AdReady: Ready for Prime Time?

adready

The ad network space is incredibly crowded (especially in this age of loose spending by advertisers).  That may be coming to a close in the near future, but for now it looks like there’s more and more ad networks popping up everyday who aren’t bringing much creativity or uniqueness to the table.

I found AdReady while doing research for another post and I’m trying to figure out exactly what they do that is different from either AdSense or CJ, Linkshare, Performics, ShareASale, etc.  From the site, AdReady is working with Google (AdSense?), Yahoo’s RightMedia and AOL’s Advertising.com.

TechCrunch gave some coverage of the site with details like a 20% cut for the network.  Beyond the ability to customize graphical ads (Photoshop?? The Gimp??), I’m not seeing the value proposition here or a reason why publishers (or advertisers) should choose something like AdReady over one of the existing ad networks.

I’d love to see them expand and improve, though… the ad network space (especially in the graphical realm) needs some tree shaking.

AdReady is an advertising technology company focused on making online display advertising accessible and effective for advertisers of all sizes. Through AdReady’s data-rich library of proven creative, real-time ad customization tools, and intuitive web-based interface, marketers are learning that AdReady makes it easy to build and run effective online display ad campaigns in minutes.

AdReady — Company Overview

The Revolutionary Affiliate Network That Could Have Been: Facebook’s Ad Platform

facebook

Facebook has released its vision of the future of marketing:

“Facebook Ads represent a completely new way of advertising online,” Zuckerberg told an audience of more than 250 marketing and advertising executives in New York. “For the last hundred years media has been pushed out to people, but now marketers are going to be a part of the conversation. And they’re going to do this by using the social graph in the same way our users do.”

Interestingly, Facebook has built in the ability for businesses and brands to create their own page on Facebook:

Zuckerberg detailed how Facebook Pages allows users to interact and affiliate [emphasis mine] with businesses and organizations in the same way they interact with other Facebook user profiles. More than 100,000 new Facebook Pages launched today covering the world’s largest brands, local businesses, organizations and bands.

“The core of every user’s experience on Facebook is their page and that’s where businesses are going to start as well,” explained Zuckerberg. “The first thing businesses can do is design a page to craft the exact experience they want people to see.”

So, how do businesses spread their marketing messages? By leveraging the social graph of users and becoming our “friends”…

Users can become a fan of a business and can share information about that business with their friends and act as a trusted referral. Facebook users can interact directly with the business through its Facebook Page by adding reviews, writing on that business’ Wall, uploading photos and in any other ways that a business may want to enable. These actions could appear in users’ Mini-Feed and News Feed, Facebook’s popular products that allow users to share information more efficiently with their friends.

Where this all comes together and really starts getting interesting to me is the inclusion of the Social Ads platform:

Facebook’s ad system serves Social Ads that combine social actions from your friends – such as a purchase of a product or review of a restaurant – with an advertiser’s message. This enables advertisers to deliver more tailored and relevant ads to Facebook users that now include information from their friends so they can make more informed decisions. No personally identifiable information is shared with an advertiser in creating a Social Ad.

More on that in a second… but how do we measure all of this “social graph” goodness?

Facebook gives marketers valuable metrics about their presence and promotion on Facebook. Facebook Insights gives access to data on activity, fan demographics, ad performance and trends that better equip marketers to improve custom content on Facebook and adjust ad targeting. Facebook Insights is a free service for all Facebook Pages and Social Ads.

So, this is a tripartite announcement of business engagement on actual Facebook pages, an ad serving platform and finally a way to track those interactions and ads.

Jeremiah Owyang has dubbed this the “Rise of the Fansumer,” which is a nice title to summarize the possibilities here for marketers of all stripes.

Going beyond just profile matching of advertisements, Facebook allows consumers to self-identify with brands and becoming fans. In turn, brands can use these “Fan-Sumers” as endorsers to their own trusted networks, resulting in trusted word-of-mouth. Brands can also self-manage their own campaigns, and there’s some unique opportunities for eCommerce widgets or applications to be part of this formula.

Jeremiah calls this a win for Facebook because it will limit the amount of non-targeted ads a user sees and enhance the concept of trusted marketing among a usage population that is not given to clicking on simple display banner ads with no relevancy or context.

Back in January of 2007, (the sadly short-lived) Evil Marketer blog predicted all of this with a post about influencer networks and twist that would have sealed a win for Facebook:

And one final commonality — the influencer and his or her recommendations, despite being the most powerful marketing force on the planet, have been almost entirely hidden from a marketer’s view or measurement.

Until now.

No, we can’t listen in to your private conversations and track a friend’s recommendation of a new movie to the actual ticket sale — yet. But most online word of mouth type marketing and all affiliate marketing (much of which is based, in some part, on an influencer recommending a product) can now be tracked, and as soon as mobile marketing takes the next step and starts letting you refer products and services and movie tickets to your friends via a trackable coupon or other incentive, then we will be watching over your shoulder, dear consumer.

The problem is that most of this is still de-centralized and segmented; Amazon reviewers, mobile marketing, social network members recommendations (especially recommendations from those with a lot of “friends”) — none of it really works together so an advertiser has a clear sense of where the influencers live and more importantly, how to get them talking about their products.

And in part 2 of the series of posts about influencer networks, we get the hook from the Evil Marketer:

The influencers in the network would choose the brands they wish to endorse (at least initially), based on genuine respect and love for the brand, but would be compensated for that endorsement. The method of endorsement and compensation for it could vary widely based on vertical and influencer “level”; a rating and/or trust system would be in place for users (both inside and outside the network) to vote in various ways to change that level.

If Facebook had allowed for some way to compensate influencer’s for their endorsements (rather than just serving them ads), Facebook would have truly had a big win on their hands… and would have really created something revolutionary in the marketing world rather than providing yet another way for brands to waste money on cheesy viral ads.

Facebook | Press Releases

NeverblueAds Partners with IAC

neverblueads

According to DM News, CPA network NeverblueAds has partnered with IAC CAP to provide affiliate application management on IAC products.

I’ve tried to find some usage numbers on the MyWebSearch Toolbar mentioned in the partnership, but haven’t been able to locate any hard data.

IAC CAP is a part of the larger IAC conglomerate.

IAC is the parent company of properties such as Ask.com, CollegeHumor.com, HSN, Evite, CitySearch, ServiceMagic, Ticketmaster and Bloglines (among about 60 others).  So, it will be interesting to see if this relationship leads to other opportunities for Neverblue or if this opens the doors for other large conglomerate new media companies to work with established affiliate outfits.

NeverblueAds, an affiliate network of Neverblue Media, has partnered with IAC Consumer Applications and Portals. The partnership enables the NeverblueAds network to manage new affiliate applications on behalf of IAC CAP for its MyWebSearch Toolbar, which includes products such as Zwinky, Webfetti, and Popular Screensavers.

Thanks to Jeff Molander for the tip.

DMNews – NeverblueAds partners with IAC CAP

ScratchBack Paying 90% During Beta Phase

scratchback_beta_300

Jim Kukral’s ScratchBack continues to gain steam in the blogging world (especially in light of Goole’s crackdown on pagerank and link sellers over the last month). You can see my full review of ScratchBack over on ReveNews.

In the meantime, Kukral has announced that they payout for ScratchBack during the beta phase will be 90%…

ScratchBack has been live a week or so, and we launched it intentionally with a “higher” cut for ourselves, just so we could see how our users reacted to it. That cut wasn’t publicized, but it was easy to figure out. It was 50/50 after PayPal fees. Much has been made about this cut and we’ve been told how unfair that is. Guess what? We agree.

I’ve been impressed with the platform so far. Give it a crack and see what you think.

News: ScratchBack Pays 90% During Beta : ScratchBack

Is Mobile Advertising Viable (Even Before Google)?

Google’s announcement of it’s mobile advertising platform and partnerships (“Android”) yesterday raises quite a few questions about the future of mobile as a computing platform. Instead of going the route of a desktop operating system, is Google putting its eggs into the mobile basket?

Consequently, since Google is an advertising company at the end of the day, is mobile the next brave new world for contextual monetization of users now that Google has conquered the search and intention engines?

And what about the smaller companies who are making forays into the mobile world of performance advertising? Do they stand a chance once the Google mobile operating system is up and running on millions of phones and serving up highly relevant contextual advertising based on years of user data?

Shawn Collins has a post about one such company throwing their hat into the pre-Google mobile ring, Ads-Click. Will companies attempting to stake a claim in the performance marketing and advertising world such as this or AdMob be eventually stomped by the Google behemoth or are they playing their cards right for getting into the ring early?

Ads-Click, a solution for search and contextual advertising, unveiled Ads-Click Mobile today. Ads-Click Mobile is a mobile advertising platform that offers a cost-per-click (CPC) pricing option to advertisers.

CPC is made possible because the Ads-Click Mobile tool includes an easy process for any organization to quickly create its own mobile landing page, which is hosted by Ads-Click. The tool also enables the creation of multiple banner ad formats and more sophisticated targeting methods than competitive offerings.

Ads-Click Mobile Launches | Affiliate Marketing Blog by Shawn Collins

Zen and the Art of Affiliate Linking Maintenance

How many links are too many links on an affiliate site?

Is there such a thing as "link saturation" (a term I’ve heard more than once at the bar during Affiliate Summit)?

While this "how-to" on effective linking doesn’t explicitly mention affiliate marketing, it’s still a good exercise in keeping things nice and neat (#10 and #11 are interesting points for affiliates).

But enough about the history of the hyperlink. How can we use them effectively in the here and now? I thoroughly enjoyed Philipp Lenssen’s recent link usability tips. I liked it so much, in fact, that I’m using it as a template for a visual compendium of link usability tips– the art of hyperlinking.

Coding Horror: Don’t Click Here: The Art of Hyperlinking

Get RSS in Your Email Inbox with SendMeRSS

SendMeRSS

The once popular R-Mail has been rebranded by its new owner (NBC Universal) as SendMeRSS.

If you’re a marketer reading blogs or if you’re a marketer interested in leveraging the power of RSS for your campaigns, the feed-to-email route may be the way for you to go since utilizing a feed reader (such as Bloglines, Google Reader, Newsgator) is not always the most popular way to consume feeds.

Send Me RSS is a a free service that lets you read your favorites RSS feeds in your email inbox just like any other email messages. Similar services are offered by FeedBlitz and FeedBurner (now part of Google).

Send Me RSS (available at sendmerss.com) is actually an upgraded version of R-Mail that was developed by Randy Morin and later acquired by NBC Universal. The domain r-mail.org now redirects to sendmerss.com.

Read RSS Feeds In Your Email Inbox with Send Me RSS | India Inc | Digital Inspiration

CPN Turns 1 Year Old

birthdaycake.jpgHard to believe, but this little blog is a year old this week.

So, I decided to bring it back after a few weeks on hiatus.  I’ve missed blogging here and participating in some of the 50+ comment debates we got into in the past.

Starting today, I’ll be jumping back into the 3-5 post a day routine and plan to do some live blogging from this week’s BlogWorldExpo in Las Vegas.  I’m speaking with The Conversation Group‘s Stephanie Agresta on Friday afternoon on the topic of affiliate marketing and social media issues, so if you’re in Vegas come by for that… should be fun.  Or if you’re in Vegas and just want to grab a coffee, beer or something stronger you can email me (sam@costpernews.com) or give me a call (803.413.6834).

Looking forward to year two of CPN!