CPA Share

September 27, 2008

Social Media (the concept, not the company)– enter my contest, win a free shirt!

Filed under: LeaderClicks — admin @ 6:58 am

I am honored to be the keynote speaker at SMX Singapore in 6 weeks from now, kicking off the conference with a talk on “social media”. I’ve spoken on panels before, though this engagement is more important and I want to make sure it’s a killer presentation. I’ll cover a bit of what I’ve learned about social advertising, plus cover how game dynamics is the driver behind social network interaction– status, collection, unlocking, feedback, randomization.

With vastly more information being available to advertisers for targeting, the advertising platforms that rule in 5 years from now will not the ones that dominate today. Search will be more than showing results based only on what someone has just typed into a box– it will encompass who they are, their preferences, what their friends like, and what people like them like. Socially-aware search is still a pipe dream, but we’re starting to see examples of it in early social advertising platforms, however crude the earliest examples are.

Beyond advertising, social data can answer questions such as “Do you know a reputable dentist in Santa Barbara?”, “What political blogs do you think I’d enjoy reading?,” or “Where can I find a cool fedora hat?”– questions that search engines cannot answer properly today.

So how do brands and direct marketers take advantage of the wealth of social data that is now available? How can that drive smarter ads and new forms of interaction? I need some clever examples to demonstrate how social media is changing the face of advertising. Send me your examples— they can be something currently being done or ideas for things that could be possible.

A couple examples I intend to use are from Me.dium, a client of mine that is a social search engine>— plus SparkPeople.com, a community for weight-loss that relies heavily on points-based interaction. Tell me what you think and you could win one of 5 LeaderClicks T-shirts!

Deadline for submission is October 2nd– just a few days away. Post your responses here or send to harrison@gevirtzmedia.com

September 20, 2008

Today’s ad serving post on Shoemoney.com– what WASN’T said

Filed under: LeaderClicks — admin @ 5:37 am

I saw 52 comments on my guest post today on Shoemoney.com. This was one of the longest posts I’ve done. And I’m pleasantly surprised by the feedback there– only one hater, who tried to broadbrush all affiliate bloggers as folks who actually don’t make any money, but exist to prey on noobs. And even that person came around to note that not all affiliate marketers are scammers.

The folks who left comments were from broad walks of life– from running a site for chiropractors (charging up to $550 CPM rates– that is not a typo), to a work at home mom, to affiliate managers, to our buddy Daehee who coached the team that won the Google Online Marketing Challenge last year. There were the typical range of comments from folks who don’t know what PPC stands for, folks who noticed how long the post was, to folks who got some value.

But the most interesting thing is not one of these comments, but what WASN’T said. I didn’t see anyone from the ad networks or any ad serving engineers post comments. The truth about scrubbing is something that large affiliates keep to themselves. Same is true for ad networks that employ a form of “boost” to favor low performing ads on the network– great for the advertiser, but a penalty paid for by publishers who make less money. We could spend hours on the tricks that are employed by ad networks, in a sort of Mason’s handshake for the uninitiated. Do most ad networks scrub? Yes. Is this a legitimate practice? Yes. But do most ad and affiliate networks also scrub in unethical ways? Yes.

A lot of affiliates were asking about a more in-depth post on scrubbing. Rather than go into all the ways– which is something I couldn’t do, because there are so many that I don’t know, too– it’s better to just say that you should look at your earnings. So what if they take 30% out? Perhaps they are paying you 50% more per lead so it backs out better than the other offer. Sure, you could ask that the advertiser place your pixel on the page– close to their pixel (since position on page matters). And you could get your AM to swear that you aren’t getting scrubbed– yeah, the check is in the mail.

So the answer? Just look at eCPM. Don’t worry about payouts (that’s a sucker play) or other metrics. Understand that CTR x eCPC = eCPM. And with CTR holding equal, then you want maximum eCPC, which is the payout times the conversion rate. So if the conversion rates are the same for an offer across two networks, you’d take the one that has the higher payout. But often the same campaigns sending traffic to the same offer page will convert differently between networks. Scrubbing is not the only reason, but the primary one. So choose according to what makes you the most– run a primary network for the offer, but reserve a small portion to run on the other network, so you can check for discrepancies between the two. If you have a lot of traffic, it’s only smart to do that.

I believe that smarter pubs will join LeaderClicks. If you believe that eCPM is the true measure of earnings, then sign up. If you think that lead payout or eCPC is what to shop for, then join another network. We’ll be releasing a series of tools to let you rotate ads between us and the other guys to keep us honest. Or write your own script– it will only take you 20 minutes. Most of the networks who run social inventory are absolutely fleecing publishers. I won’t mention names, but these folks know who they are and what margins are set for the street payouts. We could play that game, too, but think that in the long run (and in internet time, that’s 6 months), the market will eventually figure it out. I want to be ready for that shake-out now— I want publishers to ask the right questions of their ad networks, so they can make informed choices about who really does pay better– not who says they pay better.

I am 16 years old and though I enjoy a decent standard of living, you won’t see me renting office space on Madison Avenue, hiring a bunch of empty suits, or holding contests with glamorous prizes— these are all things for show that actually eat into both network profits and publisher payouts. The pie must add up to 100%, so you do the math on how that dollar of gross revenue is allocated. We have a small team of less than 20 people, primarily engineers who work on ad serving, plus a few analysts. We’re self-funded, but have more money than the average start-up, since we’ve made a fair bit doing affiliate marketing ourselves. I’d like to think that this gives us a better understanding of the publisher point of view.

In a future post, I’ll talk about some of the things that our ad server does, such as Dynamic Social Ads, where we personalize ads on the fly based on user profile information. And there are cool statistical techniques where we match offers against groups of people with common traits. We could go on and on crowing about how we have “proprietary” black box voodoo magic Google SocialAdFriendPageRank secret sauce– but really, it’s just about who pays you more money, pays on time, and is fun to work with.

So sign up for our social ad network (or if you have other inventory, that’s fine, too), use promo code “HARRISONSENTME” and I’ll send you a free LeaderClicks T-shirt when you do at least $100 in earnings. Oh, and the shirts are PIMP!

August 25, 2008

What I did this week

Filed under: LeaderClicks, Press, travel — admin @ 10:08 pm

Hey Guys,
I went to SES San Jose and when I got back to my hotel room in SF when the Tradeshow part was over I discovered CommunityNext and that they were having a meetup for Publishers (Facebook Application Owners), and Advertisers (like my new product Leaderclicks) So I decided I had to go to this instead of SES, even though I had not officially released my new product. Once I registered I noticed that I had paid for a “booth” not just a ticket and I decided to go all out.
Here’s what I did: I decided that even though I was rushing the plan of a table/booth that I would have to do something really cool but simple at the same Time. I first went to Kinkos and ordered a Vinyl logo for leaderclicks (for the table). And than left to go buy my own “swag” for leaderclicks.

I decided to give out $15 Itunes Gift Cards to people at the show and after talking to the owner of the show he told me that ‘around’ 200 people were coming. So after receiving this information I headed directly to the Apple Store and purchased 200 gift cards. After standing at the counter for 45 minutes while they scanned each gift card I called my designer and had him design a sticker for me to put on the back of the itunes gift card case things.
The sticker looked like this:
the back of gift cards
I was successfully able to get a pretty cool 2×4ft vinyl banner for my table and I was also able to put stickers like that on the back of all 200 gift cards.

When I got back to my hotel room I took these pics with the gift cards:

gift cards

more gift cards

I also had to take a picture of the receipt for only 180 of the 201 items I purchased as it’s honestly the longest receipt I have ever seen/had.

Receipt #1

here is a pic to get a good sense of how ridiculous this receipt is

Long ways receipt

Overall I had a great time at CommunityNext and picked up a bunch of new contacts. I also really enjoyed SES although I didn’t get any pics I did do an interview with Shoemoney which you should check out.
I have lots to post in the next few weeks so stay tuned!
-Harrison

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