• Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Sazbean

Software Development Management

Main navigation

  • Home
  • About
You are here: Home / 2008 / Archives for June 2008

Archives for June 2008

Aaron Worsham / Jun 11, 2008

Web Ads – AdJuggler

Continuing the web advertising thread, we are going to look at an Ad Hosting service provider.

ThruPort Technologies, the company behind the AdJuggler ad hosting service, was started in 1999 by Bruce Waldack of digitalNation fame. Bruce founded digitalNation in ’91, which was early enough in the dedicated server space to gain market share and grow it to one of the largest players in dedicated hosting at the time. In 1999 he sold digitalNation to Verio and started ThruPort the same year. AdJuggler was launched as one of ThruPorts first named services. As ad hosting services go, AdJuggler is well known in community. There are a few competitors to AdJuggler on the market, mainly because hosting ads itself is not a high technical feat to accomplish. That having been said, reliability and reputation carry a ton of weight in the advertising game and AdJuggler currently seems to have both.

AdJuggler offers up its service in three flavors. For the Enterprising web provider, Adjuggler will sell a license to run their code at your hosting location on your equipment. Ill get into why that is a great option later on. They also offer the traditional Turnkey service where all hosting and storage remains within their location, you simply link up a JavaScript tag on your site to pull the ads down. Lastly, they are available as consultants and API solutions for the roll-your-own crowd. Having worked with the guys at AdJuggler on integration projects with their API, I can say that they do know a thing of three about serving up web ads.

The technology behind their service is, as I said before, basic stuff. Basic is not a bad thing, especially when you have a solid foundation of hosting experience backing you up through ThruPort Technologies. While hosting ads is the foundation, reporting clicks and impressions is where the real work is done. They do a nice job of providing many reporting options for you at the web application. For that extra special reporting itch, the API is available through authenticated SOAP. I like to combine my AdJugger statistics with my registered user information from my web app and my traffic logs from the Apache server. The API lets me pull that information down easily and store it locally in an aggregated format. The Enterprise solution is a cool option for sites that are big enough to conduct pre-processing on their ads before sending them out to the reader which can increase cache-worthiness of the page as well as compression and optimization of the media files. It also makes the stats and the workflow a whole lot easier to tie into your system.

Price: AdJuggler charges by the impression. They do not provide pricing information publicly on their web site though Jonathan Rivers, Executive Vice President of Ad Juggler, has indicated to me that their contracts start at a $.04 CPM range (CPM is cost per Thousand impressions, think Roman Numeral M).

Technorati Tags: AdJuggler, thruport, advertising, ads, display ads, online advertising

Sarah Worsham / Jun 10, 2008

Measuring the Effectiveness of Display Ads

Here are the basics for measuring the effectiveness of your display ads:

  • Impressions: How many times is the ad served to a person (or as near as can be estimated). Impressions to search engine crawlers and bots should be filtered out (most ad servers do this automatically).
  • Clicks: How many times someone clicked on the ad (and was taken to your website – remember to target the landing page). This should also filter out search engine crawlers and bots.
  • Click-through rate (CTR): The number of clicks divided by the number of impressions multiplied by 100 for a percentage. This number will typically be pretty small. CTR of 3% is very good for rich media ads, but will quickly decrease the longer the ad is left on a website. Many CTR will be under 1%. This is an indicator of how effective the ads is or how many times the ad was seen each time before it was clicked on.

Also important are:

  • Unique Visitors (UV): As near as the ad server can tell to the number of actual people who have seen your ad. This is usually measured by IP address (think of this is your Internet address) – but several people can share the same IP address (like all the people at an apartment building). This sometimes is measured with a cookie or login to a website to get better accuracy.
  • Share of Voice (SOV): How many other ads are you sharing space with on the website? I’ve seen this measured in terms of share of impressions on the whole website or section or as the share of ads on a page (impressions is more common). More importantly, this is a measure of how many other ads are competing with your ad for readers to look at it. The better the share of voice, the more likely people are to notice and click on your ad.

Most important to measuring the effectiveness of any ad is how it is fulfilling your goals for advertising. Are you advertising to improve your brand awareness? Then the number of impressions your ad gets is important. Are you trying to sell products? Then clicks and click-through-rate are important as well as how many of those clicks are resulting in a sale on your site. Remember, statistics are just a tool to measure effectiveness. First you need to set goals for your advertising and understand how to use available statistics and tools to measure how effective your ads are at reaching those goals (more on that planned in a future post).

Technorati Tags: advertising, ads, display ads, online advertising

Aaron Worsham / Jun 10, 2008

JavaFX – In more places than Flash

In a recent podcast put out by the good guys over at JavaPosse, Brian Goetz made an interesting comment near the end

JavaFX code compiles down to ordinary Java classes, so a simple JavaFX program can run anywhere you have a JVM. now hardware support for acceleration is different for different devices, but the intention is to have a program that will run on a phone, on a desktop, on an Applet, in a Blueray device, anywhere where Java can run. Flash dominates in the RIA space and there is excellent support in Windows, and pretty good support on the mac, and random support on other platforms. Java has the advantage where there is good JVM support on many more platforms, including mobile platforms. ~ Brian Goetz

If having your application work mobile and on the desktop and in the browser matters to you, I feel this will be a big consideration for you when choosing your RIA platform

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

Copyright © 2008 - 2026 Sazbean • All rights reserved.