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How online ad rates are quantified?

A question was sent to me yesterday asking how rates are quantified in online advertising, including variables which may affect it. I believe this type questions are better addressed by internet marketers.


However, I’d like to share my take on this (and please to add your comments as well or correct me).

There’s no exact science here, IHMO, however a lot of the people in the industry will tell you otherwise. So, let’s start with the existing and more popular models;

The Impression Model. This is the most common and widely used model in internet advertising as it is easily computed and monitored as well as good for branding and awareness. Measured by CPM, or cost per thousand impressions, you only need to provide the rate and the volume. So, if you have 1 million page impressions a month and you peg your CPM at $1.00PHP 59INR 85EUR 0.95CNY 7, you’ll end up with $1,000PHP 58,686INR 84,750EUR 952CNY 7,278 a month in revenue (i.e. 1,000,000 / 1,000 x $1PHP 59INR 85EUR 0.95CNY 7). The next obvious question is how to determine your CPM rate. Well, it depends on the quality and type of traffic that you get. CPMs for sites like Friendster or MySpace will be way lower compared to sites like NBA or CNN because of the type of people targeted on these sites.

The Click Through Model. This model works under the premise that if the ad is interesting or relevant, then people will “click” on it. This approach is usually done if the advertiser wants to attract visitors into its own site. The rate for this model is measured by click-throughs or the commonly called CTR. The higher the CTR, the better the results for the advertiser and revenue for the site owner. The next obvious question is how to determine your cost-per-click. Well, again it depends on how targeted your site is (read: niche) as this affects your ad relevance and eventually CTR. Google Adsense is the best example in terms of current industry pricing. The rule of thumb is, the more expensive the product/service being advertised, the higher the CPC.

The Cost Per Action Model. One of hardest model to implement is Cost Per Action or CPA as the advertiser only pays if a certain action/event is fulfilled. It could be a new site subscriber, newsletter subscription, a trial/download or a sale. The CPA rate is high and will depend on an industry. Call it a commission of sorts, so if the product being sold thru CPA is a laptop, expect the rates to be really high compared to the one who only fulfilled an e-book subscription.

That doesn’t completely answer the question right? In the end, it’s all about perception then performance. Most internet advertisers will scout around and compare rates, maybe try each one of these models and track which ones convert the best then stick to it. If you’re a publisher and you want your advertisers to keep running their ad campaigns, give them something that is worth every penny they spend and more. Unless you’re a giant like Inquirer.net or GMANews.tv (I was going to say, Inq7.net) where advertisers are fighting tooth and nail to get a spot on the front page, a potential ad buyer will always have hundreds and thousands of other places to spend their ad money’s worth.

Abe Olandres
Abe Olandres
Abe is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of YugaTech with over 20 years of experience in the technology industry. He is one of the pioneers of blogging in the country and considered by many as the Father of Tech Blogging in the Philippines. He is also a technology consultant, a tech columnist with several national publications, resource speaker and mentor/advisor to several start-up companies.
  1. You’ve actually made a nice explanation here Abe. I think you’ve covered the basics of online ads.

  2. Thanks for the info, Abe. Quite useful. I have additional questions, though.

    What is the average click-through rate? Is it on a per blog/site basis? (understandable) or is there an industry-wide percentage assumption? (curious) How does this compare to traditional mediums (MSM advertising) Also, how does blog fare in terms of ad performance compared to normal eComm websites? Or is there any difference at all? (whatever’s applicable)

  3. Rates? There are many, many factors to this and only the brilliant engineers out there working on it know what it is :)

    I believe click-through rate works like direct mail campaigns. Average return would be 2-3%. What’s great about the click-through model is your ad is going to be shown as many times as needed to produce the number of clicks that you require for the given campaign period.

    I wrote about why this works in my blog :)

  4. Hi Abe. My ad revenue program for club members is still at an experimental stage. I base the blog rate on Google PageRank (80%) and supplemented by the Technorati rank (20%). I base my ad rate by benchmarking with existing programs and work from there. What makes mine a little different is that I’m willing to take blog beginners and grow with them. A relationship of this nature requires a lot of trust and two-way feedback. That is why I limit such program to my club members only today.

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