Archive for the ‘Yield Management Tools’ Category

CEO Goel Discusses PubMatic Premier Platform, Defines Its Version Of The Sell-Side Platform (SSP)

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

PubMaticToday, PubMatic announced that it is offering a next rev in its publisher-side yield optimization platform which notably includes “guaranteed inventory yield management” and possibly puts it into competition with Yieldex, which has been working the direct sales optimization side for publishers for a while now. See the release.

AdExchanger.com spoke to PubMatic’s CEO Rajeev Goel about the implications of this iteration of the PubMatic platform.

AdExchanger.com: Is this the PubMatic answer for the Supply-Side or Sell-Side Platform (SSP)?

PubMatic pioneered the ad network optimization space with its founding in 2006. However, it’s clear that publishers need much more than just ad network optimization. As the market has evolved, media buying has evolved, and new opportunities such as audience data and real-time bidding (RTB) have emerged, publishers need a much more advanced platform for managing their ad revenue and brands. It’s fair to refer to this as a sell-side platform (SSP).

The SSP of the future will manage both guaranteed inventory (what a publisher’s sales force sells directly) and non-guaranteed inventory (monetized via ad networks and exchanges). But it will do far more than just sell this inventory – it will integrate audience data from third parties, it will actively manage the publisher’s brand and protect from malware and poor quality ads, it will provide an integrated yield curve across both the direct and indirect sales channel, it will provide a controlled RTB environment for the publisher, and more. We think that the new PubMatic Premier is the first offering in the market to provide publishers with all of this and we’re looking forward to expanding it as well.

Can you expand on how PubMatic’s platform manages “Guaranteed
Inventory Yield Management” and provides insights? Any examples?

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AdMeld Offering Real-Time Bidding To Publishers With UK Audience

Monday, December 21st, 2009

AdMeldIn a release today, AdMeld announced “the introduction of Real Time Bidding (RTB) capabilities in the United Kingdom” through its partners AdJug, AppNexus, Infectious Digital, Invite Media and MediaMath. Read more.

AdExchanger.com corresponded with AdMeld CEO Michael Barrett about the news …

AdExchanger.com: Are you aggregating UK publishers and selling their inventory? Or, are you selling UK audience from non-UK publishers – primarily U.S. publishers I would assume? Please explain.

MB: Both. We’re giving any premium publisher with an audience in the UK the ability to monetize that inventory via RTB.

AdExchanger.com: What special challenge(s) does the UK present AdMeld? (i.e. There are many ad networks on a percentage basis of inventory in comparison to the U.S.; skepticism about yield optimizers; they’re used to networks, etc.)

MB: We’ve been extremely encouraged by the interest in our service in the UK. In an environment where, as you said, there are so many sources of demand, premium publishers are looking for ways to connect efficiently and safely with the best of them, and AdMeld saves them a great deal of time and effort doing that. One of the keys to what we do is giving publishers more options and more control of their ad inventory—and RTB is a natural extension of that.

By John Ebbert

Improve Digital Driving Publisher Yield In Ad Network Saturated European Market

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Janneke Niessen is CEO of Improve Digital, a publisher yield optimization firm based in the United Kingdom.

Janneke Niessen of Improve DigitalAdExchanger.com: How did Improve Digital begin?

Publishers are facing a shift in the online advertising ecosystem where performance campaigns, ad networks and exchanges are playing a more and more dominant role. In 2007, over 40 percent of the UK online advertising budget was spent through ad networks and exchanges – few people would argue with us if we stated that this number is higher today. Having worked for many large publishers in yield management and with extensive experience in ad operations, we were looking for an efficient way for publishers to manage these multiple revenue sources and create their optimal monetization mix. PubMatic’s ad revenue optimization technology combined with Improve Digital’s premium yield optimization technology (in beta) provides the answer, lifting revenues between 60 percent and 300 percent.

Today, 90 percent of our customers are in the premium segment, and include the largest newspaper and magazine publishers of the world. Our goals are closely aligned with those of publishers: increasing revenues from premium sales, ad networks, exchanges and performance campaigns while protecting the publisher’s brand and reducing efforts. Our typical client is looking to balance increasing revenues from discretionary inventory in harmony with growing revenues from their direct premium sales strategy.

What were the challenges in starting the business?

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YieldBuild CEO Edmondson Says Microsoft PubCenter And Google AdSense Making Beautiful Music Together

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

YieldBuildPaul Edmondson is CEO of YieldBuild, a yield optimization company.

AdExchanger.com: Please describe the momentum you’re seeing at YieldBuild. For example, how many participating publishers are a part of your optimization offering these days?

We’re really happy with our growing publisher base. While we want to respect our publishers’ privacy, we can say that we have thousands of publishers, from very large social network and content sites to small blogs.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

Any site that meets our supported ad networks’ guidelines can begin optimizing their ads the first day with YieldBuild. Since we have special strength in optimizing contextual ads, our sweet spot is with content-rich sites that get a good portion of their traffic from search. However, a lot of direct-traffic sites have also seen impressive revenue gains using YieldBuild.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

We operate completely under a self-service model. A publisher can provision an account and begin optimization in less than a half hour.

How does Microsoft AdCenter’s Publisher text ad network compare to Google’s AdSense? Data points would be payout, contextual match, customization capabilities, etc.

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Yield Optimizers AdMeld, PubMatic, The Rubicon Project And YieldBuild Unite At IAB

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Yield Optimization Lunch and Learn at the IABKum Bay Yah, Muh Lord. Kum Bay Yah.

Congrats to the IAB on their lunch and learn event, “An Out of the Box Lunch with AdMeld, PubMatic, The Rubicon Project and YieldBuild,” in NYC last Thursday. It was a study in how players in the advertising space – in this case, yield optimizers – can work together in order to enhance each other’s value.

Optimizing Lunch

Attendees were from a broad cross-section of ad networks and publishers – large and small. And, everyone in the room wanted one question answered, “How do I make more money?”

The yield optimizers answered.

In part, the optimizers in-person presentation included a basic how-to on yield optimization. We won’t cover that segment of the presentation at the IAB’s request. Needless to say, optimizing yield at scale is an imposing barrier requiring serious tech and smarts – something each of these companies have aggregated in driving publisher adoption and demand-side interest.

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Yield Optimization and The Futures Exchange

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Yield Optimization and the Display Ad Futures ExchangeIt’s that time again – let’s predict the future!

One of the key areas in which technology is affecting online media is in publisher yield optimization.

In little over a year, companies like The Rubicon Project, AdMeld, PubMatic, YieldBuild and others have solidified the position of the yield optimizer in the online display advertising ecosystem as it pans for gold across multiple demand-side sources – mostly ad networks, currently – to find the highest paying advertiser possible for a single publisher impression given a variety of factors including frequency capping of ad campaigns.

Yield, though, isn’t necessarily a sell-side concept. The buy side (advertisers) look at purchased inventory and the yield (ROI) it provides to the campaign per click, per impression, per action and more.

Lately, the optimizers have taken up the buyer’s cause with initiatives such as Rubicon Project’s and PubMatic’s demand-side offerings which inch the yield optimization model closer to that of an ad exchange as both buying and selling opportunities are optimized.  Evolution to a true ad exchange model will likely take optimizers a few years when liquidity through the ad exchange finally provides a superior yield to other publisher monetization efforts. Tools that manage brand and creative concerns (channel conflict and brand management) will be a critical step for publishers, too.

But, the ad exchange is not the end game for yield optimizers – only part of a next step.

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Yieldex Q&A With Tom Shields: Optimizing For Publishers with Direct Sales Teams

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Yieldex Yield Optimization ProfileTom Shields is Chief Executive Officer of yield optimization company, Yieldex.

AdExchanger.com: How many participating publishers?

TS: We have announced Martha Stewart Omnimedia as our first publisher partner. We are currently engaged with a number of other large publishers that we are not publicizing yet.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

Our target market is publishers who have a direct sales force and who want to maximize their revenue on premium inventory. While any publisher could participate, we are ideally suited for larger publishers who have their own sales team.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

We provide tools and technology solutions for publishers to gain a deeper understanding of their premium inventory, and provide recommendations to help them optimize their yield. These tools are used by each publisher’s in-house sales and operations teams. We manage the integration of the Yieldex solution, and provide services to our publishers to ensure they are taking full advantage of our tools to maximize their revenue.

What are the advantages of a yield optimization company?

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Yieldex Q&A With Tom Shields: Optimizing For Publishers with Direct Sales Teams

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Yieldex Yield Optimization ProfileTom Shields is Chief Executive Officer of yield optimization company, Yieldex.

AdExchanger.com: How many participating publishers?

TS: We have announced Martha Stewart Omnimedia as our first publisher partner. We are currently engaged with a number of other large publishers that we are not publicizing yet.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

Our target market is publishers who have a direct sales force and who want to maximize their revenue on premium inventory. While any publisher could participate, we are ideally suited for larger publishers who have their own sales team.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

We provide tools and technology solutions for publishers to gain a deeper understanding of their premium inventory, and provide recommendations to help them optimize their yield. These tools are used by each publisher’s in-house sales and operations teams. We manage the integration of the Yieldex solution, and provide services to our publishers to ensure they are taking full advantage of our tools to maximize their revenue.

What are the advantages of a yield optimization company?

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Yield Optimization Gone Wild! YieldBuild, Rubicon Project, OpenX Market, Yieldex

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Yield Optimization Gone WildThose crazy yield optimizers are at it again!

Or, are they really ad exchanges waiting in the tall grass?

First up, Yield Build. The company led by CEO Paul Edmondson has launched a new premium text ad network for publishers that optimizes Google AdSense ads in combination with somewhat exclusive Microsoft PubCenter ads and produces a yield improvement of 100% to AdSense alone according to a TechCrunch article. The Yield Build blog confirms the performance improvement and adds, “In addition to performing well, the ads are attractive and demonstrate excellent contextual breadth.” The ads evidently optimize according to ad layout, style, and network and take about 100,000 impressions to get the hamster peddling properly.

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Optimizing AdMeld Style With Co-Founder Ben Barokas

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Yield Optimizer AdMeld with Co-Founder Ben BarokasBen Barokas is co-founder and chief revenue officer at New York City-based AdMeld.

AdExchanger.com: How many participating publishers does AdMeld have?

Ben: AdMeld has about 50 publisher customers, including The Huffington Post and WorldNow. The rest are comprised of a variety of big names which we can’t talk about publicly just yet, but hope to announce soon. You can read more about Huffington Post here: http://www.admeld.com/news.html.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

AdMeld exclusively serves large, premium publishers. Our system produces optimal results for publishers with at least 50 million remnant impressions a month—though most of our customers have many more than that.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

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Pubmatic’s Rajeev Goel Talks Yield Optimization

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Yield Optimization - PubmaticRajeev Goel is CEO and Co-Founder of yield optimizer, Pubmatic based in Palo Alto, California.

AdExchanger.com: How many participating publishers does Pubmatic have?

Rajeev: We have over 5,500 large and medium publishers using PubMatic including eBay, Kiplinger , Inc./Fast Company, Sugar Network, United Press International, and many more.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

We work with mostly large publishers in high value verticals. We recently launched PubMatic Premier, which brings a new level of technology and service to large media companies with over $5 million in online revenue.

We also do let smaller publishers use our self-service platform to help them manage their pre-established networks because it provides value to them and it gives us a huge amount of rich data that we use to enhance our technology and publisher revenue lift.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

Weʼre a full-service company, and full-service is where we provide the biggest benefit to pubs. Our PubMatic Premier offering gives large pubs a dedicated team of six people that learns the specific needs of that publisher and provides a range of support. There is a Strategic Partnership Manager, who is the main day-to-day point of contact that leads an experienced team to focus on performance, ad network relationships, yield, analytics and 24/7 technical solutions support.

What are the advantages of a yield optimization company?

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Pubmatic's Rajeev Goel Talks Yield Optimization

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Yield Optimization - PubmaticRajeev Goel is CEO and Co-Founder of yield optimizer, Pubmatic based in Palo Alto, California.

AdExchanger.com: How many participating publishers does Pubmatic have?

Rajeev: We have over 5,500 large and medium publishers using PubMatic including eBay, Kiplinger , Inc./Fast Company, Sugar Network, United Press International, and many more.

What is your target publisher market? Can any publisher participate?

We work with mostly large publishers in high value verticals. We recently launched PubMatic Premier, which brings a new level of technology and service to large media companies with over $5 million in online revenue.

We also do let smaller publishers use our self-service platform to help them manage their pre-established networks because it provides value to them and it gives us a huge amount of rich data that we use to enhance our technology and publisher revenue lift.

Do you consider your company’s model full-service or self-service?

Weʼre a full-service company, and full-service is where we provide the biggest benefit to pubs. Our PubMatic Premier offering gives large pubs a dedicated team of six people that learns the specific needs of that publisher and provides a range of support. There is a Strategic Partnership Manager, who is the main day-to-day point of contact that leads an experienced team to focus on performance, ad network relationships, yield, analytics and 24/7 technical solutions support.

What are the advantages of a yield optimization company?

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Rubicon Project Comes Out Of The Closet: We’re An Ad Exchange!

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Rubicon Project and Ad ExchangesIn an LA Times article last week by Dan Neil, a yield optimization company finally admitted it.

“We want to be the Visa, the Nasdaq of online advertising,” said Frank Addante, Rubicon Project CEO.

Yeah baby! Just come out and say it, yield optimizers – you’re ad exchanges! We won’t disown you… not here on AdExchanger.com.

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Rubicon Project Comes Out Of The Closet: We're An Ad Exchange!

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Rubicon Project and Ad ExchangesIn an LA Times article last week by Dan Neil, a yield optimization company finally admitted it.

“We want to be the Visa, the Nasdaq of online advertising,” said Frank Addante, Rubicon Project CEO.

Yeah baby! Just come out and say it, yield optimizers – you’re ad exchanges! We won’t disown you… not here on AdExchanger.com.

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Pubmatic Opens To Advertisers

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Pubmatic Opens API to Ad NetworksThis news likely crossed under the radar for many but yield optimizer, Pubmatic, took another step forward into the exchange model by allowing ad networks open API access – the ability to buy from its network of website publishers.

To date, yield optimizers have served member publishers by aggregating, and then testing (sometimes may also be called “time series analysis”), participating ad networks for the best possible CPM. And publishers have responded as Compete.com shows consistent traction for yield optimizers AdMeld, Pubmatic and Rubicon Project in unique visitors through January 2009:

Yield Optimizers According to Compete com

Pubmatic offered the following in its release:

PubMatic said the move would also help ad networks expand ad targeting options and control over pricing and timing for campaigns. Higher quality campaigns and more targeted advertising would also help publishers better monetize their inventory.

This is another small, but important step for the ad exchange model as advertisers receive insight on media through the aggregation of shared publisher data by unique plug and play, exchange platform technology.

Yieldex Brings Inventory Optimization To Martha Stewart

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Yieldex inventory managementAnother player joined the yield optimization space today which currently includes Pubmatic, Rubicon Project and AdMeld.

Yieldex announced that the first client for its “BusinessIQ” inventory management product is Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia.

According to the release:

“The Yieldex BusinessIQ product provides accurate revenue, inventory and availability forecasting; eliminates manual spreadsheets, increases transparency of data across the organization and offers fact-based data for use in decision making.”

Yieldex’s product appears to be a step toward what we’ve discussed recently where yield optimization tools providing insight are put in the hands of the publisher – enabling the publisher “ad trader” – as opposed to handing off to the ASP model of yield optimization predecessors.

With few details on the product other than the release or the story on MediaPost, its hard to be completely sure. Nonetheless, this tool appears to be well-suited to the exchange model. Coincidentally – or not – Wenda Millard is the co-CEO of MSLO and also on the board of Contextweb, owners of the Adsdaq exchange.

MediaPost’s report indicates that Yieldex plans to sell their product as a “license by volume” and is compatible with services such as DoubleClick’s DART. The Company is led by former Net Gravity (sold to DoubleClick in 1999) CTO and Founder, Tom Shields, who also has published a blog post on today’s announcement here.

The genesis of the deal is likely Shields’ and Millard’s shared service at Doubleclick in the late 90s.

Web Publishers of the Future: Ad Traders on the Exchange

Friday, January 30th, 2009

ad-tradersPublishers of large, “premium” content websites are starting to wonder: “How are we going to survive? Are we ever going to make the CPMs, revenues and margins that we’re used to?”

Today, tons of advertising inventory is going unsold and being allocated to ad exchanges and networks. And, the advertisers with budgets are eating up the opportunity to buy at scale as CPMs plummet.

With more sites and content being created everyday, it might seem that the large publisher is going to go the way of the newspaper business requiring cutbacks on staff and content which had been supported by the sweet margins of direct sale CPMs.

Balderdash!

Tortured, “premium” content, large web publisher – your future is the exchange.

To be clear, we’re not suggesting that the direct sales team is going to be dissolved – quite the contrary, the sales team will divide into two important functions.

The Direct Sales Team

In the future, the direct sales team will be selling custom, integrated sponsorships and ad deals that get the advertiser’s brand closer to the large site’s brand and its valuable users. Of course, these deals will command high CPMs and due to their complexity will make the direct sellers an important and essential part of the sales team.

For the most part, display inventory will no longer be a part of the direct sellers’ annual sales goals as the inventory – premium and remnant – achieves its best performance through the exchange model.

The Publisher Ad Trader

A large site’s display inventory will be managed by the Ad Trader who will not just offer the inventory for sale on the exchange or send it off to yield optimization companies like AdMeld, Rubicon Project or Pubmatic as publishers do today.

In the future, many of the rapidly evolving tools from these optimizers will be placed in the hands of a site’s trader or trading team enabling enhanced optimization and segmentation of inventory by leveraging trading tools with a publisher’s own proprietary data – such as registration or behavioral data – and increase the value (CPMs go up or stabilize!) to advertisers of inventory once seen as garbage remnant, for example.

In turn, the direct response or brand advertiser’s target audience will become increasingly specific and willing to pay more for inventory as web analytics in the future prove ROI and can be directly mapped from the demand generation of a display ad campaign to the purchase of an advertiser’s products or services.

Pork Bellies Be Damned!

Technology won’t turn advertising into pork bellies as Wenda Millard famously said early last year. It will enable the exchange to provide transparency for advertisers and publishers on value and at scale. The exchange model and its technology enables increased, efficient hypertargeting and moves closer to every marketer’s wet dream: one-to-one marketing.

Moreover, publishers will be aggressively buying on the exchange for their own advertisers and, like any trader on an exchange, profiting from arbitrage.

Publisher vertical ad networks do this today, albeit clumsily. Like advertisers, publishers will be able to buy futures and spot market display ad – or search ads, or video ads, etc. – inventory from any site on the exchange, rather than the vertical network only, down to a single ad impression in real-time. Publisher ad traders may serve an ad for their advertisers or they may sell it back to the market and take the difference.

The Good News

Technology of the exchange increases the yield on inventory and creates trading opportunities for publishers as they become expert members of the exchange. Whether its perceived as premium or remnant, potentially any publisher impression is premium on the exchange for the right advertiser or… trader!

Ad Exchange and Network Optimizer, AdMeld, Hires Barrett, Former Fox Exec

Monday, November 10th, 2008

AdMeld Hires Barrett as CEONew York City-based AdMeld, a platform provider of advertising exchange and network optimization tools, announced that it has signed on as its CEO Michael Barrett, former Chief Revenue Officer at Fox Interactive Media (FIM) and EVP of Sales at AOL Media Networks.

In the press release announcing the new hire, Benjamin Barokas, co-founder and Chief Revenue Officer of AdMeld, from JumpTV and AOL, provided a bit of light on what exactly AdMeld does saying, “AdMeld removes complications when dealing with multiple networks and exchanges. No longer do publishers have to deal with disparate tags, interfaces, and conflicting statistics. Our platform increases yield while reducing the resources needed to pull reports, evaluate data, and re-prioritize campaigns in a traditional ad server.”

After an eight-month beta program of its platform according to the release, it would appear AdMeld will compete directly with companies such as Rubicon Project and PubMatic already in the publisher yield management space.

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Advertising Exchanges in The New York Times

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

New York Times on Ad ExchangesAd exchanges received a plug today in the New York Times when Stephanie Clifford wrote an article entitled “Leftover Ad Space? Exchanges Handle The Remnant” about companies looking to take advantage of the efficiencies of exchanges by building tools that enable online advertising traders much the same way traders stock exchanges depend on tools and data to make business decisions. Joe Zawadzki’s Media Math is one of these “tools” companies.

The title and tone of the article could not have been further from what ad exchanges such as Microsoft’s AdECN, ContextWeb’s ADSDAQ, Right Media and DoubleClick’s AdX Advertising Exchange would want. Each ad exchange struggles to prove to advertisers that their offering is not just a scary remnant offering but a premium opportunity offering advertisers unprecedented control.

Quoting data from ThinkPanmure (Its analyst, Bill Morrison, is one of the few authorities on online advertising exchanges on Wall Street), The Times’s Clifford makes the case for the monetization of remnant advertising inventory in advertising exchanges:

“In 2007, exchanges sold about 15 percent of the remnant inventory, and about 5 percent of online display advertising overall, according to ThinkPanmure, a research and financial services company. Most of the other 85 percent was sold through networks.”

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