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  • A Publisher's Introduction to Internet Advertising

    • Posted Dec 5, 2008 10:36 PM

      A Publisher's Introduction to [url=http://www.advtmedia.com/index.html]Internet Advertising[/url]
      By: Advtmedia.com



      Current State of the [url=http://www.advtmedia.com/services.php]Advertising[/url] Market


      The current state of the online advertising market is often the topic of articles or news stories, and

      while the market isn't as good as it was a few years ago, its not completely without promise either.

      Back in 1999 it was not uncommon to find ads for $20 CPM or more, even untargeted ones. There was a lot

      of venture capital flowing into poorly managed Internet businesses and these businesses spent a lot of

      that money on advertising. The subsequent failure of these businesses has had many decrying online

      advertising as worthless, this is not true. The real reason these businesses failed is because they had a

      poor business model, not because online advertising does not work. In fact there have been numerous

      studies showing that online advertising does work, people just expect too much from it.

      The Internet is unique in that you can very accurately measure how many people take immediate action upon

      seeing your advertising, so advertisers place unrealistic expectations on their advertising campaigns and

      they don't realize that there are two results of an advertising campaign. The first is obvious enough,

      immediate clicks, however the second result, increased brand awareness, if often ignored. Most TV

      advertising is for branding purposes, very little of it is designed to yield immediate actions such as an

      impulse buy for the latest product from Igia. However advertisers have yet to fully grasp that while you

      can track click-throughs online, it doesn't mean branding is worthless.

      In fact some advertisers are even taking advantage of this. How many click-throughs a banner gets is

      highly dependent on banner design, so there are advertisers who design a banner to get low click-throughs

      on purpose. They then sign up under a CPC pricing model and get a multitude of branding for relatively

      low cost. The opposite is also true, the most clickable banners out there are never sold on a CPC basis

      but rather a CPM one. Both of these practices are bad for the publisher but good for the advertiser. In

      order for this to change CPM prices need to go up so that people who design clickable banners find CPC

      advertising the better choice.

      Typical ad rates these days vary. You can still get $10 or even $20 CPM for a [url=http://www.advtmedia.com/index.html]targeted advertisement[/url], but

      untargeted ads can bring in as little as $0.5 CPM or worse. Typical CPC rates vary from 10 cents to 50

      cents, but most CPC campaigns bring in relatively little effective CPM unless they are targeted to your

      site. As prices have fallen to these lows the quality of ad has also fallen. It is very typical to find

      abrasive, annoying, and deceptive ads being used. In their most benign form they resemble a windows

      message box that most people are smart enough to realize is a just a banner. In their most malignant form

      they will prompt a user to download scumware or in one case programs were installed without the user even

      knowing.



      Advertising Networks


      The typical website, especially when starting out, will be a member of an ad network. There are many ad

      networks out there, some popup seemingly overnight, and close just as quickly. It is important you

      research any ad network before joining, there has been many cases where an [url=http://www.advtmedia.com/contactus.php]ad network[/url] goes belly up

      before paying it's members. There are also networks that pay late or otherwise are undesirable. For

      reviews on advertising networks check out our advertising category.

      Advertising networks all have various requirements for joining. They all usually have a traffic

      requirement for a certain number of monthly uniques or impressions. They also often have quality

      requirements and topic requirements. Even though some networks have traffic requirements under 10,000

      impressions a month, I recommend you do not serve any advertising until you reach atleast 30,000

      impressions a month, and depending on your site maybe even 100,000. The reason is that until you reach

      that point you won't make much money anyways, and you'd be better off spending your time building

      traffic.

      Another issue you should be aware of is that you don't need to join just one network. Most join multiple

      networks and then feed defaults from their first choice, to the second choice, and from their second

      choice, to their third choice. This allows you to cut down on the number of defaults you serve.

      Thanks and regards
      [url=http://www.advtmedia.com/index.html]AdvtMedia.com[/url]
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