Will Ad Networks Compete for Your Ads? 48
bokelley writes "TechCrunch has an article today about a new product called RMX Direct that holds a real-time auction for every ad on a site. Networks and advertisers bid based on the quality of the user (geography, site, time of day, etc). This could be game-changing for sites and blogs; if networks have to compete, will we see AdSense disclose more about its payouts to publishers? Will other networks like Advertising.com and ValueClick participate, or will they continue to force publishers to make hard choices? In a lot of ways, this has similarities to the challenges that Linux faces in a Windows world. The open source community has been fighting for more than a decade to make the progress it has, and we're not there yet — will online media be different?"
Re: (Score:2)
Re:AdSense already does this . . .? (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Web Revenue Stream (Score:3, Insightful)
So far, the web has been treated as commercial space by PR depts; somewhere between TV and print media. Sort of a place to hold eyeballs while advertisments get sprayed onto them. To me, it seems to be failing. For some reason, we can't seem to match worth with dollar value. Yet webtech (servers, hosting, design) still generate a significant cost.
I think that once we figure out how to pay for cyberspace o
Re:Web Revenue Stream = Overblown (Score:3, Interesting)
MySpace had to get bailed out by Google; they *weren't* making money on their non-stop heavy handed ad-extravaganza. Have you ever visted MySpace? It has more ads going than than an "Advertising suppliment" and there are interstitials and popups and every o
Re:Web Revenue Stream = Overblown (Score:2)
Search placement, is 'asta la vista' or is that 'alta vista', they lost because they were practising search placement producing crappy results whilst google was not and google beat them out for what really counted searches, msn search is where it is because t
Hope it works (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hope it works (Score:2)
Similar to Linux vs Windows? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see it. How is selling advertising space similar to the challenges of Linux in a Windows world?
Seems like that was just thrown in as a hook.
Re:Similar to Linux vs Windows? (Score:2)
Misnomer (Score:4, Informative)
D.
Re:Misnomer (Score:1)
So each advertiser enters an amount (bid) they are willing to pay for a site to impress their ad (product). When an ad impression opportunity comes in, a subset of all the bids in the system match the site's rating/info/conversion rate/etc. The highest matching bid wins the ad impression.
Just because the bids exist before the seller say
Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know about you, but I'm confused already. Is it straightforward? Or is it complicated? I lean towards the latter.
Competition is good. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:i hate ads (Score:1)
Re:i hate ads (Score:1)
You may hate ads but much like commercials, web ads are here to stay. Many websites simply cannot stay alive without generating some sort of reve
Compete (Score:3, Interesting)
Submitted by Right Media Employee (Score:4, Insightful)
orrrrr (Score:2)
Or will even more information about the visitors be required by the advertisers?
I see it the other way (Score:2)
It seems to me that this might potentially increase the revenue brought to sites via advertisement. (It certainly wouldn't result in a decrease in the number of ads - they're already there, why take 'em off?)
The Web makes advertising an annoyance (Score:3, Insightful)
Ads serves two purposes: Make you aware of a product and convince/manipulate you to buy it. They try to convince you by giving you information about key features, but we all know these information must be taken with a pinch of salt. They often exagerate positive features and leave out negative ones. There are much better places to look for product information than ads, i.e. the Web.
From from a consumer's point of view there is only one desirable aspect of ads: Learning that a product for a certain purpose exists. But if somebody misses anything, would he not go and search for the information himself? Again, the information is right there in the Net.
I have no interest in any ads whatsoever. I like my product information pulled by myself, not pushed by doubleclick, mediaplex or webmasterplan.
Re:The Web makes advertising an annoyance (Score:2)
Really no offense intended but with a little common sense you could have known that such a product is very propable to exist. The technology exists and so is a demand for iPod-related gadgets. What you really did not know was that you needed it, otherwise you would have looked for it before seeing that ad.
This is rather a confirmation of my theory: The ad did not provide any information you did not have already, but manipulated you into wanting somethi
Re:The Web makes advertising an annoyance (Score:1)
Sometimes it's hard to tell whether the information you are reading on The Web was pushed by some company and is an advertisement, or is an honest review of product information.
Take TFA, for instance.
Ok, sometimes it's not so hard to tell...
Big or small sites? (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't a serious competitor to AdSense for niche publishers. Here's why: all the networks it aggregates are focused on large publishers. Most require a boatload of page views to participate, and serve low-paying run-of-network ads to their smaller publishers. The great thing about AdSense is it allows you to serve relevant, effective text ads on sites like mine that get only 10,000 visitors a month. AdSense was designed to work well for small publishers AND huge ones. That's why it's been effective.
RMX Direct is trying to create a service that can bridge that gap. My bet is that it will monetize better than dealing directly with a single big-ass ad network, but less well than AdSense.
If this takes off... (Score:2, Funny)
"Fifty percent of our hits are coming from Antarctica? Shit, quick, what do penguins buy?!"
Doesn't matter (Score:2)
Oh please (Score:2)
It doesn't make you cool.
iRMX Real Time OS (Score:1)
Bidvertiser (Score:1)
Interesting concept (Score:2)
In a perfect world, this would work well, reality is that all the players out there have legacy code that cannot integrate with this. Many don't know the CPM until at the end of the month. Google adsense will never provide this information, pe
So, how much... (Score:2)
Nice slashvertisement... (Score:1)
And nice useless linux plug that fooled our mighty *editor* !!!
Hope you get many advertisements in your inbox, bokelley@rightmedia.com .