


Generating Revenue with On-Line Ads? 64
ratajik asks: "In my continuing quest to generate revenue from my open source project,
I've been attempting to use on-line ads. What are other Slashdot users' experiences with on-line ads? Which are the best methods (presentation,
click-through, purchase, etc.), and which are the best companies that you've deal with?"
"I've tried several at this point, and have had the best result from Google's AdSense - but even that hasn't been great. I've gone the user-most-purchase route with
Connection Junction, but with 498,000 impressions in 1 month, have had zero sales. AdSense has worked a lot better (as users just need to click through), but I'd like to see a higher Clickthrough
rate. What other companies have you dealt with and what has your experience been? What have you found to be the best type of Ad and Ad placement on your
site? What management and tracking tools have you found that work best? If you've rolled your own web ads (e.g., not using an aggregator), what did you use to do it and how did you find advertisers?I've personally tried staying away from ads on my web sites, but some of the AdSense-type ads are minimally annoying, and seem like a good way to generate a bit of revenue off of free software, especially considering Internet
advertising revenue was at a
record 2.3 billion in the first quarter of 2004."
Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
How much you wanna bet that $2.2 billion of that was pr0n?
Re:Yeah (Score:4, Funny)
Old school (Score:5, Insightful)
The best bet would to setup a donation button, and point out that your project survives off donations.
Or if your product is nifty enough, and many folks use it, pay-for-support.
At last resort, you can put a neato logo on a t-shirt for cafepress.com
Re:Old school (Score:2, Informative)
The Donation Box at E2 [everything2.com]
Can anyone think of any other large, donation based projects that publish their revenues?
Also, Jonathan Rosenberg of Goats [goats.com] seems to have the whole 'pay me, pretty please' thing down pretty well. Just perusing his site should be a 101 course in internet capitalism.
It might help to describe what kind of project you're working on, to get a better sense of what sorts of commercial options would be most appropriate.
Re:Old school (Score:3, Interesting)
You can't expect people to give money that they don't have, but it's still a difficult situation when people want your site to stay around and make frequent use of it (and it is based on monetary transactions between other users to begin with), but you're stuck paying
Re:Old school (Score:1)
..or he/she has an adblocker.
Re:Old school (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you about Google adsense - it's hardly earning an earth shattering amount, but it is earming a lot more for me than cafepress.
I think the popularity of these two speaks for itself. I've tried a few others, but in all honesty, I don't think there is anything else out there in the general market that is earning money for web sites. You might get something that works better if it's specifically targetted to your site, but in general, my advice is to stick with google adsense, and be happy with what you get.
Most of the other advertising services won't get you as much, and despite the large amount quoted, most of the money going into the advertising industry is staying there.
Finally, I wouldn't bother with donations either, unless you have an insane amount of traffic. It won't get you much, and it'll make you feel cheap when you do get anything.
You're asking /. ? (Score:4, Insightful)
You're asking the bastion of ad blocking/workarounds/avoidance? The very center of "free"?
Dude...you are gonna get so flamed.
I work for an advertising company... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I work for an advertising company... (Score:4, Informative)
... Because I Don't Know How To Read (Score:2)
looking at (Score:3, Insightful)
"Searching 4,285,199,774 web pages"
so, advertising revenue, by one count, averages 50 cents, per web page, per year...
beat 50c per page at your site, in a year, and count yourself lucky....
Your Logic Is Quite Flawed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Your Logic Is Quite Flawed (Score:2)
but there is no way to easily figure that # of pages..
I'm sure the NY times has a larger than average return for a webste, I'm also sure personal AOL pages return diddly..
I was merely trying to suggest to the OP, that he shouldn't expect to 'retire early' based on ad revenue..
he might be able to cover his hosting fees, but by mentioning that ad rev amounted to 2.3 billion, sounds like "ooh, big numbers, how do I get a piece" I'm suggesting, that's a minute # compared to the volume of
Re:Your Logic Is Quite Flawed (Score:1)
1. Whack adverts on your pages
2. ???
3. Profit!
just doesn't work.
I think an empassioned plea to those who use your project might be worth a try. If you're the only contributor to your project, this might not work, but perhaps a method like fark.com's totalfark would be good. Give the code contributors a chance to buy a personal diary page that's spac
No Flash (Score:5, Interesting)
They suck CPU, they are often just plain annoying (flashing and such, no pun intended). Many times they are doing things that a simple animated GIF could do. I think there are MUCH better uses for Flash than ads, and I wish companies would get that through their heads.
There are many ways to generate revenue. Google AdWords (as mentioned in the submission), a "Donate" button (as mentioned in another post), blackmailing, whatever. But please, don't allow flash ads.
Re:No Flash (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:No Flash (Score:2)
Re:No Flash (Score:1)
Software and Money (Score:4, Informative)
I've actually considered embedding Ads in the main StationRipper [stationripper.com] window... but don't' know if that would be overly annoying. And showing something like Google ads may be against the rules...
What I would really like to find is an aggregator that pays per impression... but DOESN'T do pop-ups, unders, animated ads with sound, etc. While most people use pop-up blockers these days, I refuse to do something that annoying.
Is there some OTHER way other open source developers are making money off of smaller products like this, besides donations and ads? I doubt the pay-for-support route will work for something like this. While I wouldn't ever expect to make a lot, it would be nice to cover costs + have a bit left over to invest in the next development machine.
I'm actually a bit of a cross-roads with the software. I've got some ideas to expanding it a lot, fix a lot of things users want fixed and add a lot of new function - but is it worth continuing down that path, or start working on something else that may be a bit more sales-oriented? So far I've done it 'cause I love programming and it was something interesting and useful to work on - but it's mostly been (lots) of support, and very little code as of late.
-Greg
Re:Software and Money (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, here's one data point for you. I won't install any application that does this unless I know I can turn them off either with an option, a hack or by buying the product if I know it's worth it even before I install it.
Eudora is the only product that does this that I use. I bought Opera for my N-Gage, but I've *never* installed the ad-sponsored version on any PC. Basically ad-s
Re:Software and Money (Score:2)
Re:Software and Money (Score:2)
Here's some examples that could work:
Free Abiword - Charge for Templates.
Free Art - Charge for the Catagorised Version with searching.
Free Music - Charge for a Cover + Bio + Interview etc
Basically the thing they buy is more of a token that allows people to get something and feel good giving you money.
For your product I'd consider trying to get a comision off the BUY button also see if you get a Amazon "People who liked tha
Only way to go. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Only way to go. (Score:3, Interesting)
I've thought about doing a one-time pop-up. I'll give it a bit more thought before I release the next version
I've also thought of a related service that could (COULD) be subscription-based (not th
Re:Only way to go. (Score:1)
1. It'll piss off those that see it.
2. Most people (considering your project is open) won't see it at all if they've set their browsers to block em.
Waste of your time, really.
My experinces (Score:5, Interesting)
Top Tier - TribalFusion, Burst Media, etc.
Highest payoff, you want to work with these guys, but they are very picky. Tribal for instance only represents 5000 or so sites. You need to be pushing 20k+ sets of eyeballs (not just impressions, but individual people) a day before they will return your calls.
Second Tier - Google AdSense, MarketBanker, etc.
Below average payoff, but they will accept almost anyone with a legitimate site. But if your seeing less than 10k impressions a day, it will be a good 6 months to a year before you've made enough to get a check mailed to you.
Third Tier - AdDynamix, AllClicks, etc.
Bottom of the bucket pay rates. But they will take any impression they can get. When you hear people complain about things like skimming, and commissions not being paid, etc. these are the type of networks that are involved.
Long story short... It all comes down to traffic. 400k impressions per month may seem a lot, untill you try to make money off of that volume.
Your best bet for supporting an opensource project would be to solicit donations or sponsors. Failing that, try to sell your own ad space to companies that fall in your target group. (i.e. if your writing video card drivers, try getting a gaming site to advertise with you)
On the other hand, if you can create something that people love and use on a regular basis, you can support yourself off it. Right now I bring in more a month from Google AdSense than I do at my decent paying IT day job. I'm expecting even more when I convert all my inventory over to TribalFusion.
Subscriptions (Score:4, Interesting)
It just seems to me that banner ads today are less about making money through view/clicks and more about making money by driving people to subscribe to an ad-free version of the site.
it don't work (Score:4, Informative)
Adsense is darn accurate, but sometimes funny ... (Score:4, Informative)
I don't pay too much attention to the ads since it kinda runs by itself, and my experience is that Google does a pretty darn good job targetting 'em ... but I sometimes get a bit of a chuckle out of what shows up - for instance, I have some Lunar Eclipse Pictures [komar.org] and one of the Adsense ads was some place selling real estate on the moon! ;-) [moonshop.com]
Re:Adsense is darn accurate, but sometimes funny . (Score:2)
I got lunar WEB HOSTING as an AdSense Ad (Score:2)
Low cost reliable web hosting. 800MB of storage for $7.95/mo. aff
The reasons why you Should and Should Not host with LunarPages.
Web Hosting for real Webmasters Taking your site higher - Aff.
Responding Personally to All Your Hosting Needs. Give us a try! aff
Yeah, Google here totally screws it up, since it's associating lunar hosting (start the jokes
Re:I got lunar WEB HOSTING as an AdSense Ad (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Affiliate Programs (Score:3, Informative)
Avoid Connection Junction (Score:3, Informative)
I wanted to see if I could make enough to at least pay for hosting, and looked around and settled on trying Connection Junction. I don't remember for sure, but I think I was supposed to get paid on click-throughs.
For the next few months, I was getting a good number of page views, but according to Connection Junction, their banners received 4-6 impressions per month, way off from what my server logs showed for page views. Maybe they're honest, but after that experience (seeing my logs showing hundreds of page views per month and CJ showing 4-6 impressions/banner views for the same month), I don't trust them.
Re:Avoid Connection Junction (Score:4, Informative)
As it was explained to me, it's not entirely as assholish as it sounds, the sale doesn't have to come by clickthrough, it just has to be within a certain time of the impression. Well, unless all your site's viewers block the cookie, then you're screwed.
Re:Avoid Connection Junction (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Have a dollar... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:content (Score:2)
There's the rub... the price Google pays depends
1997 called (Score:5, Funny)
what are (Score:1, Troll)
Ahhh, those.
Nah I don`t think they'll take off
CJC
Get on Slashdot's front page maybe? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Get on Slashdot's front page maybe? (Score:2)
But am ok with it as it ended up - I really want some answers and suggestions to this (and I've gotten a couple of really good ones), not just more traffic.
Not a bad start ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anyone besides advertisers like ads? (Score:2, Insightful)
Try making money the proven, old fashioned way by focusing on delivering goods and/or services that have a profitable value proposition for your customers.
Re:Does anyone besides advertisers like ads? (Score:1)
purpose of your site and targetting (Score:1)
Per Ad View (Score:2)
It's Commission Junction! (Score:1)
I know someone who can help. (Score:1)
I rolled my own (Score:3, Interesting)
My site is affiliated with a local entertainment magazine. We are located in a town with a major public university. My boss is computer-phobic, so I am in charge of the website. It occurred to me that people advertising in our magazine could be posting ads on the website. During the school year we get about 60,000 pageviews/month; during the summer about 45,000.
I divided the website into 4 virtual directories with approximately equivalent pageviews so that people could target users based on what kind of pages they were looking at. Each of those directories has its own ads directory. The ads are strictly banner ads, and there is only one per page (at the top). I have never gotten any complaints from users about the ads, which are visible but unobtrusive.
In each of the 4 ad directories is 1 PHP page / advertiser. My algorithm counts the number of ads in the ad directory (actually it counts the number of pages in that directory with a .php extension), then randomly chooses one to display. (The ads themselves may point to a graphics directory one level deeper.) Needless to say, it is very useful to have executable PHP code in an ad.
I priced the ads pretty low (about $25/month to cover all four areas), but then found, much to my surprise, that the ad staff doesn't want to sell them because they won't make very much in commissions. However, I've been doing OK because people see an ad and call up to see if *they* can get one.
For the future, I'd like to write some code that enables advertisers to specify day and time selections (for example 75% of our traffic comes between 9-5 M-F). I am also thinking of rewriting the Restaurant Guide page so that I can toss up a random restaurant as an ad.
My business model is a little old-fashioned (impressions), but I am considering an alternative way of charging (clickthroughs, but with a higher price per clickthrough, compared to the price per impression). So far I am making very little money, but I am planning an offensive for this summer that entails contacting everyone who advertises in our magazine that also mentions a URL in their ad: "Got a website? Where is your traffic coming from?"
I hope that this was helpful.
Other methods (Score:2)
I have made a reasonable amount of money (~$500) out of the project through donations from a company to implement specific features in the software for them, about half of which has gone in supporting the project (server and testing hardware costs).
I've idly kicked around a few ideas for making money off the project, including selling plugins for the main, free, pro