As any retailer worth his salt knows - its not how much you sell that counts, its what you sell it for. The rebounding online advertising economy has obscured a critical fact. Many online publishers have no idea when it comes to managing inventory and yields, and instead embrace a value destructive approach to sales which neither serves their shareholders nor advertisers.
Say what you like about the newspaper business, but there is one thing that the Sultans of Print understand. Yield management is all important. Media executives use yield to work out whether on a page or a centimetre basis, their sales teams are actually growing revenue for the company, or instead dropping their pants on prices to increase volume. Holding the line tight on rates takes company wide discipline, but is essential especially when the opportunity cost of what should be premium inventory is high. Such rigor rarely applies online.
Of course, the problem with websites is that the amount of inventory is potentially infinite. With the temerity of a despot in a Central American basket case economy – web publishers often succumb to the temptation of making more money by literally winding up the printing presses. Typically the first parts of a website to sell out are the homepage or specialist content sections such as finance or technology. To maximise revenue, a publisher will have two choices - put up rates or increase the number of ad units per page.
The problem with online rate rises, is the complex dynamic that currently exists between media agencies and publishers. At the risk of being unfair, most online media agencies exist for the sole purpose of driving down CPM rates and demanding compensation for any detected deviation from booking agreements. Under pressure to keep agencies happy, a rate rise on premium inventory will often be counterbalanced by a sales rep with bonus junk impressions (referred to in polite circles as ‘run of network’) to reduce the average CPM. On paper, it looks like the client has got a great deal. In reality, the vast majority of their ad campaign will probably languish in murky depths that never see the light of interaction.
Unfortunately, the other approach favored by publishers - increasing the number of ad units per page - is an even worse idea. After all, more ads per page only devalues the impact of your other advertisers. However there is a smart way of achieving the same impact. Web analytics software makes it possible to track the behavior of your online audience so that you can tell that a person who was looking at your banking & finance section is now looking at the gardening tips section of your website. So, when your banking inventory sells out, you can use the technology to serve relevant ads in unrelated sections of your network and thus create more premium inventory.
Achieving greater relevance in online display advertising is an area worthy of greater innovation. The genius of Google Adwords is that they have managed to commercialise what should be uncommercial inventory (e.g obscure web searches), by directly linking search terms with campaigns (e.g obscure web ads). Where display differs from search, is that ‘clicks’ are not a great measure of the effectiveness of a brand campaign.
If a search engine user fails to click on an ad, you can be reasonably confident your site was not what they were looking for. On the other hand, if someone doesn’t interact with your banner ad it may be due to a range of factors – they noticed your brand but didn’t click, they watched the animation and came back to your site later, they read the content of your special offer and acted upon it the next day. Post click analysis answers some of these issues, but the bottom line is the publishers need to sell smarter and clients need to buy better.
Sure, you say. But look at how quickly the online advertising industry is growing – something must be right? Too true. Advertisers are waking up to the value of the web medium and allocating a greater share of their budgets to figuring out how to make it work. Sooner or later that means that selling on reach and frequency will just not wash. Without implementing a rational yield structure in online advertising which reflects the true worth of web inventory, everyone is leaving themselves short changed.






"On the other hand, if someone doesn't interact with your banner ad it may be due to a range of factors"
For example, if the creative sucked.
Click measurement is also flawed in display ads that are branding exercies, rather than "buy this now". Ssomeone reading my news website is not necessarily looking to buy a Saab today - someone searching for Saab on our motoring site probably is. But a clever Saab branding banner on our news site could be very powerful in imprinting on the reader the long-term desire for a Saab.
Compare website visitors with commuters: Billboards on commuter routes are not sold on the basis of how many people act on the ad (buy a big mac or a Saab on the way to work) but on how many eyes go past each day in the traffic. (Maybe they should charge more when there are traffic jams holding those eyes in place for longer - pity we can't do that when our site runs slowly :o)
Posted by: John Grey | July 29, 2005 at 11:56 AM
Ah, Yes. But, some websites and media type operations are going to have more mass appeal than others. For instance, if it's a news media / publicity related website, by nature, any content, articles, profiles, even logos are links, are likely going to have some newsworthy relevance. Basically, media sells. Just about any logos on a media / or type website are going to be noticed by a quality audience. Niche media is fine also, but if you want to reach the masses, news media in both a traditional and online medium, is clearly the way to go. In my view anyway. No second prizes for what websites I may recommend. Looking at the Hitwise Top 10 websites in various media segments could be an excellent starting point. Let's not also forget the lucrative and eye grabbing celebrity related websites. Celebrity still sells. The 'Hottest On TV' website is really onto something...media and celebrity! If you want to gauge the popularity of a companies website and general online presence, Google is still largely the measuring stick. Now, what's your thoughts?
Posted by: Greg Tingle | July 29, 2005 at 03:35 PM
I also agree Google Adsense is great, it was thanks to this technology that I was able to make a small photography site break even. I do however have a soft spot for the behaviour linked advertising. True, often stigmatised as spyware, these solutions are getting a hammering in the US and are consequently cleaning up their act (at least some of them are).
As a consumer, through behaviour linked advertising, I will get relevant online advertising that is served based on my profile. This is derived from several web pages I have been visiting (not just the one I am on at that moment). As a publisher on the other hand I will make more money from that same banner, even more then what Google Adsense will generate.
I think in the near future we will see the medium to big online publishers gradually embracing behaviour linked advertising networks whilst the smaller will continue to run untargeted advertising and the very versatile Google Adsense.
Posted by: Tommaso | July 29, 2005 at 03:48 PM
Thanks for posting such vital information. I am new to the blogging scene. Any and all pointers are helpful.
Posted by: Jeff Paul Internet Millions | March 05, 2009 at 05:45 PM
wow... great site!!!! thanks
Posted by: Buy Kamagra | March 20, 2009 at 03:21 PM
A spyware install on your computer is very important If you active use internet.
I'm using http://file.sh/avg+torrent.html
Posted by: nojare | April 20, 2009 at 10:12 PM
Give please. I don't own a cell phone or a pager. I just hang around everyone I know, all the time. If someone wants to get a hold of me, they just say 'Mitch,' and I say 'what?' and turn my head slightly. Help me! Looking for sites on: Story modular office. I found only this - Modular office furniture. Prefabricated modular designs provides, rapid low cost options, sound reduction, and a cleaner environment to your growing office requirements. Modular office and national partitions a leader in industrial pre fabricated the entire easy three modular office system is completely interchangeable and. Best regards :o, Brennan from Sweden.
Posted by: Brennan | August 14, 2009 at 04:33 PM
this is an excellent question Yield Or Die
Posted by: viagra online | January 13, 2010 at 04:53 AM
No country , however rich , can afford the waste of its human resources
Posted by: christian louboutin | November 08, 2010 at 08:17 PM
It is well known that beats by dr dre headphones Sale Online become more and more popular.
Posted by: dr dre beats headphones | September 23, 2011 at 05:57 PM
You took the words right out of my mouth!
Posted by: ugg boots sale | November 23, 2011 at 07:16 PM