Google Announces Pay Per Action Beta... And Something Else Which You Can Just Ignore
from the look-the-other-way dept
The idea of "pay per action" or "cost per action" advertising has been talked about for some time. The basic idea behind it is that an advertiser only pays if someone actually buys something or performs some action after clicking on the ad. For this reason, it's been suggested as a solution to the click fraud problem. Bill Gross' Snap.com search engine relies exclusively on this model, in the hopes that advertisers worried about click fraud will opt to advertise on it over Google (unfortunately, the model doesn't really affect users at all, so it can't help the company gain market share). Today, Google announced that it will dip its toes into the pay per action waters for the first time, as it will run a limited beta on third-party sites. Obviously, Google has a significant problem with click fraud, so it makes sense that the company would at least experiment with this model. What's also interesting about the announcement is that as part of the beta, the company will allow publishers to embed link ads within their normal text. These kinds of ads are fairly controversial and often irritating to users because they appear as regular hyperlinks (sometimes they're underlined twice so that they appear slightly different), but they are in fact paid links that send the user to the sponsor company's page. What's not clear is why Google has decided to lump these two things, the text link ads and the pay per action beta, into the same announcement, since the two really have nothing at all to do with each other. It seems possible that Google knew the text link ads might elicit a negative response and so the company decided to mask that with the other announcement, knowing it would get overshadowed. Whatever the reason is, it seems very unlikely that Google will change its bread and butter model any time soon. Even with the click fraud, it makes way too much money to tinker with things in a major way.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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I have never heard that Google has acknowledged that click fraud was a big problem, course, maybe for them it isn't. Their customers might have a different opinion.
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The Adsense Blog Posts about it
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Excellent
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I think it will work like CJ and Google will impose certain requirements to separate content from ads.
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pet peeve
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text-link ads
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One more thing
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Conversion Fraud
If one advertiser offers a pound for every email signup, whats to stop me outsourcing to India or somewhere to get thousands of thousands of emails (whether nonsense or not) entered into the advertiser's site through my adsense link?
Using the same methods as click-frauders (different proxies, IPs etc) it could work VERY well....
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The Devil You Know
For an ad network like Google, it's a lot easier to track clicks than conversions, especially as the scale of the network increases. You have to check tracking pixel placement for every ad you place to even try to keep advertisers honest, and even then if an advertiser is only showing your tracker 85% of the time, there's a good chance that when you test for placement that you will see your tracker.
In the end, I think Google will wind up sticking with the devil it knows.
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Pay Per Action Ads
It'll surely reduce googles revenue aswell.
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Re: The Devil You Know
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why Google has decided to lump these two things
Phil, if they don't pay for the product, there is no commission - or there is a charge back. Either way, no problem - although there can be others.
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Google Ad Service
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Google Ad Service
The government should hold such massive communication utilities such as google and yahoo accountable to the same rules that other public infrastructures must follow. These communication giants play such a pivotal role in the internet yet are completely unregulated -- no outside rule whatsoever. When we MPMsoft suspected fraudulent clicks and reported it to google they investigated but found nothing. We make patient accounting software for medical practices and had clicks originating from several bogus sites --no problem here. Until public utilities like google are regulated by federal rules there will be only caveat emptor.
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PPA
I have always considered paying for a visitor to be a waste of time. I've clicked on lots of sites never intending to buy anything. So paying for visitors made no sense to me. However, paying when someone actually pay is just another cost of doing business and I CAN LIVE WITH THAT.
Since I have never used AdWords I will have a long wait before Google's PPA becomes available to me... Oh, darn....
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Text Link Ads
,
We have highlighted your site as a great resource and we have a client
in a related industry to you that is looking to spend money on linking
opportunities.
We have budget immediately available to sponsor & advertise on the
most relevant sites in their industry and I would appreciate you
confirm the following:
Do you have text link advertising available? If so what are the costs?
I look forward to your response and working with you in the future as a partner.
Kind Regards
Edwrd Smith
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