vBulletin

Thank you for visiting. This is our website archive. Please visit our main website by clicking the banner above.
vBulletin FAQ is dedicated to helping the forum owner build, manage and profit from his vBulletin Forum
vBulletin Web Hosting - Free skins and styles for your vBulletin - Search Engine Optimization




Google testing cost-per-action ads

Joeychgo
06-26-2006, 10:28 PM
IDG News Service
Juan Carlos Peréz, IDG News Service, Miami Bureau

Google Inc. is testing an ad model that in theory isn't vulnerable to click fraud, a serious problem that some believe puts in danger Google's main source of revenue: search engine-based advertising.

Google has built its business on displaying text ads based on a keyword or phrase entered in its search engine or included on a Web page published by Google or by a partner publisher. In this model, known as pay per click, Google collects the entire click fee for ads displayed on its pages. If the ad is displayed on a third-party Web site, Google splits the fee with the publisher of that Web site.

While very successful, pay-per-click ads are vulnerable to click fraud, which occurs when someone clicks on a pay-per-click ad maliciously, without any intent to do business with the advertiser. Click fraud perpetrators engage in this practice for two main reasons. First, a company may want to run up a competitor's advertising costs. Second, a Web site publisher may want to increase its commission revenue.

Click fraud is hard to track and detect, and estimates of its incidence vary widely, with some suggesting as many as 20 percent of clicks may be fraudulent, in which case Google's business could be in jeopardy. Google derives virtually all of its revenue from pay-per-click ads. To a lesser extent, Yahoo Inc., AOL LLC and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN division also stand to lose from click fraud.

Now, Google has begun inviting some of the publishers on its AdSense Web site advertising network to test cost-per-action (CPA) ads, which are similar to pay-per-click ads but with a major difference: advertisers only pay when the click yields a specific result, such as a concrete business lead or an actual sale. Some niche players already provide CPA ads, but Google's entry into the market would bring the concept to a critical mass of advertisers.

A Google spokesman confirmed via e-mail that the company is conducting this test. "We’re pleased with how the test is progressing and will continue to gather feedback from advertisers and publishers," he wrote.

"This type of program helps Google and other portals [like Yahoo and MSN] pursuing this type of ad product in several ways," said Kelsey Group analyst Matt Booth in an e-mail commentary. Namely, actions like telephone calls, leads or transactions are more valuable than mere clicks, because they deliver customers who are closer to doing business with the advertiser, Booth said.

Word of Google's test surfaced on Wednesday when a publisher in the AdSense network wrote in his blog that he had received an invitation to this test. David Jackson, editor and founder of the online financial publication SeekingAlpha Ltd., posted the full text of the e-mail (http://internet.seekingalpha.com/article/12363 (http://internet.seekingalpha.com/article/12363)), which the Google spokesman confirmed as legitimate.

In part, the e-mail reads: "The CPA ads come from a limited group of high quality advertisers that are interested in displaying ads on a CPA basis. They pay you whenever a site visitor performs a specified action, such as generating a lead or purchasing a product."

Biggles LLB
06-27-2006, 02:13 AM
This is excellent news. It would certainly be a fairer system all round and should end forever the multitude of complaints based on indisciminate banning from AdSense on the alleged ground of 'click fraud'. Fraud requires proof of a mens rea (guilty mind or intention) which is inevitably difficult to prove, especially where, in very many cases in the past, there has never been an intention in the mind of those clicking to actually defraud anybody.

I hope this test works out and brings this new method of payment into the mainstream of AdSense and its competitors. It will potentially be more rewarding for the ad hosts too, which can't be bad.

Nice one Google. Pleased to see you have taken on board the many complaints - at last.


vBulletin

seo book

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35

EZ Archive Ads Plugin for vBulletin Copyright 2006 Computer Help Forum