Once in a while you come across something good. When that happens you want to share it. Many companies are new to the role of publisher in a mobile advertising setting. Serving ads from multiple networks, integrating to platforms and optimising the ad serving can quickly suck up a lot of time and resources.Well, there is help to get. We ran in to the problems mentioned above in Acemob, a mobile community and multi-player company that I have co-founded. We decided to start monetizing the inventory of page impressions that our mobile community Lifestylers generates. We tried to do it in-house and build direct relationships with various ad networks. It took too much time and the results where not optimal. Since a while back now we have been using AdMarvel with great success. Disclaimer: I have no other connection or interest in AdMarvel, other than being a happy customer. It has been a great experience and simple way to have one interface to all ad networks. Good optimisation of revenues. Great reporting interface. What I really like, and it took a while to grasp, is that AdMarvel is purely an ad server solution. Completely independent of ad networks and ad sales force.
Yesterday I had the opportunity to interview one of the founders Steve Manning, co-founder and chief product officer. I’d like to share his story here.
Mobiletribe: What is AdMarvel? It seems many confuse you with an ad network
Steve: AdMarvel is a mobile ad manager – we help mobile publishers manage every aspect of their mobile ad traffic including:
1) Remnant inventory management: integrating and optimizing multiple ad networks to get the best pricing on remnant inventory
2) Preferred ad network management: dedicating specific traffic profiles and inventory volumes to ad networks that commit a campaign or eCPM floor
3) Direct campaign management: selling inventory directly to advertisers and using our ad server to host, implement and track ad campaigns for advertisers
4) Advertising analytics: generating robust statistics about the performance of a publisher’s ad traffic across ad networks, devices, regions, operators, etc.
It is very important that we are not an ad network – we are ad network neutral and do not employ an ad sales team. This means we can focus entirely on managing a publisher’s inventory towards the best measurable performance across all ad sources. We also provide complete transparency. Publishers can view the relative fill rate, CTR and eCPM performance across all their ad networks.
Mobiletribe: What about competitors? Who are they?
Steve: We don’t see anyone else in the marketplace directly competing with us. Our position of neutrality makes it possible to partner with ad networks and publishers to attain best performance.
Mobiletribe: What made you focus on your niche?
Steve: The founding team of AdMarvel launched Jamster in the US – we saw firsthand the difficulties publishers face in monetizing mobile content. These challenges ranged from integrating with multiple billing systems to tracking revenue trends at a granular level across a vast content catalog. As we saw the bulk of the mobile content market moving from premium to ad supported we realized that an entirely new type of platform was needed to solve these complexities for advertising. Multiple ad networks need integration, and revenue tracking must be granular so publishers can respond quickly to ad market pricing. We are very excited about the potential for a profitable ad supported mobile web, but we believe publishers need a platform like AdMarvel to reach the true advertising revenue potential.
Mobiletribe: What are the trends you can see based on your traffic?
Steve: One of the main trends we are seeing is the explosive growth in iPhone traffic. The iPhone provides a great platform for rich customer engagement with advertising. More and more advertisers are dedicating their creative teams to this channel and we will see a lot of evolution in the ad unit format in this medium. We are also seeing some of the web ad networks start to experiment more in mobile. They see mobile as a great growth opportunity and are starting to bring their web advertisers over – effectively becoming new mobile ad networks in the marketplace. Many of them contact AdMarvel asking to integrate with our publisher base.
Mobiletribe: Why will you be on top of the world at the end of this year?
Steve: Everyone knows that the ad market in general is getting very tight – putting more and more pressure on ad networks to find campaigns. This is combined with an explosive growth in overall mobile traffic – WAP, in-app, SMS, etc. It is becoming more and more necessary to aggregate multiple ad networks to get the payouts that mobile publishers want. Also, as mobile publishers become smarter about their customers and traffic, they are in a great position to sell inventory directly to advertisers. AdMarvel provides an easy to use platform to manage both publisher goals.
I would like to hear what experiences you have with ad serving and optimising your inventory. Please share your stories here. The promise of mobile advertising is in many cases substantial and can be a much stronger channel than other digital and physical advertising channels. I do believe the promise of advertising is overstated though. There are not enough advertising dollars around to feed all free ad-funded models out there. With an ad server working efficiently the chances to make it work will increase though. But consider to combine the ad revenues with other monetisation models as well. To be sure to be sure, as my Irish in-laws would say.





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