Oh Look, Yet Another Attempt At Cost Per Action Advertising
from the haven't-we-seen-this-before? dept
After every media mention of "click fraud" on Google or Yahoo, you always hear someone suggest that "cost per action" advertising is the solution. Google and Yahoo, of course, work on a "cost per click" system, meaning the advertiser pays each time someone clicks on the ad. That's where clickfraud comes in -- since each click costs the advertiser money or makes a publishing partner money. Cost per action, on the other hand, gets rid of that problem by saying the advertiser only pays money if some sort of "action" is taken (usually a purchase, or at the very least filling out a form). The thing is, this isn't even remotely new. One of the earliest commerce trends online was the idea of the "affiliate program" which really was nothing more than cost per action advertisements. You put up links (ads) for books on Amazon and you only got paid when someone took an action (bought the book). That's why we tend to be skeptical each time some new company seems to think it's come up with something new with yet another cost per action advertising model. The latest one is getting lots of attention because it's run by a former CEO at Altavista, one of the many search engines Google crushed, only to have its remains later (much later) snapped up by Yahoo. As for the claims that this will take on Google by being "different," remember that Google has been testing its own version of cost per action advertising already anyway. Cost per action advertising certainly makes sense in some cases, but it's a bad deal for any site if the advertisers just use it for brand building. That is, if they don't actually encourage the action, but just get their name across for a future purchase, then the advertiser gets to advertise completely for free. That's great for the advertiser, but raises plenty of questions about how strong the business model is for the site offering such ads.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Maybe I should patent the idea?
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Re:
But I do agree we tend to think of things as mutually exclusive when combining concepts often leads to a better solution.
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Niche Markets
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This has been common in the online adult industry for years.
I'm sure the smart people at Google can figure out variations of this theme that are fair and profitable for both sides.
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Also, I'm convinced altavista was dead (or at least moribund) long before google was hip. And I don't think they got crushed, they were fairly deflated.
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advertising models are sub-optimal but stable...
Personally, I think it will be a few years before some next-generation wunderkind stumbles over a better solution that doesn't involve the current web-scraping technologies that for better or for worse are getting swamped by ever growing search results.
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Re: advertising models are sub-optimal but stable.
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