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AD SERVERS
Site-Side
Ad Servers
Back at the beginning of time, online publishers needed to monetize
inventory through advertising. At first, they simply plunked
ads onto pages as regular images and served them with standard
Web servers. This worked for a little while, but it quickly
became apparent that greater features were required than could
be handled by standard Web servers.
Advertisers
needed accountable reporting. They needed audited impression
and click numbers, and they needed to know that methodology
was used. They needed to be able to access reports for their
campaigns on a regular basis and for specific date ranges.
As
more ads got served, advertisers wanted to be able to rotate
ads based on various trafficking criteria -- just like in offline
media. This required that publishers have control over their
inventory -- and that they could schedule ad flights to run
in specific rotations and for a specific number of impressions.
This is complex, because it involves prediction of available
inventory based on current and past impression volumes.
The
job of a site-side ad server is as follows:
· Serve ad creative every time a page is called without
serving "broken" banners -- this is a mission-critical
job process
· Manage the inventory of available ads and make sure
appropriate ads are served to appropriate locations based on
the media buys
· Report on the number of impressions and clicks that
have taken place for a specific flight of media
A site-side server has many other features, such as geographic
targeting, frequency capping of creative, and sequential serving
of creative. But from a basic ad-serving standpoint, that's
the role of the site-side server.
Third-Party Ad Servers
As the online advertising industry matured, it became clear
that though site-side ad servers performed their job for the
publisher, they weren't very friendly to advertisers who ran
campaigns across multiple publishers.
Here's a fictional example:
XYZ Finance is a big financial firm. It runs ads across 10 different
publishers. Every month, it runs a new campaign with 20 different
creatives. So, every month it sends 20 different creatives out
(trafficks them) to the publishers. And every month, it gets
reports back from the publishers with all its statistics. The
problem is that it then has 10 different reports in 10 different
formats. All of which must be put into Excel and merged. Additionally,
all it gets from the publisher is the number of impressions
and the number of clicks, plus a click rate. As enlightened
marketing professionals, we know the click rate is a horrible
measurement of overall performance. Additionally, if XYZ wants
to change creative during the run of a campaign, numerous manual
steps must be gone through, from contacting the publisher and
having it pull the current ads to getting new ads trafficked
out and having the publisher turn them live.
So
the answer to these problems is the third-party ad server. While
the job of the site-side server is mainly about delivery and
management of inventory, the third-party server is more focused
on trafficking, reporting, and analysis of results across multiple
locations.
Here's how it works at its most basic:
· The advertiser (or agency) has a contract directly
with the third-party server.
· The advertiser uses the third-party server to upload
and traffic all its ads to various publishers.
· The publisher, instead of placing actual ad creatives
into its system, places an "ad tag" into the system.
The ad tag calls the third-party server when it is placed on
the page by the site-side server.
· The third-party server is responsible for delivery
of the ad when it's called by the site-side server. Again, this
is a mission-critical serving job and can never be down.
· The advertiser has 24/7 access to the third-party server
and runs reports any time for any date range. The reporting
and analysis tools on the third-party server are much more powerful
and refined for the advertiser's needs.
· Since reports are generated by only one solution, they
are unified and similarly formatted. This enables clearer value
analysis of each media buy.
· If the advertiser wants to change an ad during the
life of a campaign, this can be done dynamically -- swapping
the creative in one central location. That change populates
automatically across all publishers.
Third-party servers have plenty of other features; these are
just the basics of the value proposition.
ACTERION has the capabilities to implement a site-side server
or a third-party server with all the functionalities required.
We can also serve your ads keeping the server in our posession
and managing it.
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