Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Oxado vs Tradedoubler AdMatch

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Our good friends of Tradedoubler announced the launch of their new contextual ads service, named AdMatch. It looks nice, but Oxado is better :-)

  • Oxado already integrates graphical and product ads from Tradedoubler (as well as Zanox and Commission Junction), and  also text ads from Yahoo! Search Marketing, Miva, Genieknows, and more);
  • Oxado does automatic geographic and language targeting, which they don’t;
  • Oxado provides a lot more banner formats than they do;
  • Oxado’s contextual solution has been up and running for nearly 3 years now, which gives us a lot more experience;
  • Oxado allows you to automatically switch between text, product and  graphical ads based on what performs best in each situation (though you can filter the types of ads if you really want to);
  • Oxado’s solution takes into account not only relevance, but also revenue estimations (based on past performance in terms of click-throughs, post-click and post-impression conversions, average basket or product price, and many other parameters);
  • Oxado covers all the countries Tradedoubler does, but also covers Australia, Brasil, India, Mexico, Argentina, the US and Canada…
  • Oxado includes a lot more paid-per-click ads than Tradedoubler does;
  • All in all, Oxado has a lot more ads and advertisers than Tradoubler does;
  • Oxado pays monthly, within 30 days, whether the advertiser has paid or not.

All in all, if you thought about using Tradedoubler’s Admatch, there are a lot more reasons to use Oxado!

Ads for India

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

We now have ads for India directly from Yahoo Search Marketing, which will increase the per-click revenue for visitors from this country. Enjoy!

New country: Argentina

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Just a quick word to let you know we now have CPC text ads for Argentina, courtesy of Yahoo Search Marketing. With the existing ads for Spain and Mexico, that should cover a significant part of the spanish-speaking market.

You can have Oxado & Google Adsense on the same page

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

For a long time, Google Adsense Terms of Service prohibited having any other contextual advertising on the same page as theirs, and that included Oxado banners. However, this changed last year, and now the only requirement is that there is no risk of confusion, and that ads other than Google’s be recognized as such, basically by using a different set of colors. You can see it in their own terms here:

https://www.google.com/adsense/support/bin/answer.py?answer=32849

That means you can have both Google Adsense and Oxado banners on the same page, and increase your revenue opportunities, rather than having to chose only one of the two.

Also don’t forget you can use Oxado banners as Google Adsense alternate ads (to be displayed instead of Public Service Ads).

Search and contextual modes

Friday, January 18th, 2008

If you have used the search box on our home page recently to check for advertisers on various keywords, you may have noticed we added a few options on the search results page. One allows you to see results for a specific country/language combination (the default being your own), another to select whether adult results are allowed or not, and the last one, which we are going to tackle today, allows you to select search or contextual mode and see associated results for any keyword.

First of all, why are there two modes? Simply because people actively searching for something (and typing a request in a search box for instance) are way more likely to click on the ad, and then to actually buy the advertised product or service. This means such users are more valuable to advertisers (they bring in more revenue, on average), and advertisers are thus likely to spend more money to get those.

On the other hand, contextual users are certainly interested in the product or service advertised (otherwise they wouldn’t be clicking on the ad), especially since it relates to the page they’re currently reading, but they’re still a little bit less likely to actually buy the product and service in the end. This means advertisers will not be willing to pay as much, and in some situations, they don’t want to use contextual mode at all.

Of course, contextual mode is still better than the “plain random” mode that many other networks use (and that we use in some cases, mainly when we do not have contextual ads for the user’s country).

Note that not all our partners make a distinction between the two modes, but Yahoo! Search Marketing, who provide the best paying PPC ads for the UK, Australia, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, Mexico and Brazil, actually does make that distinction.

Now, you wonder, since Oxado is operating a contextual ad network, what’s the purpose of search mode? It’s pretty simple: our engine will automatically recognize a user that is actually doing a search, and switch to search mode when required. It might do this because a user has used a search box on your site, or because the user ended up on your site after doing a search on another site (most likely a search engine). Our software will then pick up the search query the user entered, and fetch and display relevant “search mode” ads specifically for this query. Being very targeted, you’ll get even higher click rates than usual, and being in “search mode”, there are more ads, and they get paid more.

Again, you wonder, if all of this is automatic, why am I ranting about it? There are still a few things to know: if you want our engine to recognize searches on your site, make sure your form uses the GET method rather than the POST method (it actually makes more sense semantically too, POST should be used only for requests that actually change something, not to fetch data), so that the search query appears in the URL. Also make sure you use a sensible query parameter name. We recognize most of the standard ones out there, just make sure you don’t use the parameter “schblorg” for the query, we might have a hard time finding out it’s actually a query!

The other point is that for our engine to be able to pick up searches that led to your site, avoid putting the banners in frames (or iframes) at all costs (they’re bad for the contextualization in any case), and don’t hesitate to place large Oxado banners prominently on pages that get a lot of search engine traffic. For the PHP and other dynamic page gurus out there, you might even consider displaying a larger or more preminent Oxado banner when the HTTP_REFERER matches any of the big search engines.

I hope this will help you get more revenue with Oxado!

Of eggs, baskets, and similar things

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Some of your may have read about Incredimail (a public company listed on NASDAQ) having their Adsense contract terminated, and thus losing a big chunck of their revenue (IncrediMail Receives Notice from Google Regarding AdSense Program). This should teach everyone an old lesson: don’t put all your eggs (of even most of them) in the same basket, and use other sources of advertising on your sites. You know where the sign-up button is :-)

Google Adsense alternate ads

Friday, December 14th, 2007

If you have been using Google Adsense ads on your sites, you have probably already seen the unfamous “Public Service Ads”. Those can happen in a number of situations, especially if you have content on your site that Google might object to, and of course those ads generate no revenue.

In order to avoid wasting this ad real estate, you can now use Oxado ads as Google Adsense alternate ads, while still keeping the contextualization features (using a frame or something equivalent would not work as nicely).

To use this feature, just create a new banner using the appropriate link, and then paste the code before the Adsense code (which should not include any alternate ad). That’s it, you’re done: as soon as Google doesn’t have anything to display or doesn’t want to display anything on your page, Oxado ads will appear, and you should get some extra revenue.

Of course, Google, Adsense and Google Adsense are registered trademarks owned by Google, Inc.

Ad type filters

Friday, December 14th, 2007

An oft-requested feature: being able to control the type of ads displayed. This is now possible, and you can chose to filter out:

  • CPC ads (paid per click)
  • CPA ads (paid per action: lead or sale)
  • CPM ads (paid per impression: we don’t have any of those yet, but stay posted!)
  • text ads
  • graphical ads (images)
  • flash ads
  • video ads (again, we don’t have any of those yet, but they should be coming soon)

You can also opt not to display logos along text ads for those that have them, and likewise for prices.

Please note, though, that we strongly recommend you don’t filter out any ads unless there is a strong and compelling reason to do so: it restricts the number of ads our engine can chose from, and it can thus restrict relevance, or in some cases, prevent the display of any ads. If you have an international audience, don’t forget that some countries have limited inventory, and only certain types of ads, so if you filter those out, there won’t be any ads at all.

You’ve been warned!

Expanded country coverage

Friday, December 14th, 2007

We haven’t talked much about it, but we have silently added a lot of new countries over the last few months. If you have been using Oxado for a while (or a while ago), check out the list of countries here. Depending on the countries, you may either have PPC (pay per click) ads from Yahoo! Search Marketing, Miva, Genieknows and others, PPA (pay per action: lead or sale) ads from Tradedoubler, Zanox or Commission Junction, or a combination of both. Likewise, you may have text or graphical ads.

Among the countries added over the last few months:

  • Australia
  • The Netherlands
  • Mexico
  • Brazil
  • India

Yet more reasons to use Oxado on your sites. Of course, we keep on adding new coverage, so stay posted!

New Oxado blog

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Well, this is the brand new Oxado blog. We’ll use it to let you know of new features, changes, as well as rant about technical thingies and let you discover the wonderful world of Oxado. There’s quite a bit of catch-up to do as there have been lots of new things happening, some visible, some not, in the last few months, and we haven’t talked much about them. Enjoy!