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History of AdTech

The history of advertising technology began in 1993 with the first banner ad on Hotwired. Early ad tech involved simple HTML placements of GIF images. Cookies and JavaScript were later introduced, enabling user tracking and behaviors. The first ad network, WebConnect, launched in 1995. DoubleClick launched in 1996 as both an ad network and ad server. The rise of pop-ups and pop-unders in the late 90s increased revenues. Paid placement advertising began with Overture/Google AdWords in 2000. AdSense launched in 2003. Real-time bidding and exchanges began in the mid-2000s. Mobile ad networks emerged in the mid-2000s. Facebook Ads launched in 2007. Today ad tech

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views

History of AdTech

The history of advertising technology began in 1993 with the first banner ad on Hotwired. Early ad tech involved simple HTML placements of GIF images. Cookies and JavaScript were later introduced, enabling user tracking and behaviors. The first ad network, WebConnect, launched in 1995. DoubleClick launched in 1996 as both an ad network and ad server. The rise of pop-ups and pop-unders in the late 90s increased revenues. Paid placement advertising began with Overture/Google AdWords in 2000. AdSense launched in 2003. Real-time bidding and exchanges began in the mid-2000s. Mobile ad networks emerged in the mid-2000s. Facebook Ads launched in 2007. Today ad tech

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Ayan Panda
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The history of Advertising Technology

Clearcode B&B event


8th May 2015

Maciej Zawadziński
WHAT IS AD TECH?
What is ad tech?

• Software solutions for online advertising:

• delivery, targeting & control,

• data collection and decision making,

• measurement and analytics,

• ad delivery across different channels: Web, Mobile,


Video/TV, Online Radio, IoT, VR etc.
What is ad tech?
• What’s so exciting about ad tech?

• Reach: ad delivery to 3+ bln internet users,

• Scale: tera-, peta-, zeta-… of data,

• Performance & High-availability,

• Data science: making smart decision based on the data,

• Google, Yahoo, AOL, Oracle, Facebook, Twitter and other


tech giants - they all rely on ad tech!
1993
The first banner ad

• New concept - special sections on the site to display banners

• Oct 27, 1993

• Publisher: hotwired.com (Wired Magazine)

• Advertiser: AT&T

• CTR 44% (sic!)


The first
landing page
It was very simple!

• Advertiser had a direct relationship with the Publisher,

• HTML placement (468x60 pixels) with GIF format image.


1994
Cookies

• Lou Montulli and John Giannandrea invent cookies while


working at Netscape Communications,

• Use case - “a way of distinguishing online shoppers”,

• Implemented in Netscape and Mosaic browsers,

• Cookies become inseparable element of ad tech in the


following years that enable advertisers to track users’
behaviour online.
Web browsers 94’ - 09’
1995
JavaScript

• Invented at Netscape Communications,

• Shipped in Netscape 2.0 released in September 1995,

• Introduced pop ups & pop unders to online advertising.

• Similarly to cookies, JavaScript is widely adopted by the


advertising technology in the following years.
WebConnect
• World’s first ad network (in 1995 they syndicated 160 sites),

• Placed ads on network of sites that signed up,

• Pricing based on the website audience profile (Site Price Index),

• Introduced “frequency capping” to prevent “banner fatigue” as


well as banner rotation,

• In ’96 advertiser’s panel with statistics of the campaign:


impressions, clicks, responses/sales (conversions) - developed
in CGI/Pearl.
WebConnect’s ICS system
Ad network

• Advertiser can buy more inventory from many Publishers


through an intermediary and centralize the reporting for
the campaign.

• Advertiser buys a “package” of impressions and pay in


CPM model.
1996
DoubleClick
• an ad network,

• an ad server for publishers’ direct sales,

• measures impressions, clicks, spent, ROI etc.

• CPM pricing model,

• used cookies which tracked user’s history in order to serve ads


relevant to them,

• its competition, WebConnect opted out of using cookies


because “it violates the users’ privacy”.
DoubleClick website ‘97
Ad server

Ad network

Browser/ Publisher’s
Ad server
User website
Direct deal

• Direct deals - inventory sold by the Publisher’s sales team,

• Ad networks - fill the remaining inventory (but for some


Publishers this become the only or the largest rev stream).
1997
Privacy & cookies

• Cookies were discussed in two U.S. Federal Trade


Commission hearings,

• RFC 2109 specification released - HTTP State


Management Mechanism (Cookies)

• third-party cookies were either not allowed at all, or at


least not enabled by default

• recommendation NOT FOLLOWED by Netscape and IE


RFC 2109
1998-2000
aka
Dot Com Bubble
Popup/Popunder explosion

• intention - increase revenue from advertising while banner ads


effectiveness (measured in CTRs) decreases,

• major browsers add popup blocking functionality from early 2000s, IE


adds this functionality in 2004.
PPC advertising
• Bill Gross at Overture (earlier Goto.com) invented PPM model (Paid
Placement Model),

• Today it is called PPC (Pay Per Click),

• Introduced auction model for advertisers - the higher your bid, the
higher your listing,

• CPCs in ’98 - up to $1/click.

• Overture monetized large portals such as Altavista, MSN and Yahoo,

• In 2003 the company was acquired by Yahoo!


The Dot Com Bust

• startups spend substantial amounts on advertising until bubble bust,

• many startups go out of the business, including ad tech companies,

• other ad tech companies had to scale back, DoubleClick and Overture survive.
2000-2005
AdWords

• launched in 2000,

• used CPM pricing model up to 2002,

• introduced CPC pricing in 2002 - Google focused not only


on the highest bid, but also on relevance.

• As of 2013, 85% of Google’s revenue are from AdWords,

• CPCs go as high as $200/click.


AdSense

• Applied Semantics - created AdSense contextual


advertising technology in 2002,

• Acquired by Google in April 2003,

• Google launches AdSense network, enabling publishers to


monetize their content with PPC ads.
Original AdSense press release
AdSense in mid 2004
Ad networks & piggybacking
• Early-mid 2000s: Publisher

load  an  ad


• piggybacking becomes commonly
used to fill remnant inventory, Ad network 1
no  ad  -­‐  fallback  to    
ad  network  2
• endless redirects cause some ads
not to load at all, Ad network 2
no  ad  -­‐  fallback  to    
ad  network  3
• ad networks’ struggle with “liquidity”
Ad network 3
problem - their inventory is either
under-filled (not enough campaigns)
or over-filled (too many campaigns)
2005
Early “ad exchanges” launch

• AdECN, RightMedia, AdBrite, ADSDAQ

• For ad networks to address “liquidity” problem,

• Every impression is matched against campaigns in the


system,

• Highest bidder win (no real-time bidding protocol yet),

• Members - mainly ad networks,

• “Exchange” charges a flat transaction fee for every impression


Early “ad exchanges”

over-filled under-filled

Advertiser Publisher

insertion  order  (campaign) return  an  ad load  an  ad

Ad network 1 Ad network 1
not  enough  inventory  -­‐     no  campaign  -­‐  send    
own  inventory  (50%) get  from  exchange  (50%) to  exchange

Publisher Ad exchange Ad exchange

manual / API campaign targeting 301 redirect / one-way


i.e. US traffic from MacOS on tech sites
2006
Mobile ad networks

• AdMob - text links on featured phones,

• soon followed by other players,

• this was before smartphones era - first iPhone released a


year later, in 2007.
2007
Facebook Advertising

• Facebook introduces “Facebook Ads”, “Facebook Insights”


and “Beacon”,

• Beacon relies on a code installed on third party partner


websites that collects the information about user activity
and broadcasts to the user feed (by default!),

• Beacon raised a lot of privacy controversy and was shut


down in 2009 after class-action lawsuit (Facebook paid
$9.5M fine)
Facebook Beacon
3 key acquisitions

• AdECN by Microsoft

• MS switched from AdECN to AppNexus for its real-time


bidding needs 3 years after acquiring it

• RightMedia by Yahoo!

• DoubleClick by Google
DSPs founded

• DataXu

• Invite Media

• BrandScreen

• MediaMath

• AdBuyer.com
2008-today
Rise of RTB APIs
RTB APIs
Advertiser

insertion  order  (campaign)

DSP 1 DSP 2 DSP 3

$1.10 $1.15

Ad exchange 1 Ad exchange 2

$1.15

SSP/ad network

load  ad return  ad < 100 ms

Publisher
More inventory sources traded in RTB

• Display banners,

• Native advertising,

• Video and advertising,

• Digital radio and Digital TV advertising,

• …
Media Agency Trading Desk DSP 3rd Party Data
Ad Exchange Ad Network/SSP Publisher

Advertiser's budget

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
U.S. ad spend by quarter
RTB spend
Future
Future

• RTB evolution - new instruments futures, forwards etc.


(like in finance),

• IoT - Internet of Things, VR - Virtual Reality,

• Need for more transparency, privacy and openness!

• Let’s be a part of it ;-)


Questions?
Maciej Zawadziński
[email protected] @zawadzinski

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