Tag: Pay-for-Performance

  • Applied’s pay-for-performance ad serving solution

    LOS ANGELES: Applied Semantics a leading software tools and applications provider for unstructured data management has launched AdSense, touted to be the industry’s most advanced contextually targeted pay-for-performance advertising solution.

    AdSense dynamically generates advertisements comprised of conceptually relevant search terms and pay-for-performance search results targeted to real-time web content viewed by an online user.

    By delivering highly targeted advertisements, AdSense enables online publishers to achieve the maximum cost-per-impression (CPM) for their content. Additionally, since AdSense matches a web page with advertisements from over 20,000 highly targeted ad categories, AdSense is always able to find a targeted ad enabling publishers to sell 100 per cent of their inventory.

    In a recent pilot programme in which AdSense was displayed on 200,000+ news page views over a two-week period, it was able to deliver average click-through rates of 8.0 per cent, 25 times the industry average of 0.3 per cent for traditional run-of-network installations.

    AdSense is powered by Applied Semantics’ award-winning, patented CIRCA technology, a semantic engine that understands and extracts the key concepts on any web page. The foundation of CIRCA rests on the use of an ontology, or database of millions of concepts and relationships between concepts, enabling it to ‘read’ any web page and build a profile of the key meanings on the page. Lying at the heart of AdSense, CIRCA makes it possible to match the key concepts on any web page with the most relevant advertiser in real-time. AdSense crawls web pages, determines key meanings represented on the pages and selects the most effective pay-for-performance search terms. For example, a web page containing a news story on Tiger Woods and the Ryder Cup returns search terms and advertisements for golf tournaments, golf clubs and golf swings.

    AdSense integrates easily into any online advertising media type and size, replacing existing advertising displays without the need to redesign or reformat web pages, claims the company. AdSense implementation options include in-line and standard frames, banners, towers and pop-ups — all easily customisable and designed to optimise the end user experience.
     

  • LinkShare introduces media tracking innovation

    LinkShare introduces media tracking innovation

    MUMBAI:LinkShare Corporation, which claims to be a worldwide leader in pay-for-performance affiliate marketing programmes, claims to have strengthened its market position by introducing LinkShare MediaTracker Technology.

     

     

    It is the latest innovation built on LinkShare’s patented tracking technology. An official release states that the product allows greater accuracy when enterprises track online business development partnerships, e-mail campaigns and ad banners. The technology claims to give merchants an unprecedented level of accountability for web marketing spending. The company claims that its client base has grown to include the majority of Fortune 500 companies.

     

    LinkShare, which is headquartered in New York, also stated that it has been profitable for each of the last six months despite the most critical advertising recession in recent US history.

     

    Enterprises are under increased pressure to acquire customers despite spending slowdowns. They also have to demonstrate return on investment for all marketing expenditures. LinkShare MediaTracker Technology enables enterprises to see all performance data in one place and conduct easy return on investment analysis of all online marketing efforts, the release states. Merchants can compare and contrast any online marketing programme’s success – business development deals, e-mail campaigns, advertising buys or any combination of different programmes.

     

    Previously, companies could potentially track online banner campaigns or an affiliate marketing program individually, but data from different marketing efforts was often inconsistent