Digital
Thoughts
by Jay Weintraub
One of my favorite
companies was in the news recently. Normally, this would
imply Google or Yahoo, but this time the company making the
news was one that Google probably doesn’t like. The company
to which I refer is Claria, formerly known as Gator. Google
wouldn’t like them because they show pop-ups, violating the
don’t be evil motto Google values. Many anti-adware
companies do not like Claria, believing that their software
falls into the category of spyware. Advertisers and
publishers on the other hand have often embraced them. Like
them or not, Claria has built a substantially profitable
business, sometimes pushing the envelope but always above
board. They are clever marketers that understand user needs
must be met and don’t obfuscate the uninstall process.

https://www.lynxtrack.com/signup.php
Rather than being in the news
for their software practices though, Claria was featured for
their new ad network. In another sign of the cleverness that
helped them rise to prominence and become a $100 million in
revenues per year company, Claria has begun to leverage
their advertiser relationships and media buying reach. The
major difference between their new offering called
BehaviorLink and their primary platform comes from the ads
being delivered on third-party publisher websites as opposed
to via pop-ups. Among the biggest reasons for a user to
uninstall the software would be the annoyance factor of
receiving pop-ups. If Claria can find another means to
display their targeted ads, they can increase the longevity
of their user base. They might not make as much money as
quickly per user, but the longevity will compensate for
their having to share revenue with publishers. It will also
increase the likelihood of users downloading their software.
The major difference between
Claria’s BehaviorLink Network and a typical ad network such
as Fastclick is that Claria’s network depends on viewers to
the publisher’s website having the Claria Software
installed. A normal ad network relies on cookies to track, and
ultimately determine what ad to show. The typical ad network
can know such things as whether a user has seen any of the
network’s ads within a certain time period; for example,
they can know by reading the cookie when a user lands on
their publisher’s page whether a particular user has seen
the Cheaptickets ad within the past 24 hours. They can use
in-house optimization to decide which ad they should show
the user. The network might look at the category the site is
in. If they were capable, the network might also look at the
performance history of the user to make a guess as to what
ad to show next. However, what the ad network wouldn’t know is
what that user has done in between visits to its publishers’
sites.

The network wouldn’t know that
a user recently performed a search for auto insurance or
that the user spent time on some of the more prominent auto
insurance sites. Were this ad network to know this, the next
time they saw a user at a publisher’s site, they might
decide to show an auto insurance ad, or they might decide to
show something related to auto insurance such as extended
warranty plans. Were the network to have software installed
on their users’ machines, they would have access to this
information. Having access to this information would mean
they could serve impressions more efficiently, and at the
end of the day, the network that can use available
impressions most efficiently earns the greatest yield and
has access to the greatest amount of inventory.
A company that has software
installed on users’ machines also doesn’t have to worry
about their cookie being deleted. If a cookie gets deleted,
that equates to a total loss of knowledge for the ad
network. A user with a deleted cookie will look like a new
user, and as a result might see an ad again that they had
already seen. Software might get deleted, but it takes more
effort to delete software than to delete cookies. One
company that has access to true user behavior, doesn’t have
to rely on cookies, and has an inherent advantage in
maximizing ad impressions is Claria.
Claria’s BehaviorLink is an
ingenious application of their existing reach and
performance data. By not relying on pop-ups and a degraded
user experience, Claria can now court software creators
having a hard time monetizing their software, providing them
a compelling value-proposition to bundle Claria’s software.
Many other companies would have spent their efforts avoiding
anti-adware and anti-spyware companies, trying to hang on
their dying market share. Claria showed the reasons for
their past success were justified by focusing on how they
could maximize their existing reach and technology to
ultimately increase both; all under the guise of an
unattractive market. It is one of the many reasons why I
respect them operationally and believe many of us can learn
from them.
Jay Weintraub
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Also on the Confidential:
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Digital Thoughts
How Authentication and Reputation will Impact Email Marketing
Trends
Top 300 e-Tailers
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Letting Go
May's Take - Acceptable Levels of Us
Breaking
News and Industry Headlines

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