Category Archives: Direct Media Exchange

Long Tail? Or the Meaty Middle?

One of the hottest ways to think about the new “2.0 economy” has been Chris Anderson’s original article, blog, and book about The Long Tail. If you want more background try any of the previous links, but the quick summary is:

The theory of the Long Tail is that our culture and economy is increasingly shifting away from a focus on a relatively small number of “hits” (mainstream products and markets) at the head of the demand curve and toward a huge number of niches in the tail.

The Long Tail is often used to talk about the success of newer web business models like Itunes, Rhapsody, and Google Adsense, and it’s probably been used in hundreds of business plans for Web 2.0 applications being pitched to venture capitalists.

I agree with the general model of the Long Tail, but in a recent discussion with a coworker and friend about what portion of the web publishing market my team’s product RMX Direct was going after, he brought up the idea of the Meaty Middle.

What is the Meaty Middle? Let’s take a look at the Long Tail graph:

tail.jpg

On the left we have the “hits”, or in the music industry example the top of the radio charts and the most well-known artists. On the right in yellow is the long tail where the rest of the smaller artists in the music industry make up a large amount of business when taken together.

But really, is it that simple? Can we really group them in these two groups? Isn’t there a significant difference in the music artist who sells 100 thousand copies of an album and one who sells 100 copies? On that premise, we have the Meaty Middle:

middle.jpg

We now see the green Meaty Middle in the graph which takes up quite a bit of area. As I mentioned above, this is a different type of music artist than the ones further down the tail. They are legitimate bands, not household names, but definitely different from the struggling artist few people outside of their friends or local town would recognize.

Let’s get more specific with the web publisher industry since that’s where the idea originated. On the left side of the graph you have your Alexa top 250 publishers. This includes:

  • Portals: Yahoo, MSN, AOL
  • Top News Sites: CNN.com, New York Times, Washington Post, etc.
  • Social Stars: Myspace, YouTube, Flickr, Digg, etc.
  • Specialty Content: ESPN.com, Weather.com, Match.com, etc.

In the advertising world these top publishers are all enterprise level advertising clients with their own ad sales teams selling premium campaigns, and they usually still have a serious amount of remnant inventory that they sell to direct marketing advertisers or they work with ad networks to resell. More and more of them are moving to the exchange model for that inventory, but that’s another story.

Then on the other side of the industry it’s always been talked about how Google Adsense dominates because of the Long Tail. You know, how so many blogs and niche publishers use Adsense and when you add them all up together it equals a lot of inventory and a lot of money.

That’s true, but too simple. Adsense, and the other ad networks you’ve heard of like Yahoo Publisher Network, Valueclick, Casale, Tribal Fusion, and Burst really do their damage in the Meaty Middle. Why do I differentiate it? Because the publishers in the Meaty Middle are different and require different things.

When RMX Direct was mentioned in TechCrunch, we received hundreds of signups for publishers who I’d classify as “long tail”. They were primarily bloggers and focused websites with a small amount of traffic. After a hundred of these publishers started using our tool their inventory adds up to less than one Meaty Middle publisher I called on the phone and signed up to use our service.

Why is this critical to know? If we focused exclusively on the long tail publishers, we’d fail. The support and management that some of them require make them a losing financial effort, while that one Meaty Middle publisher I signed up requires little to no support at all. That isn’t always the case, but there is definitely not a correlation between the amount of support a publisher requires to the amount of ad revenue they generate.

This is one of the reasons why many traditional ad networks have a minimum volume requirement. We’re not requiring a minimum volume for the long tail small publishers because we love them and taken as a whole they do provide a good chunk of business.

The key point is that we recognize that the Meaty Middle exists, it’s a huge chunk of the market, and it’s a different type of publisher with different needs. If we resorted to just thinking about the Alexa Top 250 and the Long Tail alone, we’d be building and marketing towards the wrong thing.

As I’ve examined other industries I think it’s clear the Meaty Middle exists in most cases. There’s usually significant differences between the item at the top of the curve, the middle, and the tail. The Long Tail theory isn’t wrong, it’s just too simple of a breakdown for my taste.

Sorry About My Ugly Mug

Robin Good of MasterNewMedia.org recently interviewed me online about RMX Direct and put up an article as well as some video clips.  It provides a quick overview of RMX Direct, and it’s interesting to be involved in an interview where one party is in Eugene, Oregon, while the other is in Italy.

It was a good experience, and I thank Robin for the opportunity.

patandrobingoodvideo.jpg

Have We Reached Biz Dev 2.0?

There are a few posts out there discussing the notion that there is a new form of business development that has been coined Business Development 2.0

The “old” way of doing business development consisted of making partnerships and relationships with other companies through phone, email, meetings, networking, conferences, and the golf course.

The Business Development 2.0 way is using the APIs, data, and services of companies that provide them for your product without really needing to have a relationship with these companies.

Are we there yet? I say we’re only part way there, and I question exactly how much we WANT to be there.

Yes, I think it’s fantastic that Flickr was able to build their product without doing business development relationships, or that YouTube made Flash embed code that just took off on Myspace without having a relationship with Myspace. These are definitely good things.

However, there are some problems:

1. What happens if the company you’ve got a “2.0 relationship” with changes what they’re doing? What if Myspace suddenly decided they weren’t allowing YouTube code anymore. Since they had no formal relationship, this is quite possible, and in fact it actually happened for a brief period. Traffic for YouTube dropped dramatically, but users complained so much Myspace allowed it again and chalked it up to a “misunderstanding”. But, when you have no formal relationship based on either contracts or just personal ties, you run the risk of other companies zigging while you’re zagging.

2. Is the integration as deep as it could be? If I just grab a company’s data and start working with it, maybe I can use it in my product and have some success. But if I took the extra effort to reach out to them personally, perhaps they’d make it easier for me, throw in some promotion or a deeper partnership, and I’d benefit that much more. If we simply rely on Business Development 2.0, will we miss out on these opportunities?

3. APIs and data aren’t as open as they should be. As an example, we’d love to use the Google Adsense API in RMX Direct to allow publishers to manage their Adsense account while we also pull Adsense reporting data to automatically update what Adsense is bidding in the auction for their inventory. However, the Adsense API requires applying for it. I did so a month ago, no response from Google. It’s their loss as they are missing out on business because of it, but if their API was open, we could have proceeded. Because it’s not open, I’ll need some sort of old school business development in order to prove to them it’s in their benefit to allow us API access.

4. Sometimes regular business development is required. One of the key components of RMX Direct is the eight ad networks that are participating directly in the auctions for publisher inventory. None of these networks would have been involved had we sat back and just hoped they’d notice us and “integrate” somehow. It required business development, phone calls, emails, meetings, and long conversations to make it all happen. The relationships are deeper because of it as well.

So, the bottom line is that I’m all for Business Development 2.0, but I don’t think we’re there yet. Nor should we ever really leave Business Development 1.0 behind. 2.0 is just a new opportunity for companies to work faster and more efficiently. That’s a good thing.

Results of being TechCrunch’d

As I mentioned before, popular technology application blog TechCrunch did an article on our product RMX Direct on Saturday. Now over 60 hours removed, I figured it was time to share the results and statistics of getting “Crunch’d”.

First, I think I’d guess that these numbers are lower than the normal “Crunching”. The reasoning being that it happened on a weekend in August, perhaps one of the slowest times of the year for web traffic as people are out enjoying the weekend or on vacations to end the summer. Our product is also one that’s only of interest to bloggers and publishers that have web sites. It’s not as consumer-oriented as many of the services TechCrunch profiles. That being said, here goes:

- 1230 total visits directly from Techcrunch

- 300+ beta invite requests and counting

- 27 comments on the TechCrunch post

- Numerous mentions on other blogs

- AVC Blog post from Fred Wilson on the Coming Open Ad Market

56 del.icio.us bookmarks

- 33 Diggs

- 4 Netscape votes (Hmm)

Overall we’re happy with the results as it’s led to a lot of interest and new publishers willing to try out RMX Direct and provide us feedback. We couldn’t ask for more than that at this point.

And yes, since Right Media is serving 60 billion ad impressions a month, our servers could handle the load!

Boom Goes the Dynamite

The product my team has been working on was Techcrunch’d earlier this morning. A pretty accurate write-up, and I’m hoping to post some stats on this blog on how it affected our analytics after we have some more time to fully measure. Stay tuned…

Right Media Announces Media Guard

We publicly launched a new product as part of the Right Media Exchange today called Media Guard. Media Guard is a system that audits creatives entered into the Right Media Exchange. It has an automated component that tests for viruses embedded in ads, ads that spawn popups, and other nastiness.  After creatives pass the automated process, each creative is audited and classified by two human auditors.

The point of this is to help publishers from getting bad or misclassified ads which has been a problem recently with spyware and other strange things being distributed through ads through out the web.  Myspace was recently hit with a virus coming through ads, and there have been other occurrences.

What this all means is publishers and ad networks using RMX Direct or the Right Media Exchange will now have additional protection from bad ads.  Some may even call Media Guard the “condom for your site”…..

10 Ways to Monetize Your Blog

I’m co-leading a discussion session at Wordcamp about Monetizing Blogs, so I thought I’d also touch on it here with a post about 10 Ways to Monetize Your Blog.

First, I should preface this discussion by saying you first need to seriously evaluate whether you want to work at monetizing your blog. Steve Pavlina has a very thorough post that goes over what’s necessary to really do this well, and why the majority of people who try end up not generating significant income.

Second, you have to make sure that making money from your blog directly is your goal. For example, for this blog direct income isn’t my goal. I didn’t have ads at all untli recently, and the only reason I added them was to use the ad network management application I’ve been working on called RMX Direct. It’s quite possible that your blogging goals may just to network, write about something you’re interested in, or serve some business purpose that isn’t direct income generation.

With that out of the way, let’s get started:

1. Contextual Advertising

Surprise, surprise. Advertising is easily the most popular blog monetization tactic, mostly due to it being the easiest thing to implement. Advertising comes in many forms, and contextual advertising is the most popular due to Google Adsense and it’s general success with blogs and niche sites.

I’m going to assume everyone reading this is familiar with it, but I think it should be mentioned that too many bloggers assume that Adsense is the best solution for their blog. For some blogs and topics it works great, for others, not very well at all.

My advice is to not limit your blog to one ad network or just one form of advertising. Other contextual options include the Yahoo Publisher Network, Chitika, Clicksor, AdSonar, and others. It’s not easy to manually test all these though if you’re shuffling ad tags around and randomly allocating your impressions to them, using a ad network management tool like RMX Direct can help you manage, evaluate, and control your various ad networks.

2. Display Advertising

As I mentioned above, contextual networks aren’t always the best solution for blogs. In some cases there aren’t enough advertisers in niche topics, and in others the users just isn’t likely to click. In this case, you want to be working with ad networks that provide CPM display advertising. This means you get paid something for every ad viewed, opposed to only getting paid per click.

Just like with contextual networks, it’s important to use multiple display ad networks to get more variety from your ads, to not let any one network control your inventory, and to make sure you’re earning the most amount of money possible.

3. Targeted Advertising

The most desirable form of advertising is having companies that wish to pay good rates to advertise on your blog directly whether it’s text or image ads. Many bloggers feel that this is a pipe dream, but I speak from experience from running a wakeboarding blog for many years that you can make solid income from targeted advertising without having insane amounts of traffic.

There are a number of key things you have to do though in order to get this type of advertising:

  • Have a blog with leading content in your niche and a professional design
  • Create a “media kit” which is essentially a page on your blog that explains that you take targeted advertising, what your rates are, demographics of your users, your traffic levels, examples of the types of ads people can run, testimonials from any companies that have advertised with you, and a phone number and email address they can use to get more information.
  • Have obvious “Advertise On This Blog” links in key places on your blog.
  • Give a company or two in your niche free or very low-cost advertising in order to get the ball rolling. When advertisers see their competitors or companies similar to them advertising, they get the idea that it’s available. If all they ever see is Adsense ads, they might not realize it’s an option.
  • Be willing to be creative to help your advertisers achieve their goals, and lower your price to get the deals.
  • Provide statistics and results to your advertisers. Use an ad server like RMX Direct, phpAdsNew, or something similar which has the ability to create reports per advertiser.

Once you’ve set your blog up properly, start approaching companies in your niche who will want to reach your traffic. You don’t need to go after the biggest companies, there are many small companies who are looking to get better results from the web, and they might not even know about your blog. You don’t need to be an ad sales professional, you just need to present your case well on why they’re missing out if they don’t advertise on your traffic. Make it easy on them to work with you, help them create ads, help them determine what sizes to use, and work with them to make sure they get the results they need. It seems like hard work at first, but after you get a solid base of advertisers going, it’s a great source of income and it starts to streamline.

4. Text Link Advertising

Another somewhat unobtrusive form of advertising is using services like Text Link Ads or Adbrite to sell text ads directly to companies. This is pretty low effort and often doesn’t take up too much space on a site, so it’s easy to implement and try out. It should be noted though that you need significant traffic for it to be a big source of income.

5. Affiliate Links

One of the older web monetization methods is still as good today as it’s always been. If you’ve got a blog in a specific area, there’s a very large chance that there are companies out there that sell products or services your users are interested in. You can earn some nice income recommending or linking to those products.

Amazon.com is probably the most common affiliate merchant used by bloggers, but I’d advise finding other unique merchants who may pay better and be more specific to your topic. Amazon is always there as an option, but you’re more likely to get more help from the merchant if you go with a smaller company.

Another nice thing about affiliate links is that they fit well with quality content. Reviewing products and services for your users is valuable content, and if you can make money off it as well it’s a great combination. A word of warning though that you shouldn’t change your reviews or be biased due to the fact you can make money off a referral.

While traffic also helps for affiliate links, it can sometimes be an easier way to generate income without high traffic levels like advertising requires. As an example I did a review of a web analytics application a couple of years ago, and this blog had very little traffic at that point. I referred two sales through that review though that still earn me $150 a month every month two years later.

6. Selling Your Content (Ebooks, Videos, DVDs)

If you’ve got great content, another option is to package it and sell it. There are numerous bloggers who have created ebooks and even real books based on their blog content and made great income selling them. You can also expand to infoproducts like videos, DVDs, audio CDs, and printed books on demand.

This can take some significant work and it requires great content to actually sell, but it can be a nice income stream that lasts a long time.

7. Consulting

Depending on your topic and your level of expertise, you can sell consulting services. If you’re a web analytics expert, you could offer web analytics consulting services on your blog for an hourly fee. This takes very little work to setup beyond creating a page outlining your services, getting a standard contract, and having a way to take payments from companies. Again though, it just takes a little bit of effort to let people know that consulting services are available.

8. Donations

Not quite as common as it once was, it used to be fairly common for bloggers to ask for donations on their blog through Paypal or some other service. This only works if you have a dedicated userbase, and a large enough number of users that their donations add up. I wouldn’t recommend this if you’re also putting a lot of advertising and other monetization methods on your blog. You’ll come off as a bit too greedy in that case.

9. Selling Products

Besides infoproducts, you can sell real products like t-shirts, bumper stickers, clothing, or whatever other kind of merchandise makes sense for your topic. Companies like Goodstorm, CafePress, Lulu, and others make it easy by creating the products based on your design and letting you set up a shop. There is no risk to bloggers, which makes it a great opportunity.

10. Selling Your Blog

Perhaps the most extreme of the blog monetization methods, but it can be lucrative! If you aren’t attached to your blog and are willing to part with it, you can usually find a buyer for it. Your blog must be pretty good, and have a level of traffic worth buying, and it really helps if you already have some income streams going for it. Blogs usually sell for 12-24 times monthly revenues, and there are numerous places you can sell them like eBay and the Sitepoint Marketplace.

Conclusion

It definitely takes some work to monetize your site well, and having good traffic really helps out. Work on building a blog with a solid userbase, and you should be on your way to generating income using any of the methods above. Good luck, and please share any blog monetization experiences you have in the comments.

Update: I was pointed to a similar post by Darren Rowse at Problogger.net that is also a recommended read on the subject of making money from your blog. He mentions many of the same things, and has a couple I didn’t mention as well.

An Easy Way to Geotarget

There’s been some recent articles and blog posts about how publishers can easy geotarget their advertising.

Geotargeting has been a strategy publishers have been using for a long time, but it’s recently come back into light due to Yahoo Publisher Network only paying for/allowing USA-only inventory. If a publisher doesn’t have a way to geotarget, they are serving ad impressions that not only aren’t making money, but could potentially get them in trouble with Yahoo.

There are additional reasons a publisher might geotarget, such as certain advertisers or ad networks paying different rates for different countries. And many publishers don’t even realize that some of the large networks are paying less for their international inventory or sending it to a default altogether.

So how does one geotarget? The article I mentioned above on WebsitePublisher outlines one method, and some ad servers have the ability built in. However, the easiest way I know of is to use the product my team just built called RMX Direct.

RMX Direct allows you to enter in any advertiser or ad network you’re working with and you can determine what countries you wish to show their ads.

Additionally, you can directly apply to and work with ad networks that are part of the Right Media Exchange. A few of those networks are located in international locations and are good at selling international ad deals, so it’s an ideal setup if you’re using the Yahoo Publisher Network. In this example you can traffic in the Yahoo Publisher Network and geotarget it to USA-only, then the Right Media Exchange networks can take all the international inventory. And this all happens through one set of ad tags, and you can see the reporting breakdowns per country. Pretty slick if you’re wanting easy geotargeting control. Plus it’s free.

Google Adsense Reporting is Deceptive For Publishers

When looking at Google Adsense reports recently I noticed that the eCPM column is actually Page eCPM. No big deal right?

Well, it is a big deal.

Web publishers commonly use eCPM to compare performance between different advertising networks or advertisers. If a web publisher is working with Adsense, Yahoo Publisher Network, RMX Direct networks, Valueclick, Tribal Fusion, Burst, or some other ad network, one large factor in their decision is what eCPM that network is paying them. All those networks, as well as the hundreds of others that exist report to publishers on an eCPM basis, which is really how much a publisher gets paid per 1000 ad impressions. A single page view can have multiple ad impressions on it depending on how many ad units are on that page.

Google on the other hand is reporting Page eCPM, which is an inflated CPM value in comparison to what the rest of advertising world uses. It’s the money the publisher earns per page, opposed to each ad unit.

On the surface, there’s nothing wrong with Google choosing to report like that, but when you consider that every other network is reporting with a standard eCPM per ad unit, you wonder why Google does it differently.

The answer is because it’s a higher number. If a publisher has two ad units on a page, the Page eCPM as reported by Google will be double the actual eCPM. If they have three ad units, it could be three times larger. The more ad units you stick on the page, the larger the Page eCPM will be.

So why does it matter that Google reports a number that is made to look higher? The answer can be illustrated with the following example:

A publisher runs two ad units on their page and works with Google and Yahoo Publisher Network. They are trying to determine which network to send more inventory to, so they want to do a comparison. They look at their Yahoo Publisher Network results and they see that they’re making a $0.50 eCPM. Then they go to Adsense reporting and look quickly at the default report and see a $0.90 eCPM, and determine that Googie is paying them more so they send more inventory to Google.

Unfortunately for the publisher, they just misallocated that inventory as Yahoo is actually earning them more than Google because they really had a $0.90 Page eCPM with Adsense. Both ad units are contributing towards that eCPM total, while Yahoo is just reporting their eCPM for a single ad unit.
Now, you can find the actual Ad Unit eCPM in Adsense reporting if you do some customization, but it’s definitely not something they put out there that obviously.

The only benefit for using Page eCPM is for Google. When publishers are used to normal eCPM reporting and Page eCPM can easily be skewed up and down by just adding and removing ad units from a page. It’s helping Google get ad inventory it isn’t winning in reality. That’s deceptive when there is no real benefit for publishers to report Page eCPM, at least as the primary statistic.

A smart publisher will say “No big deal, I just look at my actual revenue”. This is great, but I’d guess a majority of publishers just look at the CPM numbers when comparing ad networks for performance and deciding where to allocate inventory. Revenue is also hard to compare when you can send more volume to one network than the other.

As Google themselves say in their Adsense Glossary: “From a publisher’s perspective, CPM is a useful way to compare revenue across different channels and advertising programs.”

It sure is Google! So how about deciding to stop deceiving publishers with reporting the subtle Page eCPM?

RMX Direct Week One Is Over

As I mentioned last week, we launched the web application I’ve been working on at Right Media called RMX Direct into private beta with a small group of publishers.

It was a grueling process getting ready for the launch, and it was a busy week fixing bugs, making improvements and talking to our beta publishers.  However, it was also a ton of fun to see real publishers using the application.

We also got our first mention in an outside blog, and have now started accepting email addresses for publishers who want to receive beta invites.  If you’re interested in testing out RMX Direct, go here and request a beta invite in the lower right corner.

Let’s hope week two goes just as well!