platform. It will be interesting to see if the same is relaunched.

5) Web18 Group – Web18 with its huge network of sites and now also with a horizontal portal in in.com is very well placed to launch a generic ad network.

What do readers think? Would we see publisher driven ad networks in India?

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July 14, 2008

Estimate your sex

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , — jeetu @ 1:33 am

Posted at Экономика

by aaron

From Mike On Ads: Use your web browser history to estimate whether you’re male or female. It looks at the sites you’ve visited, uses the typical demographics for those sites, plus a little maths, to give probabilities of you being male or female.

This simple but clever example gives you a tiny bit of insight into what websites can figure out about you, even if you don’t tell them anything.

For the record, I’m 53% male, which is a little disturbing. I’m going to go check out the Playboy site right now …

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July 7, 2008

IAB Gets Rich: Releases Guidelines to Standardize Rich Media Ad Units

Filed under: Misc — Tags: , , , , — jeetu @ 3:31 am

 

The Interactive Advertising Bureau has released an update on Rich Media Ad Units as well as added a couple of units to the standard advertising creatives.

 

A lot of innovative efforts, majorly driven by some BIG players to provide promotional solutions to their advertisers has now been stamped standard with the IAB’s latest update. So, we have the page flip at the right corner, in-video advertising, expandable and retreating ads (like in MSN & Rediff), transitionals that Ad Brite used to pitch a lot earlier and others are all included with minimum standards specs added to them in the update.

According to IAB,

 

“…these guidelines are intended to provide the industry with a lowest common denominator for creative specifications. Compliance with these guidelines means that a publisher accepts these specs as a minimum and is entitled to keep specifications to these minimums, or exceed them, at their sole discretion.”

 

Rich Media itself is defined by the IAB as “advertisements with which users can interact (as opposed to solely animation and excluding click-through functionality) in a web page format” and “may appear in ad formats such as banners and buttons as well as transitionals and various over-the-page units such as floating ads, page take-overs and tear-backs.

 

Another important aspect of the update is fixing the standard to maintain CPU usage at an optimum level. Rich media applications are usually animation and multiple process driven and hence are CPU intensive. IAB has taken the initiative to fix the maximum level of animation at 18 frames a second.

 

 

Click here to see the complete chart of ad units recommendations

 

Standards on web advertising have often gone for a toss and the fact that there are no individual market specific organizations defining standards itself was a hamper. The need, therefore, was for IAB to strengthen its scope and reach out to a lot more publishers. This update certainly looks at enabling a lot more publishers to function within the purview of what can be said to be an industry standard without risking innovative solutions to the back burner.

 

As a side note, they have also added two new ad units to the regular banner and contextual ad unit standards by including the, now popular, 300 x 100 rectangle and what I think is an irritating mode of advertising – the 720 x 300 pop under.

 

What the standards help is to let advertisers and agencies know about the kind of creatives that are acceptable and in use on the web. This saves their cost and help in planning campaigns better when compared to making separate creatives for each site they plan to use for advertising. With the amount of ad networks mushrooming all over, such standardization, especially of rich media creatives, was long due. Perhaps, each niche specific ad networks could come up with a standard solution in compliance with the IAB but customized to the demands and aberrations of their particular niche.

 

The biggest benefactor, of course, would be the advertisers in any case, while the irony being that their target audience has a general dislike for pestering advertisements.

 

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