Thursday 30 July 2015

5 DFP Strategies to Maximize ROI

Every publisher has different situations and challenges, but one concern that unifies all is how to achieve the best possible ROI. The end goal is to find avenues of sustainable revenue that aligns to the content, feel, and message of your website — and in return sets up a great user experience.

Google DFP: The Basics
Doing direct sales of inventory might earn you some cash, but it might not even approach the full earning potential of your website. DoubleClick for Publishers is an ad server utilized by a dedicated optimization team for managing ad inventories. At its very basic, DFP defines the size and location of your ad units, which are essentially the building blocks of DFP. It’s a full-featured solution that helps you keep track of your databases, tagging, and reporting, and allows you to work with both third-party networks and AdSense simultaneously as your sources of revenue.  Best of all, you have complete control of the line items that will make you money through the efforts of your dedicated optimization team,AdSense, and third party networks.

Once you know the basics, the next logical step is to figure out what works best for your website. We know that your investment is important, and finding ways to maximize revenue is always on the table. Let’s go over these five strategies to maximize your DFP ROI:

1)  Integrate Google AdSense
Manage your inventory efficiently by having your AdSense account integrated to your DFP account. With the largest network of online advertisers, your ad spaces will have content directly related to your website (meaning your users will be more likely to care about and click on your ads) and give you multiple ad formats to choose from.  AdSense also helps maximize your website earnings by filling in your unsold or remnant ad inventory.

2)  Think Third-Party
Non-Google ad networks are another great resource for relevant ad content to drive a website’s ad revenue campaign. They are essentially suppliers that can offer specific, content-related ads for publishers, but keep in mind that they’re competing too. A third-party ad network should strive to maintain relevancy to your content, while promoting a positive change in your CPMs.
Finding good third-party ad networks may be a bit of a process, but it’s all about the right fit. You may start off working with a perfectly reputable ad network, only to find that it just doesn’t work for your specific needs. Conversely, some ad networks might choose not to work with you if they don’t feel it’s a good match. The old mantra “try, try again” is key — there will always be an ad network that works for you and wants to be there when you succeed.
  
3)  Understand Your Ad Inventory
Study how you can monetize your premium and remnant inventories.There are ad networks that will be paying higher CPMs and others at lower CPMs because of the difference on target audiences. Let’s say you have 100k impressions in your ad inventory. Premium inventory is the priority and their ads is placed ahead of your remnant inventory. Ad Network X pay higher CPM so you assign it for your 20k premium inventory. The remaining 80k will be your remnant inventory. This remnant inventory is then allocated to Ad Network Y and Ad Network Z, who will compete with each other based on CPMs for the ad space.
Learning to balance the two distinct characteristics will help you maximize the potential earnings.

4) Configure Passback Ads
A passback tag is basically a backup ad that your ad network can use to backfill an ad space A passback occurs when an ad network is taking impressions, then reached a point that it no longer wants the additional impressions. It will “pass it on” to the next ad network that you have set up, so passback chain now happens. Normally, you will have to select 3 or 4 networks for your waterfall passback chain. Choose the networks based on their CPMs and fill rates. This practice will teach you how ad networks behave when you see them working together to give you the quality CPMs you need. If you have AdSense on your DFP account, AdSense will be the best fall back at the end of the line.
Example of Chain:
1. Criteo = CPM floor @ $1 = 1st ad network that will receive the impressions, impressions not needed will be passed on to Komoona
2. Komoona = CPM floor @ $.80 = 2nd ad network in line, impressions not needed will be passed on to Lijit
3. Lijit = CPM floor @ $.60 = 3rd ad network in line, impressions not needed will be passed on to AdSense
4. Adsense = AdSense will fill the end of the chain

5)  Keep Evolving – Optimize Daily
 Managing a website for any period of time will make you deeply and personally aware of the ups and downs of online advertising. With changing times and a tough market, publishers need to think about how to get more from their website’s monetizable space. If you have reached the dreaded plateau, it’s time find ways to beef up your ad inventory’s potential.
Since most of us really don’t have the time to pore over every possible ad configuration, a dedicated optimization expert is the way to go. Your website is their baby, and they only raise Ivy League kids. Aside from their killer optimization strategies, they have inside knowledge of relationships among AdSense and third-party ad networks — meaning an ad optimizer can interweave your various networks to forge healthy competition and net you the best return.


How to Maximize Ad Revenue with Google DFP


In order to maximize revenue from display advertising, the best thing you can do is sell your ad inventory directly to targeted advertisers willing to pay a premium rate. Of course, many publishers don’t sell all of their inventory directly and instead rely on network partners to monetize remnant inventory. Monetizing this unsold inventory is a major component of online monetization; optimizing the yield here can have a huge impact on your bottom line, especially if you have a significant base of existing traffic.
Many publishers find that there are often several pieces of low hanging fruit that can be picked in order to boost revenue. It’s not uncommon to add a few dollars to your total page RPM through the optimization practice. On a site generating getting 500,000 pageviews monthly, each $1 uplift in display ad RPM means a $500 increase in profit.
Multiple Networks
While many publishers rely on a single ad network (most commonly Google AdSense) to fill their unsold ad inventory, there is potential value in having multiple ad networks compete for your business. The benefit of this approach should be obvious: more competition means that you’ll earn more revenue if you’re able to only serve the highest yielding ads. As discussed below, this is much easier said than done.
Ad Network Competition
Using DoubleClick for Publishers (DFP) Small Business, the free ad serving platform offered by Google, it’s possible to have multiple ad networks targeted at a single ad unit. The goals here are to: 1) avoid missing out on impressions (i.e., a 100% fill rates) and 2) always serve the ads that will generate the highest revenue.
First off, if you have an AdSense account, you’re already approved for DFP Small Business. There are other ad serving platforms that can be used to run your display ads, but we’ve found DFP to be the best (especially for the price).
In this example, suppose we want to target a 300×250 ad unit with ads from four different networks :AdSense, Media.net and Kontera. Within DFP, follow these steps to get these line items competing:
1.      Create new Orders for the non-AdSense networks (i.e., Media.net, Chitika, and Kontera).
2.      Within each Order, create a Line Item targeting the desired ad unit.
3.      Set the Type to “Price priority” and the Limit to “None.” Select the option to enter in a Value CPM, and then input the approximate eCPM that the ad network yields. (More on this below.)
PricePriority
4.                  Upload the ad tags, and save the line item.
5.      Within DFP, click on the “Inventory” tab and find the relevant ad unit.
6.      Enable AdSense for the ad unit:

This final step brings AdSense into the equation; if DFP determines that AdSense can beat the “Value CPM” you entered, it will prioritize those ads.
Manual Problem
The obvious problem with this approach is that you need to know the CPM that each ad network generates for you. Because most ad networks work on a CPC system–meaning that revenue is earned when an ad is clicked and not necessarily just when it is displayed–you need to run ads from the network for a while in order to figure out the effective CPM these networks can deliver.
So this process is essentially telling DFP which ad networks make the most money for you; it will fill any ad requests with ads from that network if available, and then move on to any lower performing ad networks if an ad is unavailable (i.e., if you can’t get 100% fill rate from your desired network). In order to get to the point where you know which ad networks make the most for you, you’ll need to do quite a bit of experimentation. For example, you might run each network in this ad position for a week at a time, and come up with results like:
Network
Impressions
Earnings
RPM
Network #1
250,000
$500
$2.00
Network #2
200,000
$500
$2.50
Network #3
300,000
$300
$1.00
Now you’d know the “Value CPM” for input into DFP (the far right column in the above). You’d basically be telling DFP to prioritize the code from network #2, unless AdSense can beat that $2.50 figure.
This is less-than-ideal for several reasons. Effective CPMs from ad networks are rarely static, often varying quite a bit from month to month and even day to day. So in order to make sure that you’re prioritizing the right ad networks, you’ll need to be regularly updating DFP with the latest eCPM figures. That involves a lot of administrative work, and can quickly become overwhelming and frustrating.
In other words, the process described above is a pretty crude and sub-optimal solution.
Having multiple ad networks compete remains a generally time-consuming process (though we’ll get to some of the higher tech solutions below). For most publishers, this process will consist of:
1.      Testing multiple ad units in order to estimate RPMs that can be expected from certain placements
2.      Telling DFP (or other ad serving platform) to prioritize the networks with the highest expected payouts
Ideally, the server would be able to update the expected RPM automatically, interacting with the networks in order to get new yield information on a regular basis. With most of the free products out there, however, that’s not a possibility (at least not yet).

Higher Tech Solutions: Ad Exchanges
Unfortunately, in 2014 there isn’t a cheap and easy solution for publishers looking to maximize yield from multiple ad networks. It’s not just a matter of changing a setting in AdSense or DFP; this type of optimization will require quite a bit of research, and likely an upgrade to a paid premium service.
If you want the display ad optimization process to be more efficient and optimized, the freebie services like DFP Small Business probably aren’t going to be enough. You’ll need to look into more advanced ad solutions that generally involve real-time bidding platforms and ad exchanges that can integrate with multiple ad networks and different types of ad buyers to produce a higher payout.
Ad Exchange Defined
In order to understand how these types of platforms work, it will be helpful to define some terms:
Ad Exchange. This refers to a platform that lets publishers hold auctions for their display ad inventory. Just like a stock exchange, there are “seats” on an ad exchange that can be held by different types of buyers (e.g., networks, individual brands, etc.). Being involved in an ad exchange will generally allow / require publishers to set a floor price for their inventory and determine who is able to bid on their inventory. Google’s DoubleClick Ad Exchange is one of the largest options here.
Programmatic Buying (or just “Programmatic”). This term refers to leveraging big data to formulate a quantitative, rules-based marketing strategy. That can include determining the “value” of an ad impression served to different types of visitors (utilizing the increasingly advanced data available to provide some basic information about visitors to a site) and bidding on inventory across multiple mediums accordingly.
Real Time Bidding (RTB). Though real time bidding and programmatic are sometimes used as synonyms, they are different concepts. Real time bidding is one type of programmatic buying, where advertisers submit bids for ad impressions under an auction-based system. “RTB’s key benefit is providing buyers with access to real-time inventory at scale — at a price those buyers want to pay.” Programmatic buying, he notes, is a larger scale marketing effort driven by data and algorithms (and guided by a human element). Programmatic buying can be used by marketers who don’t empty RTB strategies and can be used in other mediums as well.
In other words, programmatic buying refers to the process of leveraging big data to generate algorithms and rules for buying advertisements. Real time bidding refers to the process by which many programmatic buyers procure their desired media.
AdSense vs. Ad Exchange
For publishers looking to get more advanced in their ad monetization, there are a few big ad exchange platforms out there. Pubmatic and Rubicon are both big names, but we’ll focus on the DoubleClick Ad Exchange for purposes of this article (since it’s part of the Google product suite that many publishers prefer).
At first glance, it can be difficult to understand how an ad exchange is any different than networks such as AdSense. The major distinctions are:
·         Ad exchanges allow publishers to set a desired price for their inventory. Think of this as a minimum bid amount.
·         On some ad exchanges (such as DoubleClick), bids are on a CPM basis. Conversely, AdSense generally works on a CPC basis (meaning advertisers only pay when their ads are clicked).
·         Ad exchanges probably won’t give you a 100% fill rate (if no buyers submit bids that meet your minimum) whereas AdSense has a basically unlimited supply of ads.
·         Ad exchanges have multiple “seats” occupied by different buyers. These buyers can include networks (such as AdWords) as well as individual brands or agencies. While Google buys a decent portion of the available inventory on Ad Exchange (through AdWords), there are other networks involved here as well.
If you’re interested in having multiple ad networks compete for your ad inventory in an automated, real-time fashion, your best bet is probably looking into an ad exchange. If you feel like you need to get a bit more information to understand your options, check out the additional resources below.
Bottom Line
Leveraging multiple ad network partners is a key part of maximizing your display ad earnings. Doing so allows publishers to serve a greater number of ads (since many networks have a limit on the number of placements per page) while also breeding some healthy competition. But the process of managing multiple ad networks through the most popular free ad serving platforms remains a very manual process. If you want to truly have a live auction from multiple networks for your ad inventory, higher tech (and more expensive) solutions are required


Friday 12 June 2015

1st & 3rd Party Cookies:

Who wants a cookie?
What are cookies? Here are a few over-lapping definitions;
   A small data file placed on your computer by a website that you visit.
   A piece of code placed in your browser by a website server.
         A text file placed on a hard drive to store and transmit information to the server of websites (re)visited from that browser / computer.

What is a (third-party) cookie?

A cookie is a small script placed on the hard drive of your computer by the server of a website that you visit. The cookie is placed there for the purpose of recognizing your specific browser / computer combination were you to return to the same site.
All cookies have an owner which tells you who the cookie belongs to. The owner is the domain specified in the cookie.
The word "party" refers to the domain as specified in cookie; the website that is placing the cookie. So, for example, if you visit widgets.com and the domain of the cookie placed on your computer is widgets.com, then this is a first-party cookie. If, however, you visit widgets.com and the cookie placed on your computer says stats-for-free.com, then this is a third-party cookie.

Growth of third party cookie rejection

Reports and research on the subject of website tracking tell us that the rejection of third-party cookies is growing. Increasing numbers of people are either manually blocking third-party cookies, or deleting them regularly.
How many people delete 3rd party cookies? The numbers given can be as high as 40%. If you count that many anti-spyware applications and default privacy settings also block 3rd party cookies, then it is possible that a high percentage of cookies are being blocked.

What actually happens when cookies are blocked / rejected?

1st party cookies: it is very hard to login anywhere
3rd party cookies: no adverse effects to surfing
Q: How does this affect tracking systems, when people block / delete cookies?
A: All visits will still be recorded, but a person who has deleted the cookies will not be recognised as the same (returning) visitor.
When cookies are in place, and not blocked or deleted, total visitor counts will remain comparatively low. If a person constantly deletes cookies, they will be counted as a new "unique" visitor with every subsequent visit.

Change to AdWords Enhanced CPC removes bid cap to account for location & audience

  AdWords users will notice a new alert in their accounts notifying them of changes to Enhanced CPC bidding.  The notice...